Saturday, September 10, 2022

Most Popular Editorials: James Webb Space Telescope spots alien planet shrouded in weird sand-filled clouds

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James Webb Space Telescope spots alien planet shrouded in weird sand-filled clouds

The exoplanet's atmosphere also contains methane and carbon dioxide.

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S1
5 Mindset Blocks That Stop You From Learning From Your Mistakes

Way back in 2014 I wrote about a growing movement among entrepreneurs. In 42 cities across the world founders would meet for "F***Up Nights," which are just what they sound like -- an opportunity for those on the difficult path of starting a business to share their biggest flops and failures. Since that story, these nights have spread to 185 cities. 

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S2
Don't Insist on Being Positive—Allowing Negative Emotions Has Much to Teach Us

Eight years ago, when Whitney Goodman was a newly qualified therapist counselling cancer patients, it struck her that positive thinking was being "very heavily pushed", both in her profession and the broader culture, as the way to deal with things. She wasn't convinced that platitudes like "Look on the bright side!" and "Everything happens for a reason!" held the answers for anyone trying to navigate life's messiness. Between herself, her friends and her patients, "All of us were thinking, 'Being positive is the only way to live,' but really it was making us feel disconnected and, ultimately, worse."

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S3
America is not fixing its college financing system

Joe Biden has just announced that he’ll forgive student loans of up to $20,000 for Pell Grant recipients and $10,000 for other people making up to $125,000 a year. I’ve generally been a fan of student debt cancellation — the benefits for job mobility, geographic mobility, and upward mobility are undeniable. Four years ago, when inflation was comfortably low, I was a vocal advocate of a one-time student debt forgiveness.

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S4
Distressed-debt investors are preparing to pounce

Hedge funds are used to being the star players in corporate America’s most aggressive sport: financial distress. They search for value in the liabilities of troubled firms, often hoping to participate in the restructuring of a company’s balance-sheet. And after a decade of unpleasantly benign financial conditions, excitement in the industry is building. A toxic cocktail of rising interest rates, slowing growth and high inflation is already creating pockets of distress. High-yield debt issuance has dried up (see chart), and it is increasingly difficult for companies to refinance their liabilities or raise fresh funds. In July the amount of distressed debt, which includes bonds yielding more than ten percentage points over Treasuries and loans trading at heavy discounts, surpassed $240bn, nearly three times as much as at the start of May.

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S5
Why investors are reaching for the astrology of finance

Why did the markets move? Most investors, analysts and even financial journalists will look, first and foremost, for news. Perhaps the jobs data were published, a firm announced it was being acquired or a central banker gave a sombre speech. Yet a small, dedicated cult of “chartists” or “technical analysts” believes that the movement of stocks, bonds and currencies can be divined by the making and interpreting of charts.

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S6
How (and Why) to Use DuckDuckGo's @Duck.com Email Protection

DuckDuckGo Email Protection is a mail forwarding service with baked-in privacy features. You can sign up for an @duck.com forwarding address, which forwards to a standard mailbox of your choosing. Any email messages sent to your @duck.com address are stripped of known trackers before being forwarded to you.

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S7
You Should Memorize These Ways to Reset Your Cell Service

Let’s get this out of the way first: It’s possible that you accidentally switched your phone to Airplane mode or disabled cellular data. Swipe down from the top-right corner of your screen to find the Control Center and make sure that the Airplane mode is disabled, and that cellular data mode is enabled. If you want to restart your phone, hold down the Side button and the Volume Down button until you see the Power screen, and swipe on “Slide to Power Off.” Wait for 10-15 seconds and hold the side button again to restart.

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S8
Tim Cook says 'buy your mom an iPhone' if you want to end green bubbles

“I don’t hear our users asking that we put a lot of energy in on that at this point,” Cook said when asked how Apple founder Steve Jobs would feel about using the RCS standard in iMessage during Vox Media’s Code 2022 event on Wednesday night. Instead, Cook said, “I would love to convert you to an iPhone.”

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5 consensus ideas in astronomy that might soon be overturned

From black holes to dark energy to chances for life in the Universe, our cosmic journey to understand it all is just getting started.

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Nine million people in a city 170km long; will the world ever be ready for a linear metropolis?

‘The contemporary city needs a full redesign,” purrs a seductive voice, over surging orchestral strings. “What if we removed cars? What if we got rid of streets? What if everything you needed was always a five-minute walk away?” The words accompany an animation depicting an oblong megastructure sprouting from a desert landscape, slicing through sand dunes and mountains in a continuous urban strip: a city of 9 million people, sealed inside a mirror-clad box. “A 170km revolution in urban living,” the narrator continues, “protecting the Earth’s most stunning nature, while creating unmatched liveability.”

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S12
What You Need to Build a Greek Temple

EDMUND STEWART How hard can it be? Answer: very.

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FMIA: Bills over Packers in Super Bowl LVII; Huge Year for Josh Allen, and More Predictions for 2022 Season - ProFootballTalk

Peter King breaks down all his predictions for the 2022 NFL season, from playoff picture to Super Bowl winners to awards and key coaching contributors.

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The Five Most Interesting College Football Story Lines

To celebrate the return of college football, The Ringer explores the topics that will matter most this season, from potential domination by Alabama to the fallout from Lincoln Riley’s decision to leave Oklahoma for USC

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S15
You'll want these five films on your list for fall

In Vesper, Raffiella Chapman plays a 13-year-old girl living in a future where biological experiments have wiped out all the earth's edible plants. Courtesy of IFC Films hide caption

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S16
What will happen to Queen's corgis now?

Fergus, the pup, tragically died just two months later of a heart defect, but Her Majesty was given another puppy in June by son her Prince Andrew and granddaughters Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, on what would have been Philip’s 100th birthday. At her death, the Queen left behind three dogs.

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S17
Can eating fish ever be sustainable?

"The category of seafood is really diverse," says Jessica Gephart, assistant professor in environmental science at the American University in Washington DC. "It includes around 2,500 different species produced by farming and capture fisheries. We're really talking about very different production systems there."

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Summery Braised Chicken With Soy Sauce and Tomatoes

The deep savoriness of soy sauce helps balance punchy-sweet tomatoes in this very saucy, very easy, and very flavorful summery braise. This dish is truly one-pot from start to finish, from marinating all the way through to cooking and serving. The marinade pulls double duty here: It first imbues the chicken with the flavors of soy sauce, hot mustard, garlic, and yes, even a bit of butter. Then as the chicken roasts in the oven, it cooks down into a generous sauce that begs be soaked up by rice or thick slices of toasted bread.

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S19
The untold story behind Nintendo's Wii launch in the U.S.

A couple of months after the Game Developers Conference, we unveiled the name of our new system. We wanted a name that could be said in any language— further testimony to our goal of expanding gaming to as many consumers as possible. Wii was announced. Pronounced “we,” the name was a concerted effort to highlight the inclusive nature of our approach. We anticipated that some would make jokes based on this name (Wii, wee-wee). But the distinctive term combined with its inclusiveness made the naming decision worth it.

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The death of the Queen marks the final break with imperial Britain

Her reign was a link to a country still in the twilight of empire.

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S22
Gun Person

We are ten in the room, my colleagues and I, and the volunteer asks us if we’ve ever been to a gun range. The only hand in the air is mine; I want to lower it immediately, but I’m put on the spot. The volunteer says, “Great,” in a tone that I know — having used it in my own teaching — singles me out as the star pupil.

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S23
Public transit for nine bucks a month? Germany tried it.

MUNICH, Germany — Maybe you buy the 9-Euro-Ticket to travel from Saxony to Bavaria to go to the Helene Fischer concert in Munich. Maybe you buy it to go hiking, taking the train on summer weekends to villages outside Munich. Or maybe you buy it because you’re an American journalist, but also a little bit of a tourist, used to paying $2.75 to wait 15 minutes for a crowded Brooklyn Q train, like me.

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S24
People Are Sharing Hidden Gem Alternatives To Heavily-Touristed Vacation Destinations

"Tasmania is awesome. It has some of the best food on earth. You can go pick fresh oysters off the beach five minutes from town, grab a snorkel and get fresh abalone, enjoy lunch on snowcapped Mount Wellington for lunch, and have fish and chips on the beach for dinner. There's the Cadbury factory and the Cascade brewery right near town, ridiculous rainforests, some of the best trout fishing in the world. And there's Bruny Island, which has penguins and all sorts of amazing wildlife."

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The Rise of the Worker Productivity Score

But her first paychecks seemed low. Her new employer, which used extensive monitoring software on its all-remote workers, paid them only for the minutes when the system detected active work. Worse, Ms. Kraemer noticed that the software did not come close to capturing her labor. Offline work — doing math problems on paper, reading printouts, thinking — didn’t register and required approval as “manual time.” In managing the organization’s finances, Ms. Kraemer oversaw more than a dozen people, but mentoring them didn’t always leave a digital impression. If she forgot to turn on her time tracker, she had to appeal to be paid at all.

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S26
Pretty Soon You'll Be Able to Afford Things Again

July’s inflation rate saw an unexpectedly large drop, driven by the price of gas. This could be the beginning of the end of the era of high prices.

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S27
Warren Buffett Says What Separates Successful People From the Pack Comes Down to 1 Simple Word

This quote has caused much debate amongst investors, since it was spoken by Buffett as a warning to them to be more selective when choosing stocks. Investing aside, the quote is also a useful self-leadership tip for the rest of us struggling to effectively manage our businesses and work lives.

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The 10 most in-demand work-from-anywhere jobs companies are hiring for in 2022

To help job-seekers find the best remote jobs that allow them to work around the world, FlexJobs has identified the most in-demand work-from-anywhere jobs companies are hiring for by analyzing its database for the work-from-anywhere jobs with the highest volume of postings between January and June 2022. 

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S29
Feeling Demotivated? Consider How Your Job Helps Others.

There are many different ways to encourage employee motivation and engagement, but one often overlooked opportunity is service. Studies have indicated service to others is at the very heart of creating meaning and purpose in one’s life. And we all know that when we serve others we feel more fulfilled, happy, motivated, and engaged. The good news is that each of us, in our day jobs, have almost innumerable opportunities to serve others well. But it’s often challenging for employees to see those opportunities and for companies to emphasize them well. In this piece, the author outlines six key groups we can remember to serve every day.

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S30
Curious why you didn't get that job? HR execs reveal ways they warn other employers not to hire train-wreck candidates.

These faint cues and not-so-subtle conversations can spare companies from bringing in troublesome workers. But doing a solid for a fellow HR exec at another employer could also throw up unfair obstacles for workers who might not be favored for reasons beyond work — things like race or gender.

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S31
If You Have a Mid-Back Knot That You Can't Seem to Stretch or Massage Out, This Is the #1 Move You Should Be Doing Instead | Well+Good

"People often associate this sensation of a 'knot' as an area of tightness that must be pounded on, but for many of the people that I see in my practice, it can actually indicate an area lacking stability, especially if stretching [and] massage hasn't helped," Dr. Clare explains. "If an area is lacking stability or strength, the body will try to provide this false stability by 'tightening' things in the area—it's protective in a way." In other words, the more you try to stretch and massage out the knot, the worse it gets. To break that cycle, Dr. Clare recommends strengthening the mid-back area, which will help diminish the tightness and make the "knots" magically disappear. 

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S32
Creatine, a popular exercise supplement, might help treat depression

Creatine is naturally synthesized in the liver, kidney, and pancreas at a rate of about one gram per day. Consuming milk, red meat, seafood, and nuts as part of a balanced, omnivorous diet can contribute up to another two grams per day. However, one can easily and safely consume a lot more of it through powders blended into liquids. Supplementing up to 30 grams a day in this fashion has been found to be safe and well-tolerated over the long-term (at least five years).

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S33
This Weighted Abs Workout Will Sculpt Your Stomach Like No Other

What’s one way to take your abs workouts to the next level? By adding weights! That’s why I created this four-move workout, designed to sculpt your core. By adding a bit of dumbbell, you’ll challenge your abs like never before—and have the muscle tone to show for it. In fact, this workout helped one of my client transform her body, and build a visible, sculpted stomach. What’s more, it takes less than 10 minutes. Ready to give this abs workout a go?

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S34
These Habits Are Cute When Dating but Irritating in a Relationship, According to Lifehacker Readers

Last week I asked you to share the last time your rose-colored glasses lost their rosy tint. Because as the early stages of dating turn into the harsh realities of a serious relationship, certain behaviors go from endearing to downright irritating. Innocuous examples include constant humming, clinical-level snoring, or always sneezing one million times in a row. Graver offenses include things like people who can never stop making jokes, even in serious situations.

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S35
Why friendship is different than any other relationship we have

Ask anyone who has studied friendship — or anyone who’s had a good friend — and they will tell you: Friendship is an essential ingredient in the creation of a good life. Having friends helps us feel more connected to our communities, increases our feelings of self-worth and belonging, and even helps us live longer, healthier lives. The really good ones provide something that other types of relationships can’t. They offer spaces where acceptance feels unconditional and unbound by the more formal obligations of family — in a good friendship, companionship and care are given freely and imbued with the sense that each person gives love because they genuinely want to do it.

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S36
You're Underestimating Kindness

As it turns out, the impact of a small act of kindness is much stronger than we realize, both in terms of how it makes the recipient feel, and their willingness to pay that kindness forward. In a recent study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, researchers carried out a series of experiments to test out just how meaningful some of these small acts of kindness are to the people receiving them, and how likely they are to pay that kindness forward.

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S37
The iPhone Isn't Cool

I cradled my first iPhone like an egg after I bought it. The year was 2011; the season was winter. The ground was slushy, but I was too nervous to take the thing on the subway. It was an absolute luxury, by far the fanciest and, I felt, most fragile thing I owned—more Fabergé than farmstand.

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S38
What Time Is It on This Russian Clock?

So now there are two cases to consider: Either Hand A is the second hand or Hand C is the second hand. If we assume Hand A is the second hand pointing to the number 12, then Hand B would be almost reaching 7:00. In this scenario, Hand C would be pointing directly at 2. But if it were really 6:10, as this case suggests, Hand B should only be one-sixth of the way to 7:00, not practically reaching 7:00.

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S39
To All the Brooklyn Brownstones I've Loved Before | Beth Boyle Machlan

The first thing I notice after the price is the light. The StreetEasy ad shows six windows crossing the north wing of the first floor, three pairs each topped with a terra-cotta arch. Two of the windows are original, and the center of the arch is a circle of glass surrounded by delicate, looping wood scrolls. The third window, replaced who knows when, is frosted like a shower door, a gray half-moon hung sideways. When I eventually walk into the apartment itself, the arches spill bowls of golden light across the warm wood floors.

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S40
Physics Duo Finds Magic in Two Dimensions | Quanta Magazine

In exploring a family of two-dimensional crystals, a husband-and-wife team is uncovering a potent variety of new electron behaviors.

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S41
How many people can Earth handle?

It was around 72,000 BC on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. The Toba supervolcano was erupting, in what is thought to have been the greatest such event in the last 100,000 years. A series of thunderous explosions blasted out 9.5 quadrillion kilograms of ash, which billowed out in sky-darkening clouds that crept around 47km (29 miles) into the atmosphere.

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S42
The College Advice Nobody Tells You

I write this as I prepare to take my oldest son back to campus for his sophomore year of college. My youngest son is beginning his junior year of high school, and I’m getting ready for the classes I’m teaching at Princeton this fall. For most of my life, I’ve looked forward to the beginning of the academic year with excitement. But in recent years, I’ve been a bit anxious in September. I blame it on the pandemic and its effects; I worry about all of us, especially when we separate from loved ones.

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S43
Condé Nast Traveller India

© 2022 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this website constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Service (updated April 1, 2021) and Policy and Cookie Statement (updated April 1, 2021). The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast.

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S44
Take note, Lincoln Riley: How Pete Carroll made USC magic again

Leinart would multitask if it meant reliving the glory days of USC, which for too long have felt like a distant memory. In fact, he wondered if he had enough time to cover everything: Pete Carroll's arrival late in 2000 and the unique ways he won over players and changed their mentality, the stars such as Reggie Bush he brought into the program, and the steady climb in confidence and wins -- followed closely by championships and ticket requests from celebrities.

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S45
Michael Cox's tactical guide to this season's leading Champions League contenders

After a busy summer transfer window that brought an influx of No 9s, these are the tactical changes among the Champions League contenders

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S46
10 Most Iconic Original Indian Rock Songs

With the nostalgia-laden Independence Rock festival or I-rock as it was popularly known, scheduled to make a comeback in November, social media is abuzz with tales of past experiences of watching live concerts at its original home, the legendary but now defunct Rang Bhavan in South Mumbai. And the conversation has invariably veered towards memorable performances and original compositions of   Indian bands, old and new.  

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S47
Shooting at Nothing: An Interview with Ander Monson -- Cleveland Review of Books

Abigail Oswald interviews Ander Monson on "Predator: A Memoir, a Movie, an Obsession", published by Graywolf Press in 2022.

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S48
Want Fresher Food at McDonald's? Try Asking for a Receipt

It's hard to spend a lot of money at McDonald's, so you may not think to ask for a receipt when placing an order there. But even if you only paid a few dollars for your Big Mac and apple pie, you should still ask for proof of your purchase—if only to throw the slip in the trash a few seconds later. As Reader's Digest reports, simply asking for a receipt can improve the quality of your fast food meal.

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S49
9 Bugs to Eat in a Survival Situation (And 4 You Want to Avoid)

A good chunk of the world are fine eating the nearly 2,000 species of edible bugs that share the globe with us. Anthropologists say early man depended on them. According to Pliny the Elder, Roman aristocrats were fond of beetle larvae reared on flour and wine. Aristotle was of the opinion that female cicada larvae when they were "full of white eggs" were the best eating. The Revised English Version of the Bible quotes Leviticus 11:22 saying, "Of these (insects) you may eat every kind of great locust, every kind of longheaded locust, every kind of green locust, and every kind of desert locust."

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S50
The 10 Best Tabletop Roleplaying Books Of 2022

We are in a proper golden age of tabletop roleplaying games. Never have there been so many wonderful titles, accessible in both print and digital, playable in-person, or on-screen with a virtual tabletop or just a Zoom chat. Here are the best TTRPG books from the last year of role playing to consider.

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S51
These Companies Know You're Pregnant--And They're Not Keeping It Secret

In early 2012, the New York Times Magazine put out a cover story about Andrew Pole, a statistician working for Target who was tasked with inventing a way to identify potentially pregnant shoppers, even if those shoppers didn’t want the company to know. The rationale, Pole said, was that moms-to-be are a multi-million dollar market, and Target wanted a way to pepper these moneymakers with promos and coupons before its competitors did the same.

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S52
J.K. Rowling's new book, about a transphobe who faces wrath online, raises eyebrows

J.K Rowling has said publicly that her new book was not based on her own life, even though some of the events that take place in the story did in fact happen to her as she was writing it. Tolga Akmen/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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S53
Gorbachev's Disputed Legacy

A hopeful moment in Russian history dies with the former Soviet leader.

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S54
70 Rare Photos of Queen Elizabeth That Showcase Her Extraordinary Life

The British monarch, who celebrated 70 years on the throne during summer 2022 with her Platinum Jubilee, had been living in the public eye since birth, even though her family could never imagine they would become the faces of the United Kingdom. When her uncle, Edward VIII, abdicated the throne in 1936, her father became King George VI and took on the responsibilities of the kingdom, which put young Elizabeth, then age 10, in line for the throne. When George passed away on February 6, 1952, at age 56, she officially became Queen Elizabeth II. She was 25.

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S55
Stop Booking Your Flights on Sundays. This Is the Cheapest Day to Fly

Plus, we'll share some other tips for ways to save money when flying, and the best time to fly during the holidays.

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