now on bbc news, it s time for click. this week bikes. boats. bots. and shops. hey, welcome to click! this week, we re going to talk about locking stuff and keeping stuff safe, which is why lara currently has a safe on her lap. well, it s a safe with a bit of a difference. you know when you re at the dining table and it feels like everybody has a reason that they have to do something on their phone there and then? laughs. yeah, yeah, yeah. well, this aims to overcome that. it s somewhere to lock away your devices so that you can have some good quality family time. laughs. right! so does it have a key, a combination, or is it on a timer, what? 0k, well, that is the problem. because there are timer options you can set it for an hour, overnight, for 2h hours but there s also a passcode to be able to open it in an emergency, so whoever knows the passcode needs to also be the person with the willpower not to open it. right. plus, it s not exactly the sturdiest of devices, so
this week bikes. boats. bots. and shops. hey, welcome to click. this week we re going to talk about locking stuff and keeping stuff safe, which is why lara currently has a safe on her lap. well, it s a safe with a bit of a difference. you know when you re at the dining table and it feels like everybody has a reason that they have to do something on their phone there and then? laughs. yeah, yeah, yeah. well, this aims to overcome that. it s somewhere to lock away your devices so that you can have some good quality family time. laughs. right! so does it have a key, a combination, or is it on a timer, what? 0k, well, that is the problem. because there are timer options you can set it for an hour, overnight, for 2h hours but there s also a passcode to be able to open it in an emergency, so whoever knows the passcode needs to also be the person with the willpower not to open it. right. plus, it s not exactly the sturdiest of devices, you re the boss of the safe in your house
let s start with alphabet. the owner of google has announced record profits for a second consecutive quarter, as people stuck at home during the pandemic have used more of its services. net profits jumped by 162% to almost $18 billion in the three months to march, as advertising revenue surged by a third. analysts had expected a good performance as economies around the world continue to reopen, prompting more spending on online advertising. this has boosted google s search engine business, where revenuejumped by 30% to just under $32 billion. joining me now is masha cilliers, who s a specialist partner at be shaping the future. it is not surprising to know that google would do well, we are stuck at home, we are forced online to shop and search and do what we do. what about the months ahead as economies open up more and more? ,., ., economies open up more and more? , ., ., ., more? good morning, indeed, incredible more? good morning, indeed, incredible results more? good m
stop, the suspect, a 34-year-old career criminal with 21 prior arrests. more on those charges and the service for officer diller with former nypd commissioner bill bratton coming up. but first to baltimore where the search for four remaining victims has been put on hold as the largest crane on the east coast has arrived to help remove 4,000 tons of debris from the collapsed key bridge and the cargo vessel itself. maryland governor wes moore is in a closed door briefing right now at the command center, and he s going to join us after that wraps up in an exclusive interview on the very latest. plus it is now one year and one day since wall street journal reporter evan gersch covisit was wrong evan gershkovich was detained in the russia. a moscow court just extended his detention by at least another three months. lots of breaking news to get to, so let s get to it. neil: welcome, everybody, i m neil cavuto. we want to go to wallet baltimore right now, make way to moving
to boost foreign investments in the country as its own economic engine slows. for clues on what we can expect. mattie bekink of the economist intelligence unit spoke to us. i think one of the reasons that this meeting and the stream of executives and world leaders turning to china in the last few months since the very surprisingly exit from the zero covid and the reopening is because there has been a perception gap that has only widened in the three years that china was close. but i mean by thatis china was close. but i mean by that is the perception of china from outside even those who have businesses here and for whom china is a very important market and the lived reality on the ground. that is true anywhere in the world but i think some of the geopolitical tensions and confusion during the pandemic. particularly contributed to this perception 93p- contributed to this perception gap. so what they will find is, one, but they will discover is a chance to revisit their own tea