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How Robots Can Be The Future Of Housework
Frances Gabe was the inventor of the self-cleaning home. She transformed her Oregon bungalow into a ‘giant dishwasher’ “Housework is a thankless, unending job,” Gabe said. “Who wants it? Nobody!” I agree with Gabe – and with Lenin, who condemned housework.

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This Man Was Just Awarded the World Humanitarian Prize For Daily Acts Of Kindness
Sebbie Hall, a 22-year-old from Lichfield, Staffordshire, has been honoured with a World Humanitarian Award for his remarkable dedication to daily acts of kindness and community fundraising—despite living with a rare chromosome anomaly that affects his mobility, communication, and learning. Selected to represent the UK at the One World One Culture Festival in southern India, Hall was celebrated for his impact on others through compassion and generosity. "I told you my ripple of kindness can travel across the world," he told his mother after receiving the award. Hall believes that kindness is his superpower. Over the past five years, he’s turned that belief into action—donating more than 5,000 meals to food banks, delivering laptops to children who lack online access, and providing communication devices for disabled young people. Through his charity, the Sebbie Hall Kindness Foundation, he has raised more than £100,000 for grassroots and national causes. Now, he’s aiming even higher: a £1 million goal to build an assisted living village for young adults with disabilities. “Every day he is living with a rare condition and can't read or write but look how far his message of kindness has travelled,” said his mother, Ashley Hall. “He believes that everyone has the ability to make a difference, they just have to take the first step.” Sebbie’s award is a recognition not only of his work, but of the way he’s inspired others. As his mother put it, “Organisers were looking for someone who transforms lives through compassion, and that’s what they saw in Sebbie.”
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California Awards $202 Million to Cut Pollution and Expand Clean Transit
California is pumping $202 million into clean transportation projects across the state, aiming to cut pollution and make it easier for people to get around without relying on cars. The new funding, announced this week by Caltrans, will support 143 local projects that prioritize public transit, electric vehicles, and lower emissions—especially in communities hit hardest by air pollution. “Partnering with local transportation agencies, we’re building a thriving, more connected California,” said Caltrans Director Dina El-Tawansy. “These clean transportation projects will better serve communities most affected by air pollution, expand bus and rail service and support free or reduced fare programs.” The funding comes through the Low Carbon Transit Operations Program (LCTOP), part of the state’s California Climate Investments (CCI) initiative. CCI directs money from California’s Cap-and-Invest program into efforts that cut greenhouse gas emissions while boosting local economies and public health. To date, LCTOP has invested more than $1.4 billion in over 1,500 projects. Here are some of the newly funded projects: Los Angeles County: Metro’s A Line light rail service will receive $48.7 million to support operations. The expanded service covers 44 stations and runs daily. San Francisco: The city will get $18 million to continue its Free Muni program, which eliminates transit fares for seniors, youth, and people with disabilities. San Diego: The Metropolitan Transit System will use $8.5 million to buy up to 23 battery electric buses, replacing aging compressed natural gas vehicles. Bakersfield: Golden Empire Transit District will receive $1.5 million to build a solar-powered “Smart Grid” system that stores energy during the day and charges electric buses overnight. Lake County: The Lake Transit Authority will use $173,000 to upgrade nine bus stops in Clearlake, Lakeport, and surrounding areas with shelters, benches, and bike racks. Nevada County: A new $86,000 fare subsidy will help low-income residents afford bus rides on the Nevada County Connects service. The projects reflect a shift in transportation priorities—less about expanding highways, more about improving public transit and clean energy systems. For more details and the full list of funded projects, visit the FY 24-25 LCTOP Award List (PDF) or explore updates at build.ca.gov.

Score (97)
This French Sailor Beat Cancer and Broke a Record to Win a Grueling Globe Race
After surviving cancer, three-story waves didn’t seem so intimidating. Charlie Dalin, a 39-year-old French sailor, was preparing for the Vendée Globe—one of the most dangerous solo sailing races in the world—when he was hit with a life-changing diagnosis in 2023: a six-inch cancerous tumor on his small intestine. The Vendée Globe, often called the “Everest of the Seas,” is a brutal 24,000-mile, solo, non-stop, unassisted race around the world. Competitors sail alone through the frigid waters off southern Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. Boats break. Sailors quit. One participant famously disappeared without a trace. And Dalin had cancer. But he didn’t back down. “I decided to handle it the way I would when I have a problem on board,” he told The Washington Post. “I don’t talk about it when the problem arises. I talk about it when it’s repaired.” Doctors told him he might still be able to compete—if he stayed disciplined with his immunotherapy pills. So Dalin got back to work. He trained. He raced across the Atlantic in tune-up events, managing his pain and fatigue along the way. By late 2024, he was ready. He set off in November, joining roughly 40 sailors willing to take on the challenge. From the start, Dalin held his own. He rounded the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, one of the race’s most perilous points, all while sticking to his medical routine. Then came the defining moment near the southern coast of Australia: a huge storm. Dalin could choose a safer, longer northern route—or take the shorter, more dangerous path south. He chose south. His boat took a beating. Days of pounding waves and howling wind followed. But when the seas settled, he emerged in the lead—and on track to set a record. Near Antarctica, he briefly lost that lead. Near Brazil, he won it back. On January 25, 2025, after more than two months alone at sea, Dalin crossed the finish line. He had completed the race in 64 days, 19 hours—a new Vendée Globe record. The tumor had grown during the race, but surgery soon followed. In the months that followed, so did global recognition. In November, Dalin was named the 2025 Rolex World Sailor of the Year. In December, he received the Magnus Olsson Prize, an honor given to sailors who show excellence, innovation, and sportsmanship. “I am the happiest man in the world today, that’s for sure,” Dalin said after the race. “These are crazy emotions I’ve never felt before. Crossing the line with the dawn light shining on perfectly smooth water, the boat gliding along. It was simply fabulous. An explosion of emotions in my head and immense joy. It is, by far, the most beautiful finish of my entire career.” His health is still a work in progress. But Dalin is sailing forward, navigating the unknown with the same focus and courage that carried him across the world.

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Spaniel Rescued from Cliff After Garden Adventure Goes Wrong
A spaniel had to be rescued from a cliff after wandering too far in his garden and getting stuck, according to emergency crews. Bracken, the curious dog in question, was exploring the lower part of his family’s garden in Sedbury, Forest of Dean, when things took a turn. He ended up stranded on a cliff ledge, unable to move and unreachable by his owners. The Severn Area Rescue Association (SARA) said Bracken had "got carried away" during his adventure. Around 15:00 GMT on Saturday, the SARA Beachley Rope Rescue and Lifeboat Teams were called in to assist Gloucestershire Fire and Rescue Service. Together, they launched a coordinated rescue effort to bring the dog to safety. A firefighter was lowered down the cliff by rope and managed to secure Bracken before the pair were pulled back up. As a precaution, SARA’s Lifeboat 3 was launched and positioned in the river below the cliff in case Bracken slipped or the rope rescue was unsuccessful. The boat team was later stood down once the spaniel was recovered without incident. Despite his ordeal, Bracken was unharmed and is now back with his family.

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Missing Hiker Found Alive in New Zealand After More Than Two Weeks Alone in the Wilderness
A 66-year-old man missing in the remote backcountry of New Zealand for more than two weeks has been found alive — just days after authorities had called off the search. Graham Garnett was discovered sheltering in a hut in Kahurangi National Park by a team of contractors working in the area. He had been missing since December 30 after heading out for a hike in the Baton/Ellis River area and failing to return as expected. The search for Garnett was extensive. Land Search and Rescue New Zealand, the Defence Force, the Rescue Coordination Centre, and dozens of volunteers scoured the rugged 5,193-square-kilometre national park for signs of him. But after two weeks without progress, the official search was suspended on January 15. Just three days later, Garnett was found. “This is an amazing result,” police from the Nelson, Marlborough, West Coast District said in a statement. “We are so pleased for Graham and his loved ones.” Garnett was taken to Nelson Hospital, where he reunited with his family. Officials said he had clearly been through an ordeal, but his survival was being described as remarkable given the terrain and the length of time he was missing. Kahurangi National Park, located on the South Island, is known for its steep mountains, deep gorges, and fast-moving rivers — a stunning but unforgiving environment for anyone stranded alone. “Obviously he has been through quite an ordeal and everyone involved in the search is delighted to hear that Graham has been found alive,” the police added. His rescue adds to a growing list of wilderness survival stories making headlines in recent years, including a toddler who walked 11 kilometers through the woods guided by a rancher’s dog, and a woman in Australia who was lost for eight days but made it back to her four children. For Garnett’s family and the community that rallied behind the search, this one ends in the best way possible.

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Tennis Pro Pauses Aussie Open to Help Collapsing Ball Girl: "Being a Good Human Comes First"
Turkish tennis player Zeynep Sonmez made headlines at the Australian Open not just for her on-court performance — but for a moment of compassion that briefly paused play. Sonmez, 23, was mid-match against Russia’s Ekaterina Alexandrova on Jan. 18 when a ball girl collapsed on the sidelines in Melbourne’s heat. Footage from the match shows the girl falling backward, briefly getting up, and then stumbling again. That’s when Sonmez stopped the game and rushed to help. “She was really struggling,” Sonmez later told the BBC. “She said she was fine, but it was really obvious she was not fine. So I went to grab her and said, ‘Sit down and drink something, you're not fine.’ As we were walking, she fainted, so luckily I grabbed her. She was really shaking.” In the video, Sonmez can be seen helping the girl stay upright, draping her arm over her shoulder and walking her toward medical staff. At one point, she caught the girl as she appeared to lose consciousness again. The match resumed after a six-minute delay. Temperatures during the day had soared — with forecasts predicting even higher heat in the coming days. “I always say it is more important to be a good human being than a good tennis player,” Sonmez said. “It was just my instinct to help her and I think everyone would do the same. I'm happy I got to help.” After the interruption, Sonmez went on to win the match, defeating world No. 11 Alexandrova. The victory made her the first Turkish woman in history to reach the second round of the Australian Open. Sonmez, currently ranked No. 112, has earned growing attention for her performance — but it’s her quick thinking and empathy during a tense moment that has won her admiration far beyond the tennis world.

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Burn Survivor Becomes Firefighter, Now Inspires Kids At Camp
Terry McCarty knows what it’s like to face fire—both literally and metaphorically. At just six years old, he suffered third-degree burns over 70 percent of his body in a catastrophic accident. The aftermath was brutal: a coma for two months, a year-long hospital stay, and 58 surgeries. As if that wasn’t enough, McCarty endured relentless bullying during his teenage years. "After the accident I lived in a constant state of fear and uncertainty," McCarty shared with the Daily Mail. Life as an adult wasn't much easier; employers often saw him as a liability. "I struggled to find work as an adult as people always told me I was a liability, and I had started to believe it." In what might seem an unexpected twist, McCarty decided to become a firefighter in Bellingham, Washington. It was an impulsive decision made in search of proving his capabilities to himself and others. He completed 12 weeks of tough training, which included facing fire again for the first time since his childhood trauma. "In the end, I started to realize the fire didn't control me," he said. "Why should I let fear take over my life?" His experience on the firefighting force lasted two years before he shifted focus toward helping other burn survivors. McCarty now works with the Burned Children Recovery Foundation at Camp Phoenix. This program offers young burn survivors not only counseling and peer support but also family support and financial assistance during their recovery period. "Fire robbed me of my childhood," McCarty explained. "I wanted to give these children a chance to experience being a kid." Although McCarty has left firefighting behind, he continues to engage with the community by organizing motivational speaking programs for firefighting groups and connecting firefighters with burn survivors like himself. He believes this external perspective can be useful for those who regularly encounter difficult situations. "As a firefighter, you see the worst of your community," McCarty told People Magazine. "That could really do a lot of damage to your emotional and mental health." By maintaining ties with the firefighting community while operating from outside its core structure, McCarty finds he can still participate meaningfully. His journey is both inspiring and practical; rather than letting early adversity define his entire life, Terry McCarty has turned personal tragedy into an avenue for supporting others facing similar challenges.

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This Hospital Launched a Simple Blood Test to Detect 70+ Types of Cancer Before Symptoms Start
A hospital in the United Arab Emirates is rolling out a new way to screen for cancer — and it’s as easy as a blood test. Burjeel Hospitals has introduced the Trucheck™ intelli test, a non-invasive blood test that can detect more than 70 types of cancer, even before symptoms appear. It’s being offered to citizens and residents with a focus on early detection, particularly for people over the age of 40. Unlike traditional screening methods like mammograms or colonoscopies, which only test for one type of cancer at a time, Trucheck can pick up signs of multiple cancers — including those that don’t currently have routine screening options, such as pancreatic, brain, and gastric cancers. “This method is very simple. It’s a simple blood test, where you can pick up a blood sample without fasting, without preparation. It can discover up to 70 different types of cancer,” said Prof. Humaid Al Shamsi, CEO of the Burjeel Cancer Institute and Adjunct Professor at Harvard Medical School, in an interview with Khaleej Times. The test is designed for asymptomatic individuals and aims to fill a major gap in early screening uptake. According to Prof. Al Shamsi, fear and discomfort have kept many from pursuing early cancer testing. “We conducted a study on more than 1,000 members of society a few years ago, and we found that almost 60 per cent were not very keen on early detection and screening. The reasons included the fear of the information — they do not want to know — and fear of the colonoscopy or mammogram processes.” He believes Trucheck could change that. Unlike blood cancers like leukemia or lymphoma, which the test does not detect, the Trucheck test works by identifying circulating tumor cells in the blood — a method that allows for early detection of many solid tumor cancers. Prof. Al Shamsi said the results are fast and highly accurate, with a reported accuracy rate of between 95 to 98 percent. However, like any screening tool, there’s a small risk of false positives — about 1 percent. “The only problem is that you can get a false positive, but this chance is only one per cent. Any test in the world has a chance of false positive. We have to counsel the patient about these risks and be mindful of patients before they undergo this test.” At a cost of between Dh7,000 and Dh8,000 per test, the screening isn’t cheap, but Prof. Al Shamsi said it could prove cost-effective when compared to the price of multiple individual tests. “This can be very cost effective in the long term, and you’ll be testing for more (types of cancer) at reduced costs.” He also noted that the UAE is one of the first countries in the world to adopt the test as a public health initiative, with the Department of Health in Abu Dhabi already rolling it out to Emirati citizens aged 40 and up. “This is considered to be the first country globally to adopt this very new technology for cancer screenings,” he said. The age threshold, he added, is based purely on cancer risk. “Above 40 is simply because a person’s chance of getting any cancer is higher post-40 — that’s the only reason — and it’s more cost effective. I think in the future this will change, actually. But as we get older, there’s a higher risk of having cancer.” Still, Prof. Al Shamsi emphasized that Trucheck is meant to complement, not replace, existing screening programmes. “My advice is to consider cancer screening above the age of 40. We still have ... all the other ways of testing — colonoscopy, fecal occult blood test, mammogram, cervical screening, and also PSA screening. These tests are very important. We should always continue to screen for cancer, because cancer is a silent killer.” He cited a recent case that underscores this urgency. “In fact, even this week, I had a patient in her mid-forties who said, ‘Doctor, how come I have stage four pancreatic cancer and I have no symptoms?’ The reality is, cancer is silent.” That silence, he said, is what makes early, wide-range screening so important. The hope is that with easier access and less fear, more people will be diagnosed earlier — when treatment has the best chance of success.

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From the Streets to the Therapy Chair: Army Veteran Turns His Life Around to Help Others Heal
Chris Sanders never expected to make it to 40. A former soldier from Rotherham, he hit rock bottom after leaving the British Army in 2004, battling PTSD, alcohol addiction, and periods of homelessness. But today, at 49, he’s not just surviving—he’s helping others do the same. “I had to sell my medals to put food on the table,” Sanders said. “But I look back on that time and say without it, I wouldn’t be the man I am today.” Sanders served in Bosnia, Northern Ireland, and Cyprus, sustaining injuries in each posting. He was shot in Bosnia in 1994, stabbed in Northern Ireland in 1996, and hurt during a riot a year later. Like many veterans of his era, he never spoke about the trauma, just carried on with the next assignment. “You never dealt with it,” he said. “But then when you leave the forces, you’re left to your own devices. I didn’t know what was going on.” What followed was years of instability. Two years after leaving the Army, he had what he describes as a “massive emotional and mental breakdown.” “I went on a rampage, broke everything in the house I could physically break,” he said. “It was an angry outburst that scared me so much—that was the point where I needed to know what’s going on.” He turned to Alcoholics Anonymous and met another veteran who was also struggling. That conversation made him realise he wasn’t just drinking—he was self-medicating. He was officially diagnosed with PTSD in 2006. He moved constantly. He lost jobs. Relationships broke down. At his lowest point, he was sleeping rough—in the woods, under bin shelters, even in an old leisure centre in Rotherham, where he huddled near warm air vents. For his son Brandon Jarvis, now 24 and serving in the Royal Navy himself, the impact of those years was deeply felt. “We didn’t know whether he wanted to see us really,” Jarvis said. “It just seemed like we weren’t chosen in a way.” He remembers the hurt of missed visits. “When you’re at school, getting excited to go on holiday and see your dad, and sometimes it just didn’t happen, so it was quite upsetting.” The breakthrough came during a counselling session. “It helped me understand the triggers that were setting me off drinking and the repeated patterns of behaviour over the years,” Sanders said. He started rebuilding—this time from the inside out. He enrolled at a community learning centre in Sheffield to study literacy and numeracy, then took a counselling course at Barnsley College. He now co-runs a counselling service with Rosanna Duggan, a fellow graduate. Their focus is on accessibility, offering therapy on a “pay as you feel” basis to reach those who might otherwise be overlooked. “There are people who’ve missed out,” Sanders said. “It’s not about fixing people, it’s about making people understand themselves more.” He and Duggan are trying to bridge the gap between overstretched NHS services and costly private therapy, experimenting with a hybrid model that doesn’t leave people waiting or priced out. The transformation hasn’t just been professional. Sanders is now in what he calls a “loving relationship” with his three children and three stepdaughters. And for Brandon, the change is striking. “It does make me very proud seeing him go to college and he’s just stayed committed and smashed through it,” he said. “It’s pretty remarkable, to be honest. I think as he’s grown, he’s also grown as a father.” Sanders agrees. “Twenty years ago, I wasn’t going any further than the street or to get beer and fags,” he said. “That’s all I had. Now I have a plan, and it’s genuinely exciting.”

Score (97)
Divers Rescue Entangled Mobula Ray as Sharks Circle — Then It Came Back to Say ‘Thanks’
An underwater rescue mission off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, turned into an unforgettable moment when a mobula ray tangled in fishing rope returned to circle its rescuers — a gesture divers described as a possible “thank you.” The dramatic scene unfolded after a team of free divers and underwater photographers discovered the ray trapped more than 10 meters below the surface, completely ensnared in rope from a shark fisherman’s buoy. Mobula rays, sometimes called flying rays, devil rays, or eagle rays, are relatives of the giant manta ray, though typically smaller and more diverse, with around a dozen known species. Andre Smits, an underwater photographer from Eindhoven, Netherlands, was among the divers who spotted the struggling animal. “We went to one of the shark fishermen’s buoys because we didn’t find any wildlife to interact with that day,” Smits told England’s Southwest News Service. “Our guide jumped in to check the line, popped his head up right away, and said, ‘guys, I need your help. There’s something stuck in the line.’” What they found was a ray in distress, tangled in rope that had looped around nearly every part of its body. The team of seven divers had to work in shifts, cutting the thick line with knives while carefully holding the panicked animal. Three silky sharks, each about 2.5 meters long, circled nearby. Smits said the rescue was especially delicate due to the rope’s tension and the risk of the ray jerking free at the wrong moment. “The buoy line, being artificial material, could be like a knife in its own right if someone was holding too tightly,” he said. “The animal was in freak mode, starting to swim around to try to get free, but then it understood that it was stuck.” A free-diving trainer in the group dove below the ray to cut the rope from underneath, allowing the team to bring the ray closer to the surface. Working methodically, they eventually freed the animal, which had sustained injuries from the entanglement but was still strong enough to swim. “The beautiful thing was we cut her free, we released her, and she swam away about 30 meters,” Smits said. “And then it felt like she decided to come back.” To the team’s astonishment, the ray circled back toward them. “She really swam back to us and did a ‘thank you’ circle,” Smits recalled. “She came right between us to our faces, almost giving us a grateful hug.” Despite the danger posed by nearby sharks and the risk of blood in the water, the divers managed to complete the rescue without injury — to themselves or the ray. The group documented the entire encounter, highlighting not only the intelligence of these marine creatures but also the growing threats they face from human debris. Mobula rays, like their manta cousins, are known for their graceful movements and often curious nature — qualities that made this encounter all the more striking. Smits called the experience “one of the most beautiful moments” he’s witnessed in the ocean.