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80°

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81°

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7-Day Forecast

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81°

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61°

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61°

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85°

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58°

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71°

31%

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55°

81%

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64°

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53°

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54°

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67°

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Sunrise 5:09am · Sunset 9:12pm
Tides: Next: High 7.3 ft at 12:24 PM
AQI 51 — Moderate
No quakes M4.5+ in last 24h

Seattle Sports

3-14

8th in Western Conference Division

LOSS Storm 73 at Mercury 93 Sat, Jun 20
NEXT Home vs Wings Today · 7:00 PM
40-39

1st in AL West

WIN Red Sox 1 at Mariners 3 Yesterday
NEXT At Pirates Tomorrow · 3:40 PM
4-2-5

10th in NWSL

NEXT At North Carolina Sat, Jul 4 · 3:30 PM

Latest News

Updated 2 minutes ago
GeekWire about 1 hour

Building a ‘digital twin’ 10,000 feet underground: PNNL, Nvidia and Fervo team up on geothermal AI

As tech giants hunt for massive amounts of clean electricity, PNNL, Nvidia and Fervo Energy are partnering to develop a new public tool that aims to eliminate the guesswork of drilling into the Earth's molten depths. Read More

GeekWire about 2 hours

Amazon MGM Studios drops film about Sam Altman months after tech giant’s $50B OpenAI deal

Amazon MGM Studios has backed away from "Artificial," a nearly finished film about OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. The studio said last week that the film would "be better served if it were released by a different studio." Read More

GeekWire about 5 hours

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

South Seattle Emerald about 5 hours

COLUMN | Young Seattle Authors Find Their Voices Through the Storybook Project

Reagan Jackson introduces the young writers behind AHSHAY's Storybook Project, a seven-week pilot helping marginalized youth see themselves as authors.

KUOW Seattle Now about 7 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.

City Cast Seattle about 9 hours

The Croc's New Owner, the Lenin Statue's Wild Origin, and What's Happening at 12th and Jackson

Today on the podcast, host Jane C. Hu and producer Liam Billingham sit down with the new owner of The Crocodile, Comedy Tent’s managing director, Chris Copen to ask all about the future of The Crocodile. They dig into plans for the smaller stages, and what 1,000 survey responses in under an hour from Seattleites says about how much this city cares about our arts venues. Then, contributor Marcus Harrison Green joins to unpack Mayor Katie Wilson's new crackdown at 12th and Jackson — and whether it will have a real impact. Plus: the surprisingly wild history of Fremont's Lenin statue and our listeners shout out some of their favorite spots around town in our Monday Mailbag. Learn more about the sponsors of this episode: Want to get in touch? Follow us @CityCastSeattle on Instagram, or email us at [email protected]. You can also call or text us at 206-880-3931. For more Seattle news, make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter, City Cast Seattle. Support City Cast Seattle by becoming a member: membership.citycast.fm/seattle Looking to advertise on City Cast Seattle? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise.

GeekWire about 23 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 1 day

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

South Seattle Emerald 1 day

DOOM LOOP: Infill

How to make friends with urbanists.

GeekWire 2 days

Anthropic, Amazon, and the Fable shutdown; AI-powered school arrives; World Cup tech

Anthropic took its two newest AI models offline to comply with a U.S. order, with Amazon CEO Andy Jassy reportedly among those who raised the concerns behind it. The GeekWire Podcast also digs into agentic AI's effect on Amazon's culture, an AI-driven school opening near Seattle, and the sensor-packed World Cup ball. Read More

KUOW Seattle Now 2 days

Weekend Listen: In Seattle, an exhibit by an Iranian artist examines the idea of freedom for women in her country, and teens and seniors swap tech skills and life skills

Today, we’re bringing you the best from the KUOW Newsroom. While the U.S. and Iran are attempting to negotiate an end to the U.S. led war, the Iranian men’s national soccer team is scheduled to travel to Seattle next week for the World Cup. They will face off against Egypt in their final match in the group stage. Just blocks from where the teams will play, an exhibit by an Iranian artist examines the idea of freedom for women in her country. KUOW’s Ayeda Masood has the story.  And, teenagers and senior citizens might seem like they don't have a lot in common: different generations, different technology, different language. But one teacher in Skagit County bridged the divide by putting teenagers and senior citizens in a room together so they could learn from one another. Kyle Norris reports. We can only make Seattle Now because listeners support us. Tap here to make a gift and keep Seattle Now in your feed.  Got questions about local news or story ideas to share? We want to hear from you! Email us at [email protected], leave us a voicemail at (206) 616-6746 or leave us feedback online.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

GeekWire 3 days

Worlds collide at Amazon Spheres as pro-Palestinian group protests cloud giant’s Israel contracts

Carrying bullhorns and signs depicting Amazon executives as war criminals, about two dozen people protested outside the Spheres in Seattle on Thursday evening, calling on the company to stop providing technology to Israel for what they described as genocide in Gaza. Read More

About Paddleboard

Paddleboard is a Seattle news aggregator that pulls from local newspapers and neighborhood blogs, alongside weather, sports scores, election info, and resources for navigating the city.

For questions or feedback, please email [email protected].