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The clock in the Windows 11 taskbar has been given a makeover that Windows developers had opposed for decades.
The weird clock malfunction allowed the Saints to spike the ball with three seconds left in the game. In other words, the four-to-five second hitch basically preserved an extra play for the Saints.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has reset the iconic Doomsday Clock to 89 seconds to midnight. For the second consecutive year, it is the closest the world has ever been to global catastrophe.
NFL fans have questions after the game clock inexplicably stopped with nine seconds left in the fourth quarter in a mistake that nearly turned the fate of the Saints-Commanders game.
What it's meant in the minors: When stricter pitch clock enforcement -- based on a 14-second clock with the bases empty and an 18-second clock with runners on -- began in the minors earlier this ...
Picture a clock ticking so steadily that it doesn’t lose a second, even after running for 1 billion years. Scientists are now closer than ever to realizing that level of timekeeping precision ...
In 2015, the NCAA shortened the shot clock from 35 seconds to 30 for college basketball. What would happen if it shaved another six off, like the rest of the hoops world?
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, the closest to catastrophe in its nearly eight-decade history. Here's a look at how — and why — it's moved.
Switching to optical clocks would have cascading ripple effects from meteorology to basic physics.
The world remains the closest it has ever been to the symbolic hour of the apocalypse, with the Doomsday Clock set once again to 90 seconds to “midnight” for 2024.
This year we reset the Doomsday Clock to 90 seconds to midnight – holding at the closest we have ever been to apocalypse. Teetering near the edge. Need a break?
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