The moment President Trump signs the Iran deal at the Palace of Versailles.
The agreement was finalized during a dinner hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron inside the historic palace.
The signing marked a major diplomatic milestone after months of negotiations aimed at ending the conflict between the U.S. and Iran.
Welcome to the NVIDIA RTX Spark channel.
A new superchip for the age of personal AI.
Don't worry, your favorite NVIDIA local AI content continues on right here, just with a new headliner.
Let's get started...
TEAM TAIWAN!
"I love my ecosystem here" - Jensen
"Our businesses are growing incredibly. Someone told me last night the annual GDP of Taiwan is going to grow 10%" $NVDA
Today, we remember a legend.
On this day in history, Harambe would have celebrated another birthday. An icon that became part of internet history, American culture, and an entire generation’s timeline.
Tomorrow marks 10 years since we lost him. Ten years since the moment the world stopped scrolling and collectively mourned something bigger than a meme.
He became a symbol of loyalty, strength, chaos, unity, and the strange beauty of the internet bringing millions of people together for one cause: never forgetting Harambe.
Everyone remembers where they were when they heard the news. And somehow, a decade later, his legacy still lives on.
Gone, but never forgotten.
Rest easy to a true patriot. 🕊️🇺🇸
May 27, 1999 — May 28, 2016
Forever in our hearts.
King68 responds to people saying he “failed” because he never made the NBA 👀
“Basketball paid over $150,000 in tuition.”
“I graduated college because of basketball.”
“If that’s your idea of failure, I don’t know what to tell you.”
The $11 BILLION MAN!
He rejected me 3 months ago, but I finally interviewed @BillAckman, one of the greatest investors of all time.
I interviewed him in Beverly Hills, and I asked him how he got RICH and his best investment advice for people in business.
I also asked him the best industry people should be looking to get into in today’s world, and his number one networking tip for people starting out.
Lastly, I asked him for the best advice he’d give the younger generation.
NEW: Judge rips into man, saying, “His address will forever be the Department of Corrections,” after sentencing him to life in prison without parole for the murder of his brother, his brother's wife, and his brother's children.
Paul Caneiro, 59, shot and killed his brother, Keith Caneiro, 50, who was his business partner, before going into his home and shooting and stabbing his wife, Jennifer, 45.
Paul then stabbed Keith's 2 children, Sophia, 8, and Jesse, 11, before setting the house on fire to make it seem like he was also being targeted.
The autopsy showed the kids died with smoke inhalation injuries, meaning the children were still alive when Paul lit the house on fire.
Monmouth County Judge Marc Lemieux said the children tried to fight off their 230-pound uncle, but Sophia, only weighing around 45 pounds, and Jesse, weighing around 90 pounds, didn't stand a chance.
Prosecutors said that Paul committed this heinous act after Keith confronted him about stealing $80,000 from Keith's trust, which was meant to help fund his life insurance policy.
During the trial, Jennifer's mother, Bette Karidis, said, “A thousand years would not be enough… In an act of pure evil, he took the life of four innocent people… His own flesh and blood out of greed and selfishness. He disgusts us.”
Paul was found guilty of all charges by the jury, including murder, aggravated arson, weapons possession, and hindering apprehension.
After citing all of his sentences, Lemieux told Paul, “You are no longer Paul Caneiro … you are a quadruple murderer, who slaughtered innocent children. That is your identity… confined to a 4-foot by 7-foot cell until your final breath.”
NEW: Students go nuts after donor announces during his commencement speech that he is paying off all of their senior year debts.
Anil Kochhar and his wife decided to give the gift to all ~200 graduates in N.C. State's family.
Kochhar is the son of Prakash Chand Kochhar, an immigrant from India who studied textile manufacturing in Raleigh.
"My father found not just an education, but an opportunity that allowed him to build a life, support his family, and begin a legacy that continues today. And it will never stop, never," Kochhar said.