Distracted walking might seem like a small problem, especially compared to bigger road safety issues. But it’s something we ...
The inside story of the former president’s messy, offensive and remarkable defeat of Kamala Harris, Joe Biden and his ...
Spending many hours daily looking at screens feels like a foregone conclusion. The new challenge is paring down what fills ...
Five cruisers had come to Rita Murad’s family home. It was a two-story building of unpainted concrete, set on a tightly ...
From ice creams to smartphones to tractors, the right to repair movement should help consumers and businesses get more out of ...
Through his wealth and cultural influence, Elon Musk undoubtedly strengthened the Trump campaign. WIRED unpacks whether it ...
Former Arkansas governor who once said he could buy a holiday home in Jewish settlement set to become envoy; China hawk Waltz ...
Plus: How newsrooms are using generative AI, what makes news seem authentic on social media, and how to bridge the divide ...
As the Arkansas Times’ own Matt Campbell wrote earlier this year, “America is cooked.” The U.S. Supreme Court not only paved ...
ICYMI — Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) is urging the Commerce Department to strengthen and expand proposed rules that restrict the export of U.S. surveillance technologies to repressive foreign governments, ...
When Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes went to prison after Jan. 6, his ex-wife thought her family was safe. Then Donald Trump talked of pardons.
There’s no physical pain with nostalgia but there are bouts of mental anguish/heartaches/happiness/memory loss dating back to almost the exact middle of the 20th Century.