
Caroline Jones
Senior Editor at Inside Climate News
Senior editor @insideclimate, affiliated faculty member @ECjrn, formerly of @wcp. Philosopher of sandwiches. Boston Celtics enthusiast.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
businessmondays.co.uk | Caroline Jones
Fivetran, the global leader in data movement, today announced the launch of its Managed Data Lake Service for Google’s Cloud Storage. Building on the launch of Fivetran’s Managed Data Lake Service last year, this latest expansion enables enterprises to seamlessly centralise structured and unstructured data from over 700 connectors into Google’s Cloud Storage in a query-ready open table format.
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1 month ago |
businessmondays.co.uk | Caroline Jones
Fivetran, the global leader in data movement, today announced the launch of an enhanced Partner Program, making it easier than ever for partners to grow their business. The expanded Fivetran Partner Program offers higher incentives, deeper go-to-market collaboration and expanded technical enablement to help partners deliver seamless, automated data movement while supporting customers in centralising their data for AI, analytics and business decision-making.
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1 month ago |
businessandamerica.com | Caroline Jones
Sales of noise-cancelling headphones have rocketed in recent years, bringing the ‘perk’ of blocking out all the unwanted sounds around you. But last week experts warned that overuse of these popular gadgets could be having an unexpected effect on our hearing – ironically the very thing many people buy them to protect.
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Dec 9, 2024 |
thewest.com.au | Caroline Jones
Tis the season to be hungover. But, of course, hangovers aren’t exclusive to Christmas – the average Briton spends more than a year of their life nursing one, according to research by cancer charity Macmillan. A hangover doesn’t just make you feel rubbish physically – new research by the University of Bristol has found that people who drank the night before performed worse in maths and memory tests the next day, and were less able to control their emotions, too.
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Jun 24, 2024 |
thewest.com.au | Caroline Jones
A swift swill of mouthwash is part of many people’s daily dental routines. But while around a quarter of Britons use it, there’s growing evidence to suggest it may do more harm than good: a study has found that antiseptic mouthwash increases levels of ‘bad’ bacteria in the mouth that may in turn raise the risk of gum disease and certain cancers.
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Did not know a @Darrow_M /@urbanbushwoman9 /@DonnieSimpson team-up was missing from my life until now, but I'm so glad it exists!

The People Issue is here. Meet an up-and-coming go-go singer, a teacher with a fascinating story, a pastry chef with big plans, a fearless dramaturg, and D.C.’s (likely) new shadow senator, among others. https://t.co/2wVMFMpBBI

RT @LauraHayesDC: It was free every Thursday and the back cover always told you what bands were playing at the 9:30 Club and sometimes it h…

RT @lee_hedgepeth: Journalism matters. Days after an exclusive @insideclimate investigation and intervention from @splcenter, a small Alaba…