NCAA, Michigan reach agreement on recruiting violations investigation
The NCAA announced punishments for Michigan after it reached an agreement with the university for what the organization said were recruiting violations.
The NCAA announced punishments for Michigan after it reached an agreement with the university for what the organization said were recruiting violations.
This ruling is unrelated to the Michigan sign-stealing investigation, which remains ongoing.
Center Vladislav Golden is following coach Dusty May from Florida Atlantic to Michigan. The 7-foot-1 big man has one season of eligibility remaining.
The addition of von Oelhoffen further strengthens a Trojans roster that projects to compete for a national championship.
Meta is offering some creators thousands of dollars if they go viral on Threads.
Apple’s iPadOS has been branded a gatekeeper under the EU’s DMA legislation, which means the software has to comply with a host of rules. The company has six months to comply to avoid fines.
Ram hasn't said when or if it will discontinue the truck in the U.S., but this move doesn't look good for the previous-generation Classic.
Some major deals on board: a Dyson stick vac for $80 off, an HP laptop for just $279 and a powerful tower fan at a 40%-plus markdown.
At its annual GitHub Universe conference in San Francisco on Monday, GitHub announced Copilot Workspace, a dev environment that taps what GitHub describes as "Copilot-powered agents" to help developers brainstorm, plan, build, test and run code in natural language. Jonathan Carter, head of GitHub Next, GitHub's software R&D team, pitches Workspace as somewhat of an evolution of GitHub's AI-powered coding assistant Copilot into a more general tool, building on recently introduced capabilities like Copilot Chat, which lets developers ask questions about code in natural language.
The stories you need to start your day: Oklahoma tornado outbreak, Taylor Swift’s album sales record and more in today’s edition of The Yodel newsletter
Kubik, a plastic upcycling startup, has raised a $1.9 million seed extension, months after announcing initial equity investment. The startup’s latest investment is from African Renaissance Partners, an East African venture capital firm; Endgame Capital, an investor with a bias for technologies around climate change; and King Philanthropies, a climate and extreme poverty investor. The fresh capital comes as the startup scales its operations in Ethiopia following the launch of its factory in Addis Ababa, where it is turning plastic waste into interlocking building materials like bricks, columns, beams and jambs.
Daigneault was also voted Coach of the Year by his NBA head coaching peers.
University leaders need to "control" pro-Palestinian protestors, the Senator said.
The FTC’s decision to outlaw nearly all noncompete agreements could restructure the balance of power between businesses and workers — if it survives legal challenges.
Yahoo Sports' Charles McDonald breaks down the Bengals' 2024 draft.
Last week, the U.K. announced its largest ever military support package for Ukraine. In fact, the London Defense Tech Hackathon was the first-ever event to bring together some of the U.K.'s brightest minds in technology, venture capital, and national security in a military setting. The idea was to hack together ideas to both assist Ukraine and create a far more porous layer between the worlds of fast-paced civilian tech and the very different world of the military.
This week, the Supreme Court held a nearly three-hour hearing on whether Trump can be held criminally liable for trying to undo his 2020 election loss — or for anything else he did during his presidency.
Amazon Prime Video and the NBA are reportedly nearing an agreement that would make the streaming and retail giant a major platform for game telecasts.
Protests are currently happening at college campuses around the country as students show support for Palestinians in Gaza.
Universities across the country are taking varying approaches to encampments that have taken root on their campuses, with some allowing them to remain and others calling in police to break them up.
Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker concluded his testimony about a deal to kill negative stories about former President Trump during the 2016 campaign, and two more witnesses were called.