Mémoire cash - Sorti en 1992, Flashback reste un classique inoubliable







Cela fait quatre ans que l'iPhone embarque une connexion satellitaire, mais elle est assez rudimentaire et ne peut en l'état être utilisée que pour les urgences (et l'envoi de messages aux États-Unis seulement). Cette situation pourrait changer avec l'iPhone 18 et le modem Apple C2 qui serait le...



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Cela fait quatre ans que l'iPhone embarque une connexion satellitaire, mais elle est assez rudimentaire et ne peut en l'état être utilisée que pour les urgences (et l'envoi de messages aux États-Unis seulement). Cette situation pourrait changer avec l'iPhone 18 et le modem Apple C2 qui serait le...







© SAUL LOEB / AFP





The actor, comedian and raconteur, who would have turned 100 on Sunday, could play humble or haughty, cheeky or Chekhov – but always stole the show
When standup comic Tom Allen received Attitude magazine’s comedy award last year, he used his acceptance speech to salute the subversive wits who paved the way for freedoms now enjoyed by queer people in Britain. Joining Oscar Wilde and Noël Coward on the list was an actor and raconteur singled out by Allen as “a big hero of mine”, and feted by everyone from Orson Welles to Judy Garland, Maggie Smith to Morrissey.
“I wanted to mention Kenneth Williams because he was so profound,” Allen tells me. “And yet, because he was also funny, that profundity hasn’t been acknowledged. As a child, I connected with his outsiderness. Rather than trying to fit in, he went in the opposite direction. Not only did he not apologise for being different, but he was queer in every sense, truly at odds with the world in which he found himself.”
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© Photograph: Evening Standard/Getty Images

© Photograph: Evening Standard/Getty Images

© Photograph: Evening Standard/Getty Images
Joint patrols are being mounted to protect undersea cables from Russian sabotage: localised cooperation is our best hope for now
Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council thinktank
When European countries in the Baltic Sea region joined Nato for protection against Russia, they were not anticipating their most powerful Nato ally would be the one threatening to seize territory from them. The shock of the Greenland crisis may have faded from the headlines, but Donald Trump’s US has also suggested it may decide not to defend Europe. And Russia continues to be a nuisance in the Baltic Sea.
Luckily, the vulnerable Baltic nations have launched an impressive string of initiatives to keep their mini-ocean safe. As the US sheds responsibility for Europe’s defence, these efforts could provide a model for the future of Nato itself.
Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council thinktank. She is the author of Goodbye, Globalization: The Return of a Divided World and The Defender’s Dilemma: Identifying and Deterring Gray-Zone Aggression
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© Photograph: Johan Nilsson/TT NEWS AGENCY/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Johan Nilsson/TT NEWS AGENCY/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Johan Nilsson/TT NEWS AGENCY/AFP/Getty Images