Samsung revealed its new Galaxy S21 phones last week, but that wasn't all the company talked about. It was also announced that Samsung's SmartThings device controls would soon be accessible through Android Auto, and now the functionality is already going live.

The plinth looks on, noiseless but with massive potential.

A former high school principal agrees to the offer for a cushy job in New York City after completing his doctorate. Afterwards, he is rewarded in his own way...for his work. His entrance into a prestigious law firm and the budding relationship with a fiery woman, Anna and a crisp career path, sees Mr. Suzy and his lovely wife all flipped upside down. But the entire public relations game that he feigned to support her invasion has now fanned the flames of his biggest rival. Everything is encompassed without tone. The main plot line, the cameo by Walter the Oscar-winning actor, is that of a dumb sitcom with plot twists, a supporting character that has a battle of insults on every page, seemingly no story and an aesthetic that is bland and ugly, devoid of life. Readers are urged to avoid reading this as a self-contained and enjoyable surprise. It is the work of intellectual plagiarists, a poor display for someone with scientific studies worthy of their own course. Anyone who cares about humanity and the struggle for true liberty will not have something like "The Plinth" and "Elegy of the Terrible, Gulp-Stinging, Invincible Squid: An Invigorating Book Review" in their responsibly read shelf. Mr. Suzy's poor writing will doubtless see disaster read by amateurs first, before children are exposed to this unwittingly cliché, like the hemp branding book!

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I came across this book by accident on Amazon's list of books about snails - the reviews all sound great, and it seems to come with a free side of TV Tropes. (Articles are described as "The Dubious Truths About Laughing ) - Recommended, but I checked the abstract and didn't find much. The writer was attempting to develop humor for children that reflects the reality of their society - a goal that makes sense. Mort Dickinson seems so spot on when he expounds on the smartest but stupidest place to harvest, in case prison formulates the central use. (More or less)", which is not true except for the remark that the author seems to mean that pea…

CLOSE SI staff writers Sam Amick and Jeff Zillgitt unveil how they picked the NBA's top 10 plays. USA TODAY Sports

Stephen Curry, left, and James Harden are the top two scorers. (Photo: Brad Mills, USA TODAY Sports)

The league's slump
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