Media and Communications
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
For a quarter-century, McNally Robinson's Grant Park location has tapped into local book lover's desires
9 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 8, 2021Bright orange safety shirts now beacon of hope, thanks to young designer
8 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 27, 2021Set of The Porter a testament to the special connection production has with Winnipeg's Black history
12 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 2, 2021The show must go on as Selkirk buys theatre
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021I meme, you meme: internet language brings us together
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021Prominent fact-checker Snopes apologizes for plagiarism
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026Tree-felling display home transport generates online buzz
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Aug. 14, 2021Bell MTS enhancing broadband for rural areas
3 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 23, 2021Bell MTS is launching its Wireless Home Internet service for 12 communities across Manitoba, with enhanced broadband access for nearly 40,000 rural and remote locations to come by the end of 2021.
“It’s an exciting chapter for us and for all of Manitoba,” said Ryan Klassen, vice-chair of Bell MTS and Western Canada, in an interview Tuesday.
The new 5G-capable network will offer download speeds of up to 50 megabits per second and upload speeds of 10 Mbps, with no data overage fees on the 3500 MHz spectrum. It’s part of a recent $1.7-billion investment from telecommunications giant Bell Canada, as it expands across the country from province to province over the next two years.
“COVID-19 certainly accelerated the need for something like this, because we’ve all been relying more than we ever have on strong and trustworthy internet service,” Klassen told the Free Press. “But in many ways, it also predates that, because these are communities that haven’t had this kind of access before.”
One Extraordinary Photo: England’s Harry Kane reacts to a missed scoring chance
2 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 4:26 PM CDTAI is helping gas stations collude to raise California fuel prices, lawsuit says
3 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 4:38 PM CDTWebsites suggest conspiracies fed accused Montreal gunman’s ‘buffet extremism’
5 minute read Preview Updated: 6:12 AM CDTCharlie Brown’s longtime pen pal is finally revealed in new Apple TV ‘Peanuts’ movie
5 minute read Preview Updated: 7:19 AM CDTAI is an energy and water hog, here’s what you can do to counter that
7 minute read Preview Updated: 7:33 AM CDTHockey Night in Canada: A cultural tradition forever changed
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTWhat is the 2026 song of the summer? AP offers some predictions
7 minute read Preview Updated: 12:55 PM CDTTop developers are pivoting from chatbots to physical AI
6 minute read Preview Updated: 1:03 PM CDTChinese supercomputer displaces US machines as world’s fastest for first time since 2017
2 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 23, 2026A supercomputer in China now outranks its U.S. counterparts as the world’s most powerful, marking the first time since 2017 that a Chinese computer has topped a list sometimes viewed as a measure of a nation's technological prowess.
The LineShine computer in Shenzhen, China, displaced top-ranked U.S. computer El Capitan in the latest version of the TOP500 ranking announced Tuesday. It was the Chinese computer's debut on the list.
Scientists behind the TOP500 project said the LineShine computer at China’s National Supercomputing Center achieved 2.198 exaflops, meaning it can perform more than 2 quintillion calculations per second.
El Capitan, at the U.S. government’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, now ranks second, ahead of two other U.S. supercomputers at national laboratories in Tennessee and Illinois. Dropping to fifth place is the Jupiter supercomputer in Germany. The five are the only publicly verified exascale computers in the world.
Locals are challenging a million-square-foot data center that would be the biggest in California
8 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 23, 2026In April, developers of the massive Imperial Data Center cleared a major hurdle after Imperial County Supervisors approved a plan to combine several tracts of land for the nearly one-million-square-foot facility in rural Southern California.
It would be the largest data center in the state; the parent company, Imperial Valley Computer Manufacturing, LLC describes it as a hyperscale facility, “designed exclusively for advanced artificial intelligence and machine learning operations.”
Last week, that progress came to a halt when the county board walked back its decision, declaring a 45-day moratorium on data centers and forming a public commission to advise the county on zoning policy for the facilities. Their reversal came after months of backlash, and a more than hour-long public hearing in which residents voiced sharp criticism of the sweeping project and its swift approval.
The developer, Sebastian Rucci, said he’s filing a lawsuit to seek a temporary restraining order against the moratorium today, arguing that the county failed to show a true emergency, explain what harms and impacts it will cause, and what specific concerns residents have raised.