Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. June 25th, 2025 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: June 25, 2025 - 18:02

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. June 25th, 2025

June 25, 2025

Technology is moving fast in 2025, and perhaps way too fast for us to catch up. A story out of New Jersey is a prime example of that, as we take a glimpse into the future of everyday driving. Here is how the journey begins. A New Jersey teenager used his father’s Tesla to take his road test. The examiner declared that the teen had allowed the car to perform parallel-parking manoeuvres, but the father insisted that he didn’t activate those features. Naturally, questions are being raised. Joining us to expand further on those concerns is Lorraine Sommerfeld, a Driving.ca columnist. Speaking of tech gadgets, are you concerned that Artificial Intelligence might take your job? What industries do you think are prime targets for A.I. inventions? Andrew Pinsent, filling in for Kristy Cameron, tackles today’s Question of the Day. Plus, there is a growing uproar within the truck-driving industry right now. Several drivers are calling on the feds to halt, in their words, a $2 billion ‘scam’ that re-classifies drivers. We dig deeper with Mark Seymour, who is the owner of Prescott-based Kriska Transportation Group.



Unpublished Newswire

 
A new study in the New England Journal of Medicine has found that ivermectin, an antiparasitic drug used to treat tropical diseases such as river blindness, can also fight the spread of malaria. It does so in a way that seems oddly (and satisfyingly) like revenge against the mosquitos that...
July 29, 2025 - 10:56 | Chris Knight | National Post
Residents and businesses in Bowmanville, Ont., in Durham Region were told to discontinue all non-essential indoor and outdoor water use as of Sunday.
July 29, 2025 - 10:24 | Gabby Rodrigues | Global News - Canada
Twenty-month-old Amelia liked to play with zippers. One February morning in 2019, the toddler woke when her mother returned to the bed the two had been sharing in a rented room in a Kitchener, Ont. home. Amelia didn’t have her own crib. It was around 10 a.m. Her mother had just used drugs in the bathroom, and then slipped a baggie with what was left of the blue-coloured substance inside a zipper pocket on the front of her sweater. She thought the opioid in her possession was fentanyl. Later testing determined it was, in fact, carfentanil, a fentanyl cousin 100 times more potent than...
July 29, 2025 - 09:55 | Sharon Kirkey | National Post