Boiling water Warning: If you are going to drink water, please boil the water first, as water quality decreases during bushfires

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power has issued a boil water notice as brush fires continue to ravage Southern California.

The notice has been issued for Pacific Palisades and adjacent communities north of San Vicente Boulevard for the next 48 hours, the LADWP said.

“This applies to water that is used for brushing teeth, making ice cubes, and food preparation such as washing produce,” the LAWDP’s website said.

Officials said boiled tap water or bottled water should be used for drinking and cooking purposes. Tap water should be boiled for one minute and then cooled.

At a news conference Wednesday morning, Chief Executive Officer and Engineer Janisse Quiñones said the demand for LADWP has been “tremendous.” She explained that they’ve pushed their water systems to extreme levels for several hours straight.

With the increased use of the systems, the water pressure has lowered. Quiñones said as the pressure lowers the water quality also lowers.

“Please if you’re going to be drinking water you need to boil the water,” she said.

She encouraged customers across Los Angeles, not only in the Palisades to try and converse water. The fire departments and other agencies helping battle the flames need as much water as they can get.

“We are fighting a wildfire with an urban water system and that is really challenging,” she said.

To see or not to see: ABC’s “Gears,” which stars Tim Allen and Kate Dennings as a… How to watch the premiere on ABC for free

Tim Allen and Kat Dennings are returning to the sitcom screen, this time as an estranged father-daughter duo. “Shifting Gears” premieres Wednesday, Jan. 8, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Watch the new series for free with a trial from Fubo or DIRECTV Stream. You can also watch it on Jan. 9, with a free Hulu trial or Hulu with the Disney Bundle.

About the show:
Matt is a stubborn, widowed owner of a classic car restoration shop and does things his way. But that’s about to change. The real restoration happens when his estranged daughter Riley moves into his house with her kids.

In tonight’s series premiere, “Restoration,” Matt is confronted with his most unexpected and challenging project yet – restoring his relationship with his estranged daughter and her kids. As Riley moves back in under his roof, the family will have to adjust to a new normal.

Tune in tonight, Jan. 8, at 8/7c on ABC.

Where to watch ABC:
Fubo (free trial) – Get your first month of Fubo for $79.99. Stream 200+ top channels of live TV, sports and news without cable. (Participating plans only. Taxes and fees may apply.) Plans include Cloud DVR as well as a free trial.
DIRECTV Stream (try it free) – With plans starting at $79.99/month, switch to DIRECTV Stream to enjoy 75+ channels and numerous add-ons. Click here to explore more DIRECTV options.
Hulu (7-day free trial) – After the free trial, get Hulu with ads for just $7.99/month or $79.99/year. Ad free Hulu costs $17.99/month. Eligible students can also get Hulu with ads for only $1.99/month. Watch thousands of shows from the Disney, ABC and Fox library, including next-day episodes of current seasons.
Disney Bundle with Hulu – Choose the Disney Bundle to unlock either a Hulu and Disney+ duo for $10.99/month, or a Hulu, ESPN+, and Disney+ trio for $16.99/month. You can also unlock a Hulu, Max and Disney+ Bundle for $16.99/month.

Can President-elect Donald Trump change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to “Gulf of America”?

President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday that he would move to try to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America,” a name he said has a “beautiful ring to it.”

It’s his latest suggestion to redraw the map of the Western Hemisphere. Trump has repeatedly referred to Canada as the “51st State,” demanded that Denmark consider ceding Greenland, and called for Panama to return the Panama Canal.

Here’s a look at his comment and what goes into a name.

Why is Trump talking about renaming the Gulf of Mexico?
Since his first run for the White House in 2016, Trump has repeatedly clashed with Mexico over a number of issues, including border security and the imposition of tariffs on imported goods. He vowed then to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it. The U.S. ultimately constructed or refurbished about 450 miles of wall during his first term.

The Gulf of Mexico is often referred to as the United States’ “Third Coast” due to its coastline across five southeastern states. Mexicans use a Spanish version of the same name for the gulf: “El Golfo de México.”

Americans and Mexicans diverge on what to call another key body of water, the river that forms the border between Texas and the Mexican states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas. Americans call it the Rio Grande; Mexicans call it the Rio Bravo.

Can Trump change the name of the Gulf of Mexico?
Maybe, but it’s not a unilateral decision, and other countries don’t have to go along.

The International Hydrographic Organization — of which both the United States and Mexico are members — works to ensure all the world’s seas, oceans and navigable waters are surveyed and charted uniformly, and also names some of them. There are instances where countries refer to the same body of water or landmark by different names in their own documentation.

It can be easier when a landmark or body of water is within a country’s boundaries. In 2015, then-President Barack Obama approved an order from the Department of Interior to rename Mount McKinley — the highest peak in North America — to Denali, a move that Trump has also said he wants to reverse.

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Just after Trump’s comments on Tuesday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said during an interview with podcaster Benny Johnson that she would direct her staff to draft legislation to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico, a move she said would take care of funding for new maps and administrative policy materials throughout the federal government.

How did the Gulf of Mexico get its name?
The body of water has been depicted with that name for more than four centuries, an original determination believed to have been taken from a Native American city of “Mexico.”

Has renaming the Gulf of Mexico come up before?
Yes. In 2012, a member of the Mississippi Legislature proposed a bill to rename portions of the gulf that touch that state’s beaches “Gulf of America,” a move the bill author later referred to as a “joke.” That bill, which was referred to a committee, did not pass.

Two years earlier, comedian Stephen Colbert had joked on his show that, following the massive Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, it should be renamed “Gulf of America” because, “We broke it, we bought it.”

Are there other international disputes over the names of places?
There’s a long-running dispute over the name of the Sea of Japan among Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, with South Korea arguing that the current name wasn’t commonly used until Korea was under Japanese rule. At an International Hydrographic Organization meeting in 2020, member states agreed on a plan to replace names with numerical identifiers and develop a new digital standard for modern geographic information systems.

The Persian Gulf has been widely known by that name since the 16th century, although usage of “Gulf” and “Arabian Gulf” is dominant in many countries in the Middle East. The government of Iran threatened to sue Google in 2012 over the company’s decision not to label the body of water at all on its maps.

There have been other conversations about bodies of water, including from Trump’s 2016 opponent. According to materials revealed by WikiLeaks in a hack of her campaign chairman’s personal account, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2013 told an audience that, by China’s logic that it claimed nearly the entirety of the South China Sea, then the U.S. after World War II could have labeled the Pacific Ocean the “American Sea.”

Just as AMD announced a new processor designed for handheld devices like the Steam Deck, Valve was quick to deny rumors about the Steam Deck 2

Everybody, it’s CES time. This year’s show kicked off with the release of new hardware – many of which you can’t afford, new gimmicks, flashy demos, and too many references to artificial intelligence. CES is also a time when new chips are released, and AMD brings new ones every year.

The chipmaker is pretty much the only player in the gaming handheld space right now, so there’s a lot of anticipation for the new Z2 processor and the upcoming devices. Unfortunately, despite AMD’s claims, it doesn’t actually include the new Steam Deck.

AMD has announced a new Ryzen Z2 series of APUs designed for low-power devices such as gaming palmtop computers. The Z1 and Z1 Extreme are already available in many first-generation PDAs, and several of the next generation are ready for upgrades.

As part of the CES conference call announcing the new series (via PC Gamer), AMD said the Z2-equipped handheld console “comes from multiple partners, Legion Go, ROG Ally, Valve Steam Deck.” This is obviously big news, but only because the last one was unexpected. Obviously, that’s not accurate either.

Valve engineer and Steam Deck developer Pierre-Loup Griffais was quick to clarify to Bluesky that “the Z2 Steam Deck is not and will not be.” He also added what most of us are probably thinking, namely that the slides may be intended to say “about such products, not to announce anything specific.”

Valve has long said it’s not interested in designing a new Steam Deck unless it can offer a more meaningful generational upgrade than the current model, but the company also said last year that we won’t see Steam Deck 2 until at least the end of 2025. So it’s possible – assuming the new model comes out later this year – that it will use the technology just announced, or perhaps an improved version of that technology. After all, manufacturing takes time.

Like its predecessor, the Z2 architecture contains both a CPU and a GPU on the same chip. There will be three models available: the Z2 Extreme, the standard Z2, and the Z2 Go. The two high-end options are almost identical, except that the Extreme’s GPU is more powerful because it has four additional GPU cores. The Extreme uses the RDNA 3.5 architecture, while all Z2s will not use the just-released RDNA 4.

When is President-elect Trump’s Inauguration Day? Are there any events that the public can attend?

Monday marked a significant step toward the Inauguration Day of President-elect Donald Trump, as his victory was certified by the United States Congress.

During a joint session overseen by Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump’s Electoral College victory was certified by Congress, paving the way for him to return to the Oval Office in two weeks.

Here’s what to know about Trump’s upcoming inauguration.

When is Inauguration Day?
The U.S. Constitution originally called for the president to be sworn into office on March 4, but the 20th Amendment, passed in 1933, changed that date to Jan. 20.

According to the U.S. government, the only exception to that date is if the 20th falls on a Sunday, in which case the inauguration would be moved to Jan. 21.

This year, Jan. 20 falls on a Monday, so Trump will take the oath of office on that date.

Is there a specific time the new president takes office?
Under provisions of the 20th Amendment, the terms of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will officially end at noon Eastern Standard Time on Jan. 20, meaning that Trump and Vice President-elect J.D. Vance will officially take office at that time, whether or not they’ve had their oaths of office administered.

What is the presidential oath of office?
While the vice president takes the same oath of office as members of Congress, the president takes a slightly different oath:

“I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

What events take place on Inauguration Day?
In addition to taking the oath of office, the incoming president traditionally delivers a public address on the steps of the United States Capitol, kicking off their administration with a detailed declaration of their priorities and intentions upon taking office.

Following the inauguration, there is a traditional parade honoring the new president, and numerous inaugural balls are held in the evening, with the new president traditionally appearing at several of the glitzy events in the capital.

Can the public attend the inauguration?
The inauguration of the new president is generally a highly attended event, with thousands gathering to hear the inaugural address and the oath of office.

Enron announced a “breakthrough” product, the Enron Egg, purportedly a miniature nuclear reactor

Enron has unveiled a new product a month after the infamous and defunct company was resurrected − apparently for fun − by one of the guys behind the satirical “Birds Aren’t Real” conspiracy theory.

The parody company announced the “historic reveal” of the Enron Egg, “the world’s first at-home nuclear reactor,” in an X post on Monday.

Enron re-entered the public consciousness in early December with the launch of Enron.com, two decades after the American energy company was sullied by fraud and some of its top executives were sent to prison. The website was launched on the 23rd anniversary of the company’s bankruptcy filing along with a press release and an official-looking promo video.

The materials, which at first glance seemed to signal a rebranding, instead ended up being an elaborate joke. Not only was Connor Gaydos of “Birds Aren’t Real” fame involved, but the company’s own terms and conditions say the website is “protected parody” for “entertainment purposes only.”

In a five-minute clip, Gaydos, playing an Enron CEO, claimed the Enron egg was going to revolutionize the power industry, the independence industry and the freedom industry. Gaydos also says Enron has partnered with FEMA to provide nuclear eggs to rapid response teams all over the world.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we have harnessed the power of the atom,” Gaydos said. “Introducing the Enron Egg, the world’s first micro-nuclear reactor for residential suburban use.” The little device, according to Gaydos, has the ability to power a home for 10 continuous years.

‘Birds aren’t real’ guy purchased Enron trademark in 2020
Public documents first found by CNN show that the Arkansas-based company behind the Enron trademark purchase is owned by Connor Gaydos, who, along with Peter McIndoe, created the mock “Birds Aren’t Real” conspiracy theory.

The joke conspiracy is meant to satirize the spread of misinformation by proliferating the false idea that the U.S. government wiped out birds and replaced the animals with drones to spy on Americans.

Gaydos’ LLC, The College Company, bought the Enron trademark in 2020 for $275, the documents show. The website’s terms list the Enron relaunch as “performance art.”

What is the Enron egg?

The Enron Egg is a “compact nuclear reactor that uses Uranium-Zirconium Hydride (U-ZrH) fuel rods to generate heat through nuclear fission,” according to the Enron website. “This heat is transferred via a 3D-printed Inconel heat exchanger, powering a turbine to generate electricity. A closed-loop cooling system ensures safe operation without environmental contamination.”

No price was listed for the Enron Egg, but the company says it is “significantly more affordable than traditional energy systems.” Interested parties may preorder the Enron Egg by signing up for Enron’s email newsletter.

What was Enron?
Enron was a Houston, Texas-based energy, commodities, and services company. In 2001, Enron collapsed in a market-shaking bankruptcy amid revelations that the company had grossly overstated its earnings. The financial implosion victimized tens of thousands of employees and investors.

Some got prison sentences, including CEO Jeffrey Skilling and CFO Andrew Fastow.

Kenneth Lay, Enron’s former chairman, died of a heart attack in 2006, one month after his career ended with a criminal conviction for lying to investors about the company’s finances.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D For China Uses Same GPU & Memory As RTX 5090, Same Price Too

NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 5090D for China has also been announced and features the same specs as the RTX 5090 with the same pricing.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D Heads Out To China: Same Price, Same GPU, Same Memory
In addition to the standard GeForce RTX 5090, NVIDIA is also rolling out its special “D” variant for China. The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D was expected to launch but it looks like the company has gone with the same specifications this time around, suggesting a moderate clock adjustment or a software-side lock.

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D GPU has already been listed by various AIBs, including GALAX and Colorful. In terms of specifications, the graphics card features the same GB202 GPU die with a total of 21,760 CUDA Cores. The memory specifications are also the same as the RTX 5090 with 32 GB of GDDR7 memory running at 28 Gbps, offering a total of 1792 GB/s total bandwidth. The cards are also coming in custom variants, though the Founders Edition model won’t be available in China.

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090D was the first special variant for China designed to meet the US export regulations. The model featured cut-down CUDA and Tensor cores, lacked overclocking, and also had a lower set of TGP, though some models use the full 450W TGP. The core specifications are not being changed this time around, which is good to see, and it looks like other changes will be easy to overcome using BIOS hacks and mods once the models start rolling out.

There won’t be a restriction on the custom variations as GALAX has its 1-Click OC model with a 3-fan and 3.5-slot design being listed on its webpage while Colorful is rolling out the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D in both Neptune (Liquid Cooling) and Vulcan (Air Cooling) flavors.

As for the pricing, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090D will feature the same MSRP as the RTX 5090, though for the Chinese market. The standard card will have an MSRP of $1999 US which ends up at around 14,999 RMB for China, including taxes. Since these are custom models, the pricing will be slightly higher.

Why did Peggy desorbo and Craig Conover break up after 3 years of dating?

The former stars of ‘Summer House’ broke up after three years of dating. Find out the reason why, according to what Paige said, here.

Paige DeSorbo and Craig Conover called it quits, and fans are dismayed. The reality TV stars were one of Bravo’s favorite couples, so why did they break up? Despite their relationship coming to an end, Paige recently emphasized that their split was amicable during a December 30, 2024, episode of her and Hannah Berner‘s “Giggly Squad” podcast.

How Did Paige DeSorbo & Craig Conover Meet?
Paige and Craig first met in 2019 during season 4 of Summer House, and they developed a closer friendship while appearing in season 1 of the spinoff series, Winter House. Throughout 2021, the Bravo co-stars stepped out for a few events together, but they didn’t go public with their relationship until that October.

How Long Were Paige DeSorbo & Craig Conover Together?
Craig and Paige dated from 2021 through 2024, so they were together for three years.

Why Did Paige DeSorbo & Craig Conover Break Up?
Paige explained the reason behind her and Craig’s breakup during an episode of her “Giggly Squad” podcast. The reality star emphasized that neither she nor Craig “did anything” to hurt each other and that there split wasn’t a “bad thing.”

“I think we both were just being really mature and saying what we want and what we didn’t want,” Paige said. “And I think that’s extremely powerful to be able to voice how you’re feeling in real time and what you want for your future. … We both gave each other a little time to deal with it on our own, in private, with our family and friends, and now, I feel like it is appropriate to be able to tell people.”

Though Craig has not publicly commented on their breakup, Paige called him “the best boyfriend [she’s] ever had.” The Bravo celeb further added that her ex “did everything correct, and he never made [her] feel insecure or anything like that.”

“I love him and I think he loves me. I think we will remain friends,” she elaborated. “I think he is one of the best people I’ve met in my entire life. I will remain the biggest fan of him and want the best for him, and he truly will get the best because he is the best.”

Rumors of Paige and Craig’s split circulated months before their split, which Paige shut down during the podcast episode.

“Rumors of us breaking up months ago — again, also not a real thing,” she insisted.

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