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Are there any sites that explain the news (US)?

The best known site for explanatory journalism is http://Vox.com, whose motto is "Explain the news." Vox, which was launched by former Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein, explains the news by using a combination of articles, videos, maps and card stacks (kind of like a permanent stack of index cards about ongoing issues in the news).Another interesting up-and-comer is http://TheConversation.com, which purports to practice "evidence-based" journalism. The articles are written by scientists, academicians and policy experts and edited by professional journalists. The Conversation has helped shed light on several recent issues for me, such as why the 1965-66 massacre of 500,000 communists in Indonesia is only now coming to light.Andrew Smith also points out some great mainstream sites, such as The New York Times, the New Yorker, Slate and The Atlantic. The latter also has an excellent digital-only offspring, Quartz. If you really want to go old-school, go with The Economist, founded in the era of penny papers but still relevant today.

Is there any person or site that can predict my future help me its urgent?

i know only one guy that has fully satisfied me and that is skc
he can be found at www.skc2kk.blogspot.com .
he is very good when it comes to prediction
i think everyone should try him .and anyone who thinks that astrology doesnot matter is a fool every step that u take is according to ur deeds that u have done in past so just know ur upcoming future

Is there a site that has music codes for neopets???

I had this one site i new but someone made it from weebly it worked and it was something like cheetahs full time music codes something like that is there any othere sites???

Is there a web site that I can get free ring tones from?

Ventones

Is there a site that catalogs every online course?

As far as I know, there are no quality indexes of e-learning resources. The more interesting question is: Why?The lame answer is that, with the exception of Khan, all of the sites you mentioned require login, etc. This prevents the programmatic indexing of these sites and their resources. This is also, coincidentally, why those sites aren't as revolutionary as their rhetoric. They're really really awesome correspondence courses.The interesting answer is that the indexing of these resources is a compelling data modeling question and would be legitimately difficult, even if those sites were to open themselves to scrapers. The problem is that learning resources are poor candidates for full text search (Googling), since their context is what makes them educational. So we need metadata to properly model the relationships between resources and topics, etc. And we have some metadata, but its garbage. Garbage in, garbage out. Paradata (data related to the resources' use) is a whole nother can of beans. Learning. Resources are not well represented by a popularity metric; so we  have to find some way of assigning quality, authority, something along with popularity. Techniques that were developed for marketing/ad serving (too many) won't work well because they don't reflect the truth value of the document. Just because a million people watch something doesn't make it true, or suitable for learning.But take heart! There is currently something afoot called the Learning Resources Metadata Initiative that is trying to wrangle and model these resources. This is an exciting area and a lot of work is being done. The future is almost here.

Is there a site that presents truly unbiased news?

There is a very useful website called https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/It lists 2000 websites, and indicates the left or right bias of all 2000 sites. It lists about 250 websites that have Unbiased news. Here is a webpage that I made that summarizes all their findings.http://eflip2.com/bias/I needed this information when I worked on choosing the sites to include in www.eflip.com Eflip shows the current screenshot of 400 great websites. It was important to know what kind of a bias the various sites have.

Is there a site that can tell me the modern way to write HTML?

Hey there!You're right in a sense about tables and breaks.However, the reason breaks aren't really used anymore is because they're not really semantic. They don't provide any structural information, they literally just tell the browser to break to a new line.You can still use them, and they do work.Tables are still valid HTML, but back in the 90s and possibly as late as the early 00s they were used to provide a layout to the page because the only way to make a website look the same across each browser was to use a table to structure the page.This is drastically different compared to modern techniques like the grid layout or flexbox.I'm not sure if there is a list of outdated HTML tags out there, but I would suspect a Google search might yield some information.However, if you're looking to learn about new techniques, I definitely suggest resources like Learn Web Design, Web Development, and More, and Learn to code.You're better off just starting off right than looking for old information.The Mozilla Developer Network is a great place to find information about HTML elements. So, if you need to know something about an HTML element that you haven't used before, starting here is a great idea.If you have questions about whether your website is valid HTML5, you can go here: Markup Validation ServiceThis will check your code and return validation errors.Best of luck!

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