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Walmart s online store isn t profitable Now it s borrowing from Amazon s playbook

Walmart s online store isn t profitable. Now it s borrowing from Amazon s playbook CNN 5/4/2021 By Nathaniel Meyersohn, CNN Business © Gabby Jones/Bloomberg/Getty Images The Walmart+ home screen on a laptop computer arranged in the Brooklyn Borough of New York, U.S., on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2020. The world s largest retailer wouldn t provide a full-year forecast and executives offered only generalities on its much-touted subscription service, Walmart+, despite repeated attempts from analysts on a conference call to get more. Photographer: Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images Let s say you re shopping for something on Walmart.com maybe t-shirts. Popular Searches Under the category on the site, you ll see a number of options shipped and sold by Walmart itself. Then, there are others. You can get a Ford Mustang tee from a third-party seller named Wild Bobby, or one boasting Disney s Stitch character from the seller Open and Clothing. Basically, there

US Coronavirus: There are two key things America now needs to tackle in its Covid-19 vaccination efforts

US Coronavirus: There are two key things America now needs to tackle in its Covid-19 vaccination efforts CNN 2 hrs ago By Christina Maxouris, CNN © Gabby Jones/Bloomberg/Getty Images Pedestrians pass in front of Covid-19 vaccination site signs outside the American Museum of Natural History in New York on Friday. Experts say they saw that coming. In the first few months, we were capturing the part of the population that really wanted these vaccines, infectious diseases expert Dr. Mati Hlatshwayo Davis told CNN on Saturday. But now we ve reached the wait and see crowd and the outright I don t want it crowd.

US Coronavirus: There are two key things America now needs to tackle in its Covid-19 vaccination efforts

US Coronavirus: There are two key things America now needs to tackle in its Covid-19 vaccination efforts CNN 5/3/2021 By Christina Maxouris, CNN © Gabby Jones/Bloomberg/Getty Images Pedestrians pass in front of Covid-19 vaccination site signs outside the American Museum of Natural History in New York on Friday. Experts say they saw that coming. In the first few months, we were capturing the part of the population that really wanted these vaccines, infectious diseases expert Dr. Mati Hlatshwayo Davis told CNN on Saturday. But now we ve reached the wait and see crowd and the outright I don t want it crowd.

Vaccines created false sense of security worldwide, WHO chief scientist says

Vaccines created false sense of security worldwide, WHO chief scientist says From CNN’s Keri Enriquez A nurse prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine in Quimper, France, on April 30. Fred Tanneau/AFP/Getty Images The safety and availability of Covid-19 vaccines created a false sense of security worldwide that the pandemic was ending, according to World Health Organization’s Chief Scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan. “I think vaccines did create a false sense of security, to the extent that people around the world, even in countries that were not significantly vaccinating, thought that now the end of the pandemic had come because just because we had developed a number of vaccines and that they were proven to be safe and effective,” Swaminathan said in a panel discussion hosted by Physicians for Human Rights Friday.

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