• Tesla cuts prices of Model Y, Model X, Model S vehicles in US

    Tesla cut the prices for its Model Y, Model X and Model S vehicles in the U.S. by $2,000 each on Friday, according to the electric vehicle maker's website. Elon Musk's electric vehicle maker lowered the prices for its Model Y base variant to $42,990, while the long-range and performance variants are now priced at $47,990 and $51,490, respectively, the website showed. The basic version of the Model S now costs $72,990 and its plaid variant $87,990. The Model X base variant now costs $77,990 and...

    • CNBC

    Bristol Myers Squibb beats on revenue, launches $1.5 billion cost cuts as it posts quarterly loss

    Bristol Myers Squibb said the charges primarily reflect its acquisition of Karuna Therapeutics and collaboration agreement with SystImmune.

  • Tesla price cut: Model Y undercuts Model 3 by $5,000 with tax credit

    Tesla on Saturday once again cut prices on several of its models for the U.S. market, as part of around-the-world price cuts. Given the cuts, anyone considering the Model 3 and Model Y in the U.S. may want to take a fresh look at the numbers. The base price of the Model Y rear-wheel drive has dropped $2,000 versus last week, to $44,630, while the

  • Boeing Posts $355 Million Loss

    (Associated Press) – Boeing said Wednesday that it lost $355 million on falling revenue in the first

  • Tesla cuts prices on 3 models

    If you’re in the market for an electric vehicle buying a Tesla will now be a little less expensive.

  • DMV services working again after outage earlier this week

    MEDFORD, Ore. – DMV offices across Oregon are now able to issue ID’s, licenses and permits after a system outage prevented them from doing so earlier this week. Spokesperson Michelle Godfrey said the outage started late Monday night and was due to a system configuration issue. Godfrey said they were still able to process transactional […]

    • CNN

    Netflix is the dominant streaming service. So why is it changing its model?

    Netflix, the dominant player in streaming, is expected to announce its first-quarter results on Thursday after enjoying months as a Wall Street darling. But much of the company’s past growth and success, analysts say, has come from its old, well-established business model. In recent months, Netflix has made moves to expand and even radically reinvent that business. While streaming competitors like Disney+, Hulu, Max (owned by CNN’s parent company Warner Bros. Discovery) and Peacock work to draw...

  • Netflix is the dominant streaming service. So why is it changing its model?

    Netflix, the dominant player in streaming, is expected to announce its first-quarter results on Thursday after enjoying months as a Wall Street darling.

  • Ribbon cutting for psilocybin service center in Ashland

    ASHLAND, Ore.– The Ashland Healing Center held a ribbon cutting ceremony for its new psilocybin service center Friday morning. The service center on A Street started operating in November, but only recently joined the Ashland Chamber of Commerce. The co-owners of the Ashland Healing Center said they have already drawn customers from Oregon, California and […]

  • Chemung County veterans honored in Post Everlasting Service

    ELMIRA HEIGHTS, (WETM) -- Veterans of Chemung County who served in the armed forces and local members of the American Legion Post were honored for their service by the Chemung County American Legion Department of New York. The ceremony was held at the American Legion Post 154 in Elmira Heights, honoring veterans who have passed []

  • Albuquerque wants input on proposed food service rules

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – The city's Environmental Health Department is looking for feedback on a proposed ordinance to update food service and retail rules. Albuquerque City Council will vote on the proposal on May 6. “We want to make sure that people who feel like this impacts them have an opportunity to weigh in on the ordinance []

  • Sugar in baby food: Why Nestlé needs to be held to account in Africa

    Nestlé has been criticized for adding sugar and honey to infant milk and cereal products sold in many poorer countries. The Swiss food giant controls 20% of the baby-food market, valued at nearly US$70 billion.