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CNA
15-07-2025
- General
- CNA
Test today category
New: You can now listen to articles. This audio is generated by an AI tool.


Forbes
07-07-2025
- General
- Forbes
How To Help People That Don't Want Help
Not open to help You can't. Click here for a categorized list of my Forbes articles (of which this is #952)
Yahoo
25-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Today's Wordle answer for Tuesday, June 24
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Feel free to use our freshly-written hint for today's Wordle whenever you think you need a bit of a boost. Unleash it at the start to give your opening guess a helping hand, or save it for later, when you need to get rid of those last few gaps. However your game goes, don't forget that the June 24 (1466) answer is always here if you need it. I was convinced that every new row today was going to be the winner. I'd been careful. Clever. Confident. Every row turned out to be anything but—some of them were just as wrong as the one before. It was annoying to have the rug pulled out from underneath me with each new guess, but to be fair it did make my long and winding road to victory much more interesting. The best of the best in any category. The strongest. The smartest. The toughest. Always at the top, always superior. Yes, there is a double letter in today's puzzle. A good starting word can be the difference between victory and defeat with the daily puzzle, but once you've got the basics, it's much easier to nail down those Wordle wins. And as there's nothing quite like a small victory to set you up for the rest of the day, here are a few tips to help set you on the right path: A good opening guess should contain a mix of unique consonants and vowels. Narrow down the pool of letters quickly with a tactical second guess. Watch out for letters appearing more than once in the answer. There's no racing against the clock with Wordle so you don't need to rush for the answer. Treating the game like a casual newspaper crossword can be a good tactic; that way, you can come back to it later if you're coming up blank. Stepping away for a while might mean the difference between a win and a line of grey squares. Fancy winning Wordle? The answer to the June 24 (1466) Wordle is ELITE. Past Wordle answers can give you some excellent ideas for fun starting words that keep your daily puzzle-solving fresh. They are also a good way to eliminate guesses for today's Wordle, as the answer is unlikely to be repeated. Here are some recent Wordle answers: June 23: ODDLY June 22: THRUM June 21: GLADE June 20: TAUPE June 19: CURIO June 18: MUNCH June 17: PRANK June 16: PETTY June 15: QUAIL June 14: GHOST Wordle gives you six rows of five boxes each day, and you'll need to work out which secret five-letter word is hiding inside them to keep up your winning streak. You should start with a strong word like ARISE, or any other word that contains a good mix of common consonants and multiple vowels. You'll also want to avoid starting words with repeating letters, as you're wasting the chance to potentially eliminate or confirm an extra letter. Once you hit Enter, you'll see which ones you've got right or wrong. If a box turns ⬛️, it means that letter isn't in the secret word at all. 🟨 means the letter is in the word, but not in that position. 🟩 means you've got the right letter in the right spot. Your second guess should compliment the starting word, using another "good" word to cover any common letters you missed last time while also trying to avoid any letter you now know for a fact isn't present in today's answer. With a bit of luck, you should have some coloured squares to work with and set you on the right path. After that, it's just a case of using what you've learned to narrow your guesses down to the right word. You have six tries in total and can only use real words (so no filling the boxes with EEEEE to see if there's an E). Don't forget letters can repeat too (ex: BOOKS). If you need any further advice feel free to check out our Wordle tips, and if you'd like to find out which words have already been used you can scroll to the relevant section above. Originally, Wordle was dreamed up by software engineer Josh Wardle, as a surprise for his partner who loves word games. From there it spread to his family, and finally got released to the public. The word puzzle game has since inspired tons of games like Wordle, refocusing the daily gimmick around music or math or geography. It wasn't long before Wordle became so popular it was sold to the New York Times for seven figures. Surely it's only a matter of time before we all solely communicate in tricolor boxes.


Times
15-06-2025
- General
- Times
Times Cryptic No 29256 The Times & The Sunday Times
A Puzzles subscription gives you unlimited access to Times Puzzles. It also gives you access to 30 articles per calendar month on The Times website. You can upgrade to any of our digital subscriptions at any time by calling Customer Services on 0800 068 4965. Call us Monday – Friday 8am to 7pm or at the weekends 8am to 4pm. You won't be charged for your new subscription until your next billing date. You will continue to be billed on the same date each month as your original billing date.
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WIRED
08-06-2025
- WIRED
The Best Read-It-Later Apps for Curating Your Longreads
Jun 8, 2025 8:00 AM With the popular app Pocket going away, you'll need a new way to catch up on those articles you've been meaning to read. Here are the best options. All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. It's not easy keeping up with everything that's written on the web, especially not if you've got a dozen open browser tabs vying for your attention. This is where read-it-later apps come in. These apps let you siphon off articles you want to get back to later, at a more leisurely pace, when the work of the day is done. You can catch up on your reading in bed, on the subway, over breakfast, or whenever you like. Sadly, we just lost one of the more capable read-it-later apps: Mozilla is shutting down Pocket as it focuses its efforts on its Firefox browser, and Pocket data will be permanently deleted on October 8. If you're looking for a new home for your archive of articles, or you're keen to see what read-it-later apps are capable of doing for the first time, you'll find our pick for the best options below. Instapaper Instapaper offers a clean, calm interface. Courtesy of David Nield Instapaper is one of the oldest and most comprehensive read-it-later apps out there, and it does a fine job of turning chaotic webpages into calm, orderly blocks of text that look like they're displayed on an e-reader. Articles can be added straight from your browser, pasted in manually, or added via email, and there are apps for reading saved articles in the web browser and on your mobile devices. There are lots of neat little features hidden away in Instapaper, like the ability to organize articles with folders and tags. If you decide you like Instapaper enough, there's a paid tier too: For $6 a month it adds features including the option to have articles read out to you, a ''speed read'' mode that displays one word at a time, and the ability to send articles to an Amazon Kindle. Instapaper (freemium) for web, Android, iOS Feedly Use Feedly to track your favorite sites on the web. Courtesy of David Nield Feedly can help you keep up with everything being published on your favorite sites, and curate a read-it-later list of articles you want to get back to when you have the time. You get a host of features for sorting the incoming deluge of posts, from filters and keyword searches to folders for organization and a choice of list layouts across your devices. Articles can be saved or shared with a click or a tap, and as your read-it-later section is built up, it appears in the main navigation pane. You can either read simplified articles in Feedly, or click out to the originals on the web. A Feedly Pro subscription ($7 a month) lets you monitor more feeds and access more advanced features like integrations with apps like OneNote, Evernote, and LinkedIn. Feedly (freemium) for web, Android, iOS Matter Matter supports multiple content types. Courtesy of David Nield Matter is fully aware that Pocket is shutting down, and is offering Pocket users half-price on a premium plan (the normal price is $15 a month). There is a free tier, but if you pay, you get access to features such as text-to-speech for articles, and options for annotating saved posts. Matter can also import all your saved Pocket articles, so switching over is pretty seamless. The idea is you can pull in all kinds of content, including web articles, PDFs, newsletters, and social media threads. Everything is presented through a polished, elegant interface, with options for sharing links and tagging articles to keep them organized. Another nice touch are the reading recommendations that pop up in various places around the app. Android users take note, Matter is for iPhones and iPads only. Matter (freemium) for web, iOS Use to track everything you want to read. Courtesy of David Nield describes itself as a bookmarks manager, but that's really just a read-it-later service under another name. It runs across the web and mobile, accepts article submissions via any browser, and comes with a whole host of integrations across apps like Evernote (for adding bookmarks to notes) and Google Drive (for backing up bookmarks). As well as saving articles, you can store video and audio links in too, and everything is accessible through a clean, intuitive interface that's easy to get around and organize. Sign up for a Pro account, which will set you back $3 a month, and you get access to extras including article annotations, reminders, and full-text search for your bookmarks. (freemium) for web, Android, iOS Readwise Reader Readwise Reader is packed with read-it-later features. Courtesy of David Nield Readwise Reader packs in just about every feature you could want from a read-it-later service, including not just the ability to save articles, but also support for videos, social media posts, PDFs, and emails. There's text-to-speech here, article annotations, Kindle support, and comprehensive search and sorting tools to help manage your archive. This doesn't come cheap though: Readwise Reader will set you back $13 a month, which also gets you everything in Readwise, a full featured note-taking app. You can however test the service out for free for 30 days to see if you like it before paying, and there is an import option for Pocket, so you can bring all of your existing articles along with you. Readwise Reader ($13 a month) for web, Android, iOS