Alexis Ohanian said just months ago she couldn’t walk.

See the article here:
Serena Williams’ Proud Husband Tweets About Her Success
Alexis Ohanian said just months ago she couldn’t walk.

See the article here:
Serena Williams’ Proud Husband Tweets About Her Success
The photo has encouraged many to create their own caption.

The rest is here:
LeBron Chilling On A Donut Floatie Is The New Summer Meme
WEST HOLLYWOOD (CBSLA) — A violent and racist rant was caught on camera outside a West Hollywood grocery store. Angela Jefferson is the woman on the video recorded outside a Pavilions store. She says she was studying and listening to music around 2:30 p.m. Tuesday when a man sitting at the next table started saying derogatory things to her. “He had like a pipe or something or stick and he was hitting it on the tales and he tried to hit me with it, but I dodged it,” she said. “He was calling me the ‘N’ word … He was calling me the ‘B’ word.” Angela says she asked him to stop, but he then smashed her belongings and threw a chair at her. Dulcinea Circelli was inside the store having lunch and heard the commotion. “So I came out here and saw that he had broken a chair and was trying to hit this woman in the head and saying the ‘N’ word, and at that point, I started recording,” Circelli said. The video shows another witness coming over to stop the man from attacking Jefferson. When the witness told him to leave, the man got angrier. “It was just so scary and just the fact that he was expecting the security guard to back him up when he was armed and attacking two people with metal rods,” Circelli said. Witnesses say the man was drunk and left before sheriff’s deputies arrived. “I’m outraged about that and I don’t feel safe personally with him out there,” Circelli added. Jefferson said she’s thankful others intervened. Police say if the man returns, does it again and is caught he will be arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct.
More:
Woman Studying Outside WeHo Grocery Store Attacked In Racist Rant
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) – A fast-moving brush fire broke out Tuesday afternoon near Griffith Observatory. The Griffith Park Fire quickly grew to about 10 acres around 2 p.m. and was located “no closer than one-quarter mile northwest of the Griffith Observatory,” LAFD officials said. The Observatory was evacuated by Police & Park Rangers due to drifting smoke. This is a breaking news report. More information will be provided as it becomes available.
Read the original post:
Brush Fire Breaks Out Near Griffith Observatory
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) – A fast-moving brush fire broke out Tuesday afternoon near Griffith Observatory. The Griffith Park Fire quickly grew to about 10 acres around 2 p.m. and was located “no closer than one-quarter mile northwest of the Griffith Observatory,” LAFD officials said. The Observatory was evacuated by Police & Park Rangers due to drifting smoke. This is a breaking news report. More information will be provided as it becomes available.
Read more:
Brush Fire Breaks Out Near Griffith Observatory
“Savannah looks like Beyonce that time she hung with Kim.”

Continue reading here:
Pics Of LeBron And Savannah Out With Tristan And Khloe
“Savannah looks like Beyonce that time she hung with Kim.”

Continue reading here:
Pics Of LeBron And Savannah Out With Tristan And Khloe
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A decade ago, Apple opened a store peddling iPhone apps, unlocking the creativity of software developers and letting users truly make their mobile devices their own. The resulting explosion of phone apps — there are now more than 2 million for the iPhone alone — has changed daily life for billions of people around the world. It has unleashed new ways for us to work and play — and to become so distracted that we sometimes forget to look up from our screens. It has created new industries — think ride-hailing services like Uber, which would be unimaginable without mobile apps — and pumped up demand for software developers and coding schools. But it has also opened the door to an age of technology anxiety, rife with concerns that apps are serving us a little too well and holding our attention whether we want them to or not. IN THE BEGINNING None of that was going on when Apple’s app store debuted 10 years ago Tuesday. At the time, mobile phones were largely a take-it-or-leave it proposition, with features programmed by their manufacturers and customization mostly limited to a choice between tinny electronic ringtones. The iPhone itself was still in its infancy, with only 6 million devices sold during the device’s first year. Then came the App Store, which offered 500 programs users could take or leave themselves. During its first weekend, people downloaded 10 million apps — many of them games. Apple competitors Google, Amazon and Microsoft soon launched their own app stores. Together, these companies now offer roughly 7 million apps . Apple, meanwhile, has now sold more than a billion iPhones . THE APP ECONOMY That app tsunami, and the riches it generated, spawned new economic opportunities. Billions of dollars flowed into startups dependent on their apps, from Uber to Snapchat to Spotify to game makers like Angry Birds creator Rovio. Opportunities for software developers blossomed as well. Apple perhaps benefited most of all. Its “free” apps usually display advertising or make money from subscriptions or other in-app purchases, while others charge users to download. Apple takes a cut of this action, sometimes as much as 30 percent. The app store is now the fastest growing part of Apple’s business. Together with other Apple services, the app store generated $33 billion in revenue over the year that ended in March. The company says it has paid out more than $100 billion to developers during the past decade. THE OTHER SIDE OF APPS For all the possibilities apps have allowed, there’s also a dark side. The Center for Humane Technology, an advocacy group formed by early employees of Google and Facebook, charges that many apps are engineered specifically to capture our attention, often to our detriment. That makes them “part of a system designed to addict us ,” the group says. Apple says it shares similar concerns. To help, the company is adding new tools to the iPhone to track and control the usage of the most time-consuming apps. (© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
Link:
How Apple’s App Store Changed Our World