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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Monday 12 September 2016

Business Outsider

The cloud is overrated. Don't even turn on your Note 7. Proof that taking more holidays increases your wages. And our annual
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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

The cloud is overrated. Don't even turn on your Note 7. Proof that taking more holidays increases your wages. And our annual reminder that there was such a thing as "Agadoo".
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6 things Australian traders will be talking about this morning

Global markets dodged what could have an ugly extension of Friday's selloff in bonds and stocks after Federal Reserve governor Lael Brainard lowered expectations for an interest rate hike.
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Apple and Amazon are destined to battle for the future of computing

Apple gave us a tantalising glimpse at a possible future for computing in the form of the AirPods -- a $159 pair of wireless earbuds that provide one-touch access to the Siri digital voice assistant and everything she can do.
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Facebook just rubbed one of Google's biggest missed opportunities in its face

Using Facebook Messenger instead of one of Google's chat apps is a "no-brainer," according to David Marcus. But he is Facebook's VP of messaging products.
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Pokémon Go is finally giving players more rewards for walking

A large update to Pokémon Go is currently rolling out across the world. The biggest change? The buddy system! 
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Barbra Streisand rewrote a classic song to completely bash Donald Trump

The legend performed at a Hillary Clinton event on Friday and rewrote the lyrics to Stephen Sondheim's classic "Send in the Clowns" to slam the Republican presidential nominee.
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There are 2 OPECs

OPEC production stayed around record highs in August. The 14-member oil cartel saw output fall by about 23,000 barrels per day to 33.2 million in August, according to external sources cited in the OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report.
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$6 billion Atlassian once took a $60 million investment it didn't need so employees could cash out

Business software company Atlassian, now a $6 billion publicly-traded company, has been profitable since 2005. Better yet, Atlassian did it without doing a traditional round of venture capital investment.

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