During the age of aviation, Sophie Peirce-Evans was one of the most famous women in the world. A few years later she died penniless and unknown. A new novel looks at one aspect of her groundbreaking life.
Plenty of people will tell you that their local chipper is the best. So why are they all closing down? And what makes newly-named Chipeen different?
Leinster's climbers are starting to find their legs again after taking a different route map to the European glory that has eluded them for too long. Leo Cullen's men should have too much for Edinburgh, but can they at last conquer their Everest again?
Wall Street braces for a longer-term disruption from Iran war, loading up on shares of laggard oil-and-gas producers, write David Uberti and Jared Mitovich, The Wall Street Journal.
The Japanese multinational is acquiring the Ennis-based Infinity Lifts. The deal comes just one year after it bought Dublin’s Ascension Lifts as part of its European acquisition strategy.
Drugmakers or nations that strike pricing deals or make U.S. manufacturing investment commitments can secure lower levies, or be spared them entirely, write Gavin Bade and Xavier Martinez, The Wall Street Journal.
The State’s policy is to reduce reliance on the private sector to look after children in care, but payments to contractors keep increasing, with more companies raising debt or private-equity investment.
Released records show the National Cyber Security Centre identified an "uptick" in attacks last year. Files from one target, the Department of Enterprise, show how Vietnamese scammers with potential organised-crime links tried to exploit one of its investment portals.
Legislation that could be enacted this spring would pause construction of large new data centers until November 2027, writes Will Parker, The Wall Street Journal.
Moscow wants to emulate China’s WeChat by having a one-stop app to dominate the internet and lock Western rivals out, write Matthew Luxmoore and Milàn Czerny, The Wall Street Journal.
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