Welcome to My Blog

10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Monday 22 May 2017

Business Outsider

Deaths reported in a "serious incident" at an Ariana Grande concert in the UK. Trump's hands come under scrutiny in three wa
Business Insider Australia Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Enable Images to View

10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Deaths reported in a "serious incident" at an Ariana Grande concert in the UK. Trump's hands come under scrutiny in three ways. And the "alien megastructure" has fired up again.
Enable Images to View
 

STUDY: Upselling by predatory funeral directors can add 1000% to the cost of a funeral

The average basic funeral in Australia costs about $6,000 but all regulatory requirements related to the disposal of a body can be met for as little as $1,200.
Enable Images to View
 

Here are BAML's latest currency market forecasts

Courtesy of Claudio Piron and Athanasios Vamvakidis, FX strategists at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch (BAML), here are the bank's FX forecasts for G10 and emerging market currencies over the next 18 months.
Enable Images to View
 

Marvel reportedly trademarks 'Hail Hydra' after site redirects to Trump's bio on the White House website

After news broke that hail-hydra.com redirected to the White House website, Marvel Comics apparently made moves to trademark the famous phrase.
Enable Images to View
 

The auto industry is facing 'unprecedented change' -- and Ford needs to move faster

Mark Fields stepped down as Ford CEO on Monday and was replaced by Jim Hackett, who was previously the chairman of Ford Smart Mobility. 
Enable Images to View
 

Apple just launched a new attack on Android

Apple is back in the business of trying to persuade consumers to switch to its products from a rival platform -- only this time it's targeting users of Android, not Windows.
Enable Images to View
 

How a spreadsheet born in a Sydney living room became a fintech with 300,000 users

It was only in 2012 that Pocketbook founders Bosco Tan and Alvin Singh had enough of not knowing where their money was going, and decided they could only fix the problem themselves.

No comments:

Post a Comment