• Carthage businesses struggle with Spire construction

    CARTHAGE, Mo. — Road construction around the Carthage square is making it difficult to get to nearby businesses. Spire is replacing most of the gas lines throughout town, and today workers closed off multiple entrances and exits to the square throughout the day. In fact, two sides were closed just this morning, Thursday, and that's []

    • WDTN

    Large flames seen at Germantown business

    GERMANTOWN, Ohio (WDTN) -- Heavy smoke and flames are seen at a Germantown business. According to Montgomery County Regional Dispatch, dispatchers received a call at 11:07 a.m. to respond to the 8400 block of Upper Miamisburg Road. Miami Valley Fire District confirmed they have been sent as mutual aid to the fire. An initial caller []

    • KTVZ

    10 celebrities who have broken into the cannabis business

    Stacker researched and created this list of 10 celebrities who have found success within the growing cannabis industry thus far.

  • America Is Now in the Business of Losing Wars

    On Oct. 7, thousands of members of the terrorist group Hamas and its “civilian” friends broke through the barrier between the Gaza Strip and Israel and proceeded to torture, rape and slaughter at least 1,200 Israeli people. They burned their homes, killed their children in front of them and then kidnapped some 250 Israelis back to Gaza, where they planted themselves in terror tunnels built with foreign humanitarian funding over the course of two decades, just beneath civilian areas including...

  • America Is Now in the Business of Losing Wars

    On Oct. 7, thousands of members of the terrorist group Hamas and its “civilian” friends broke through the barrier between the Gaza Strip and Israel and proceeded to torture, rape and slaughter at least 1,200 Israeli people. They burned their homes, killed their children in front of them and then kidnapped some 250 Israelis back to Gaza, where they planted themselves in terror tunnels built with foreign humanitarian funding over the course of two decades, just beneath civilian areas including...

    • AskMen

    Think You're "Too Busy to Date"? Try These Sites Out

    If you're a career-first kinda guy and struggling to find a partner, these dating sites might save your love life.

  • The tangled web of the Butterlys' business dealings over the years

    The Butterly family presided over a wide network of businesses in its heyday – but many shut or went into receivership during the financial crisis.

  • The business of generating and selling low-quality ebooks

    Online marketplaces are stocked to the brim with low-quality e-books generated by LLMs or cruder generative methods. It's nothing new—hucksters have been slapping together garbage ebooks by plagiarizing wikipedia and whatnot since the dawn of the format. But now it happens in incredible, overwhelming volume. — Read the rest

  • April 2024 Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey

    Note: Survey responses were collected from April 8 to April 15.

  • Google Business Profiles Register Your Defibrillator (AED)

    Google sent out emails a couple of days ago to businesses asking them to register their Automated External Defibrillator (AED) with Google Business Profiles. Google said, "you could save lives" if you do it."This can help emergency responders find the life-saving device when someone nearby is suffering from a cardiac arrest emergency," Google wrote.It is not clear if Google will add an AED icon to your Business Profile in Google Maps. Or if it will just add the details to the PulsePoint AED map...

  • 5 Ways to Move Forward After Shutting Down Your Business

    Did you have to make the tough decision to close down your business? Here are 5 ways to help you on the journey of recovery from business failure to your new entrepreneurial adventure.

  • Topeka earns grant to encourage minority businesses

    TOPEKA (KSNT) - The City of Topeka announced on Tuesday that it had been awarded $30,000 to assist minority businesses and entrepreneurs. The City of Topeka was awarded $15,000 to encourage minority businesses to make commitments to contract with anchors, institutions like the city, state agencies, hospitals and universities. Funding comes from the city's participation []