サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
iPhone 17
www.abc.net.au
"Hannibal at Erez, dispatch a Zik [attack drone]," came the command on October 7. Those words, reported by Israeli newspaper Haaretz in July, confirm what many Israelis have feared since the Hamas attacks on October 7 in southern Israel. Israeli forces have killed their own citizens. Israeli authorities say more than 800 civilians and around 300 soldiers were killed on October 7. A number of Israe
Japan's anime industry is worth tens of billions. But behind the screens creatives struggle to make ends meet
For the first time ever, an undercover agent for China's secret police steps out of the shadows to tell all about where he's been and who he's been targeting. 阅读中文版 On a bitterly cold winter morning in China last year, a man who'd spent more than a decade working as a spy for the notorious secret police decided to flee his homeland. "I spent most of the time in the airport's bathroom, worried that
In the past week, a chaotic battle has played out at one of Silicon Valley's foremost tech companies over the future of artificial intelligence. On one side were the men who hold the keys to some of the most advanced generative AI in the world, backed by multi-billion-dollar investors. On the other were a handful of entrepreneurs who fear these systems could bring an end to humanity if the industr
Dark mode is here!If you would like to change, tap into the appearance drop down below.Go to appearance
Posted 28 Oct 201528 Oct 2015Wed 28 Oct 2015 at 4:04am, updated 21 May 202021 May 2020Thu 21 May 2020 at 12:55am Caroline Norma lectures in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies at RMIT University. At least since the sexual revolution of the 1960s, Lefties have been rankled by the presence of feminists among their ranks. But purging these uppity women presents a challenge. Overtly denigra
Victoria's health authorities are asserting that the latest outbreak is a bit different from its last— they say very limited contact seems to be behind some transmission of the virus in Melbourne. The state's COVID-19 Commander, Jeroen Weimar, has called it "stranger to stranger" transmission and says they're "concerned". "With previous variants, we are more used to transmission really occurring i
As Australian cricketers and commentators have found out in the past week, getting an exemption to leave does not mean you can automatically return. Should the Olympic and Paralympic Village suffer an outbreak of COVID-19 during the Games will all athletes and officials be quarantined in Japan unable to return home? Could the snap decision that saw the possibility of $66,000 fines and five years i
Chile's military said at least 36 people had been infected at its Bernardo O'Higgins base, including 26 army personnel and 10 civilian contractors conducting maintenance at the base. Base personnel "are already properly isolated and constantly monitored" by health authorities in Magallanes, in Chilean Patagonia, the army said, adding there had been no complications as yet. An Army press officer sa
Simon Carney, a spokesperson for the Australian Society of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery (ASOHNS), said he expected the incidence of patients experiencing ongoing loss of smell (anosmia) or diminished sense of taste (dysgeusia) could "go up quite significantly" following the outbreak. But despite a growing body of scientific literature identifying anosmia and dysgeusia as signs of COVID-19
The Australian Government is urging Japan to change its family law system, in relation to parental child abduction. Earlier this month an Australian father received a 6 month suspended sentence for trespassing while trying to find out more information about the location of his children, who'd been taken by their Japanese mother without his consent. The ABC understands that Australian Embassy offic
An Australian man detained for more than 40 days and convicted of illegally entering an apartment building in Tokyo says he was only trying to find out more information about the location of his children. Forty-six year-old Scott McIntyre's two children were taken by their Japanese mother without his consent, while the family was living in Japan – a country that doesn't recognise the concept of jo
Ms Gibson built a social media empire and launched The Whole Pantry cookbook and app on the back of claims to have cured her brain cancer through alternative therapies and good nutrition. It was later revealed she never had the disease. Ms Gibson had also made false claims about donating a large portion of her profits to charities and to the family of a boy with an inoperable brain tumour. In Sept
Tue 18 Sep 2018Tuesday 18 September 2018Tue 18 Sep 2018 at 6:44am China will use its 'social credit' system to monitor over a billion citizens. (Foreign Correspondent: Brant Cumming)
Melbourne supermarket giant Woolworths has agreed to let international nude crowd photographer Spencer Tunick use one of its carparks for a photoshoot after earlier denying permission. Tunick had planned to photograph thousands of nude Melburnians at the rooftop carpark at the supermarket's Prahran store on Chapel Street, in inner-city Melbourne. The New York-based artist is famous for his photos
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has issued a blunt warning to Chinese university students affiliated with the Communist Party, urging them to respect freedom of speech in Australia. There are mounting anxieties about the way the Chinese Government uses student groups to monitor Chinese students in Australia, and to challenge academics whose views do not align with Beijing's. Australia's security age
North Korea has in the past threatened Australia with "disaster" for aligning itself with the US against the country's reclusive regime. After 522 days without testing a single missile, the regime tested three within a week in May 2019, signalling its intention to remain a threat to its neighbours and the world. So just how much of the world is potentially at risk? North Korea has a large arsenal
Martha C. Nussbaum is the Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago. She is a recipient of the 2016 Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy and has been named the 2017 Jefferson Lecturer in the Humanities. When people feel themselves powerless, out of control of their own lives, and fearful for themselves and their loved ones, it is all too easy to conv
Unwanted pet goldfish are being dumped into waterways and growing as large as 1.9 kilograms, researchers in Western Australia have found. Dr Stephen Beatty from the school of Veterinary and Life Sciences at Perth's Murdoch University has been working on a control program for Busselton's Vasse River for the past 12 years. He said he and his colleagues regularly found goldfish that weighed over 1kg,
Driverless technology and other intelligent systems like satellite farming require Australia's longitude and latitude to be corrected, scientists say. Australia's coordinates are out by more than 1.5 metres and that could have major implications for new technologies that rely on global positioning systems (GPS). Dan Jaksa from Geoscience Australia is working with a team of scientists from national
A Queensland council is releasing dingoes onto a Great Barrier Reef island to kill feral goats that are destroying its endangered ecosystem. The four wild dogs, two of which have already been released on Pelorus Island, will not have a chance to become pests themselves, as they have been implanted with a time-activated poison, Hinchinbrook Shire Council said. "As a council we have an obligation as
A great grandmother, she has many reasons to look back on her life with immense satisfaction. Sustained by her talented, artistic family, nourished by her deep Christian faith, she describes herself as "lucky". But there were dark days that have shaped her life too. As a young woman, she was imprisoned by the Japanese during World War II, along with her family and many other Dutch civilians in wha
Multiple official sources have confirmed the recent attack, and the ABC has been told it will cost millions of dollars to plug the security breach, as other agencies have also been affected. The bureau owns one of Australia's largest supercomputers and provides critical information to a host of agencies. Its systems straddle the nation, including one link into the Department of Defence at Russell
次のページ
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く