harold by them. in the south, temperatures rising even faster. 120 degrees in some parts of texas. now not just texas. get ready, this could get worse. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. glad to have you. fox on top of more nature getting over the top. to rick reichmuth. what are we looking at, rick? not only is it abnormal to be the c-named storms, it s where they are that is abnormal. they ve been forming in the open atlantic. the waves that came off the coast of africa. that generally happens to mid september, we get into that type of tropical development. so getting there, we ve never had two that formed to the east of the lesser antilles. all forming in a time that we might be looking at a lower than average season. currently, we have bret, cindy. there s no real threat to land for this. we ve had some strong wind gusts. if you throw up weather max 16 behind me, i can show you what s going on here. wind gusts of 69 miles an hour in st. lucia. bret, down across parts
but it is very different in the sense that president biden, it is thought to be about ten documents that he had done this was during his time as vice president and as a senator, some were found at his home in wilmington in delaware and others at the headquarters of a former think tank he was a part of. but he cooperated with the department ofjustice in order to get those documents back, the same thing happened with former vice president mike pence who is not going to be charged by the department ofjustice so it is very different, but it has not stopped trump of accusing president biden of weaponising the department ofjustice to go after him which president biden has completely dismissed. as you mention, he did say republicans are treated differently to democrats by the justice department. a lot of messages that came out in his speech, but of course one of the questions that experts have tried to answer is whether or not he could face prison time if found guilty, if convicted.
time artificial intelligence has been all around us. you may not have noticed has been all around us. you may not have noticed it has been all around us. you may not have noticed it but has been all around us. you may not have noticed it but your - not have noticed it but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smart phones, they have all been steadily improving their performance, because the computers behind them have been learning. computers behind them have been learnina. ., , computers behind them have been learnina. . , , ., learning. then last year, something important - learning. then last year, - something important happened. ai got human, or at least it felt like it did. felt like it did. companies like google felt like it did. companies like google and felt like it did. companies like google and open - felt like it did. companies like google and open ai l felt like it did. companies - like google and open ai started showing off
this week, we re taking a deep dive into artificial intelligence, and how it s transforming the world around us. yeah, that includes in healthcare, where we meet the ai helping radiologists to diagnose cancer. you can see these little white dots. the ai is highly suspicious. and in the fast moving game of ai artwork, who owns what? and can artists protect their work? for some time, artificial intelligence has been all around us. you might not have noticed it, but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smart phones, they ve all been steadily improving their performance because the computers behind them have been learning. and then last year, something important happened. yeah. ai got human or at least it felt like it did. companies like google and open ai started showing off stunning photorealistic images like these, all created by ai from short text descriptions. and then ai started having conversations with us. they were starting to generate st
the bbc can t verify that figure, but understands many children have gone from care homes and residential schools. 0ur eastern europe correspondent sarah rainsford has followed the story of parents desperate attempts to bring their children home. it is the most anxious journey of these mothers lives. dashing to reach the children they d been separated from for six months. ukrainian children, sent to summer camps run by russia, and then never returned. alla tells me every minute now counts. the children have been told they ll be put in care if their mums don t come for them. that means a gruelling trip across thousands of miles, from ukraine, deep into the country that s declared war on them. translation: i should never have let him go but we didn t know. - theyjust took him and that was that. my son had seen explosions. i wanted him to relax from the war, and then this happened. ijust hope we make it in time. russia has been removing children from parts of ukraine it occupi