It’s not from Cyberpunk 2077 or RoboCop. It’s new camera technology powered by machine learning that could let police identify people deemed dangerous, and those with arrest warrants, in real time.
December is kind of a quiet month for action fans on Amazon Prime Video, but there’s at least one recent arrival that’s going to heat things up. Bullet Train has made its Prime Video debut after a ...
Farah Otero-Amad is a trilingual video producer at The Wall Street Journal, where she scripts, shoots, hosts, and edits vertical videos reaching millions across platforms. Her work makes global issues ...
President Donald Trump's Justice Department faces a Friday deadline to release a massive trove of documents from its investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, ...
The Komodo dragon doesn’t chase, it waits. This video reveals the chilling strategy behind how the world’s largest lizard takes down prey up to 20 times its size. With a bite that delivers more than ...
Journal Sentinel beat writers John Steppe and Ben Steele preview the Dec. 6 game between Wisconsin and Marquette at the Kohl Center.
Talkin’ Spartans: On Michigan State football’s win over Maryland and Jonathan Smith’s future Lansing State Journal columnist Graham Couch and Detroit Free Press beat writer Chris Solari discuss ...
As American shoppers buy less packaged foods, Big Food has leaned on a familiar excuse: It’s the economy, stupid. That explanation misses a crucial shift: middle- and high-income Americans are still ...