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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Sunday 15 October 2017

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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

North Korea warns Australia, again. People who get to work in treehouses. Is Steve Bannon the real Trump instrument of doom? And the push to make Aussie digital dollarydoos real.
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Bitcoin hit an all-time high on Friday -- here's how you buy and sell it

Bitcoin hit a record high of $US5,866 on Friday, October 13, after a dismal September in which the cryptocurrency fell to $US2,900 a coin on September 15.
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6 things Australian traders will be talking about this morning

Good morning. To the scoreboard. Dow. 22,871.72 +30.71 (+0.13%) S&P 500. 2,553.17 +2.24 (+0.09%) AUD/USD. 0.78951 +0.0067 (+0.86%) ASX200 SPI futures (December contracts). 5,766 (-2)
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Australian auction clearance rates rebound after falling to a near 2-year low in early October

Australian capital city auction clearance rates rebounded last week after falling to the lowest level since January 2016 in early October, driven by an uptick in Sydney and Melbourne.
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These maps show how much damage a North Korean thermonuclear weapon could do to major American cities

Nuclear weapons may be humanity's most terrifying creations, but most people would be hard-pressed to say what, exactly, such an explosion might do to their town or city.
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We visited the posh English preschool in Manhattan where manners are paramount and 4-year-olds eat off china

The English private school that educated princes William and Harry found a home in New York City this year. 
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This titanium iPhone case costs $US1,700 -- more than the most expensive iPhone it could possibly protect

iPhones are more expensive than ever, but there's a subset of users who want even more luxury, and for whom cost isn't an factor. 
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Amazon has triggered a $6 billion bidding war in the US -- here are the craziest proposals for its new headquarters

After Amazon announced in September that it will build a second headquarters in an undetermined location, more than 50 North American cities concocted bids to persuade the company to choose them.

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