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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Monday 13 March 2017

Business Outsider

Kim Jong Un may be about to learn what a "decapitation attack" looks like. New York may be about to learn what snowstorms lo
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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Kim Jong Un may be about to learn what a "decapitation attack" looks like. New York may be about to learn what snowstorms looked like 129 years ago. And the black swans are out.
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Even Elon Musk can't believe the rally of support behind fixing Australian energy problem

The Tesla energy conversation in Australia continues to push forward.
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Sean Spicer says Trump 'doesn't really think' Obama 'personally' wiretapped Trump

White House press secretary Sean Spicer altered Trump's claim that Obama directed an illegal wire tap during the presidential election.
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Ford chairman on flying cars: 'Most people can't drive in two dimensions, much less three'

While the tech and automotive worlds have been racing to build self-driving cars, there's another potential revolution going on in the personal transportation industry. flying cars.
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The tomato in your pasta tonight may be traced back to the ground where it was harvested

A tech company in rural Victoria has created an Internet of Things (IoT) system for Japanese food processing firm Kogame that allows a piece of vegetable to be tracked from the point it was harvested to the dinner plate.
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Theresa May to be given the power to trigger Article 50 after the Brexit bill passes

Theresa May is to be given the power to trigger Article 50 -- the two-year formal process by which Britain will leave the EU -- after both houses of parliament vote to pass the Brexit bill unamended.
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The Mark Zuckerberg myth: Most startup founders are not uni dropouts

More than four in five startup founders in Australia are university graduates, smashing the romantic stereotypes of Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates making their dreams come true after dropping out of tertiary education.

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