Seattle Conditions
☼
Sunrise 5:09am · Sunset 9:12pm
☰
Tides: Next: High 7.3 ft at 12:24 PM
●
AQI 50 — Good
◆
No quakes M4.5+ in last 24h
Seattle Sports
8th in Western Conference Division
LOSS Storm 73 at Mercury 93 Sat, Jun 20Latest News
Updated 3 minutes ago
Capitol Hill Seattle
City Cast Seattle
Daily Journal of Commerce
Davy Jones Locker Room
Eater Seattle
Field Gulls
Fremont Neighbor
GeekWire
International Examiner
KUOW Seattle Now
Lookout Landing
My Ballard
NW Asian Weekly
NW Progressive Institute
On Montlake
Phinney Wood
PubliCola
Puget Sound Business Journal
Seattle Gay News
Seattle Medium
Seattle Met
Seattle Transit Blog
Seattle Weekly
Sounder at Heart
South Seattle Emerald
The Needling
The North American Post
The Seattle Times
The Spectator
The Stranger
The Urbanist
West Seattle Blog
Westside Seattle
GeekWire
12 minutes
Riding the clean energy waves: How Sila’s Gene Berdichevsky built a next-gen battery powerhouse
From the ashes of clean tech 1.0 to scaling automotive-grade silicon anodes in Moses Lake, Sila co-founder and CEO Gene Berdichevsky shares why patience, market forces, and material science are the true keys to the energy transition. Read More
Seattle Medium
33 minutes
Vanishing Care: GOP Healthcare Cuts Hit Black America Hard
Cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act have resulted in the closure of over 1,000 healthcare facilities and reduced services, disproportionately affecting Black communities. This systemic impact has led to increased ambulance response times, contributing to delayed care, preventable suffering, and a heightened risk of mortality for Black Americans, who already experience higher uninsured rates.
Seattle Medium
43 minutes
Women Built The Ministry. Men Kept The Title.
The Southern Baptist Convention has advanced a constitutional amendment that would formalize restrictions on women serving as pastors, a development that for many Black church leaders exposes a broader reality: women are often essential to ministry but excluded from many of its highest positions.
Seattle Medium
about 1 hour
How One News Error Shook Baltimore’s Faith Community
The Baltimore Sun's erroneous identification of Pastor Antoine Burton as a crime suspect has prompted widespread outrage among Baltimore clergy and elected officials, raising critical questions regarding newsroom safeguards, public trust, and the profound implications of misidentification for Black community leaders.
Seattle Medium
about 1 hour
I Now Know He Won Nothing
Reports highlight former President Donald Trump's controversial claims regarding the Iran conflict and his administration's efforts to restrict voting access, alongside his perceived disrespect for international figures. In contrast, former President Barack Obama's eight-year tenure is frequently cited for its achievements and the hope it inspired.
KUOW Seattle Now
about 2 hours
Seattle banned data centers. Now what?
Today, we're bringing you an episode from our friends at KUOW's Booming podcast. Seattle’s city council just approved a one-year moratorium on data centers within city limits – making the city the biggest in the country to ban them. The move comes after several big developers proposed data center projects that could use up to a third of the power that Seattle uses on an average day. On today's episode, what do data center companies want to be in Seattle for, anyway? And are we better off without them? Thank you to the supporters of KUOW, you help make this show possible! If you want to help out, go to kuow.org/donate/boomingnotes.Booming is a production of KUOW in Seattle, a proud member of the NPR Network. Our editor is Carol Smith. Our producers are Lucy Soucek and Alec Cowan. Our hosts are Joshua McNichols and Monica Nickelsburg.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Westside Seattle
about 18 hours
Pickleball vs. Tennis: Seattle Residents clash over future of Alki courts as city hosts final Public Engagement sessions
Pickleball vs. Tennis: Seattle Residents clash over future of Alki courts as city hosts final Public Engagement sessions Off patr Sun, 06/21/2026 - 1:10pm
GeekWire
about 19 hours
Etzioni on AI: What the World Cup tells us about the best roles for humans and machines
The 2026 World Cup has added AI and computer vision to the officiating crew — a sensor inside the ball, semi-automated offside calls, and 16 tracking cameras per stadium. Oren Etzioni explains how the systems work, what they deliberately leave to human referees, and what it says about automation more broadly. Read More
GeekWire
about 23 hours
Week in Review: Most popular stories on GeekWire for the week of June 14, 2026
See the technology stories that people were reading on GeekWire for the week of June 14, 2026. Read More