Morning Agenda: Cable’s Mega-Deal to Be Unplugged
Date: 24 April 2015
By DEALBOOK
Dealbook
Cable’s Mega-Deal to Be Unplugged | HSBC Weighs Move From London | Deutsche’s Libor Damage
24. dubna 2015 bylo pátek pod hvězdičkou ♉. Byl 113 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl Barack Obama.
Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 11 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly pátek 24. dubna 2026 před 32 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou sobota 24. dubna 2027, za 332 dní. Žili jste 4 050 dní nebo přibližně 97 220 hodin nebo přibližně 5 833 221 minut nebo přibližně 349 993 260 sekund.
Date: 24 April 2015
By DEALBOOK
Dealbook
Cable’s Mega-Deal to Be Unplugged | HSBC Weighs Move From London | Deutsche’s Libor Damage
Date: 25 April 2015
By RAVI SOMAIYA
Ravi SOMAIYA
NBC News investigation of statements made by Brian Williams, commissioned after Williams apologized for embellishing story about his Iraq War coverage, has examined around six previous instances of fabrication or misrepresentation in reporting.
Date: 24 April 2015
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting interesting stories from around the web. In this installment, great reads from John Branch, Dan Levin and others.
Date: 25 April 2015
By JOHN KOBLIN
John KOBLIN
CNN announces that Sunday morning television show State of the Union will be hosted by Jake Tapper starting in June 2015.
Date: 24 April 2015
By SCOTT SHANE
Scott SHANE
News Analysis; death of American aid worker Warren Weinstein in January drone strike highlights technology's unsettling imprecision, and raises hard questions about Pres Obama's reliance on their use; independent investigations reveal far higher rate of civilian casualties in drone offensives than government has disclosed; deaths have bolstered critics who say strikes involve unacceptable level of guesswork and unintended destruction.
Date: 24 April 2015
By JONATHAN MAHLER
Jonathan MAHLER
News Analysis; withdrawal of Comcast's $45 billion merger with Time Warner Cable reflects how deal's air of inevitability faded as lawmakers and regulators focused on implications for broadband service and net neutrality; government's emerging commitment to keeping a free and open internet was essentially at odds with single company controlling as much as 40 percent of public's access to it.