Here’s how the attacks in Minnesota unfolded early on Saturday.
© Tim Gruber for The New York Times
© Tim Gruber for The New York Times
© AP
© AP
© PA Wire
© AP
Israel has eliminated many of the brains behind Tehran’s nuclear programme. But don’t expect the regime to back down
This is a war 30 years in the making. Benjamin Netanyahu was talking about the threat of an Iranian nuclear bomb back in the 1990s and he has scarcely let up since. For decades he has believed that a nuclear Iran would represent the one truly existential threat to Israel and that military force is the only sure way to prevent it. Several times during the many years in which Netanyahu has sat in the prime minister’s chair, an all-out strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities has been weighed up, debated and planned for. In the early hours of this morning, it finally happened.
Netanyahu will be pleased with the early results, including the elimination of key Iranian military commanders and nuclear scientists. But the ultimate consequences could look very different. By his actions, he may only have accelerated the very danger he has feared for so long.
Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist
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Continue reading...© Photograph: Meghdad Madadi/TASNIM NEWS/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Meghdad Madadi/TASNIM NEWS/AFP/Getty Images
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© Invision
Masters champion McIlroy shot a four-over-par 74 – eight strokes off the lead of JJ Spaun
© PA
© AP
IDF says defense system is operating to intercept missiles from Iran; explosions in Tehran and surrounded areas reported by Iranian state media
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has addressed the nation, saying the IDF had targted Iran’s leading nuclear scientists working on the Iranian bomb.
He said that Iran’s main enrichment facility in Natanz had been targeted.
This operation will continue for as many days as it takes … We are at a decisive moment in Israel’s history.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Léo Corrêa/AP
© Photograph: Léo Corrêa/AP
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© AP
McIlroy is looking to shake off a hangover from his Masters triumph in April
© PA Wire
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Dramatic scenes unfolded overnight in the Northern Ireland town as rioters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks and glass bottles, with 17 police officers injured
© PA
McIlroy is looking to shake off a hangover from his Masters triumph in April
© PA Wire
Riot police were deployed around the Clonavon Terrace area on Tuesday night as hundreds of people gathered
© PA
© AP
© AP
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
© ASSOCIATED PRESS
PeaZip n'a jamais été abordé dans ces colonnes jusqu'à présent, alors qu'il fait partie des outils multi-plateformes permettant une transition en douceur vers le libre. Il a presque dix ans. Sortie le 14 avril, la version 10.4 continue la série 10.0 commencée en octobre 2024.
Giogio Tani, le développeur de PeaZip publie plusieurs versions chaque année. Le logiciel évolue par petites touches largement testées via les fonctions "expérimentales" des versions précédentes.
Il est libre, multi-plateformes, multi-architecture, portable (nomade), écrit en FreePascal avec Lazarus, ouvre et écrit plusieurs formats d'archives. Il est rapide et assez léger pour un tout-en-un (11,2 MB). Il est bien maintenu, l'auteur est transparent sur la sécurité, documentation et tutoriels sont conséquents et pédagogiques. L'interface est travaillée, sobre, ergonomique, thémable, configurable, jolie, … N'en jetez plus ! Ah si encore : il est dispo en Gtk et Qt sous X11 et Wayland, et l'auteur l'empaquête à tout va.
C'est un humble logiciel très bien foutu, très travaillé, utile pour installer des outils libres sur les systèmes proprios afin de les amener en douceur vers Linux ou *BSD (il ne fonctionne pas encore sous Haïku).
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