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fromTheregister
20 hours ago

India satisfies its supercomputing needs, not its ambitions

India's National Supercomputing Mission has built substantial compute capacity and local indigenization but still lacks domestic semiconductor leadership and a completed homegrown CPU.
Science
fromTheregister
6 hours ago

Norway's new supercomputer to use waste heat to raise salmon

Olivia supercomputer multiplies Norway's computing capacity sixteenfold using AMD Turin CPUs and Nvidia Grace Hopper Superchips to support diverse scientific and AI research sustainably.
fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Author Correction: Photocatalytic low-temperature defluorination of PFASs - Nature

Researchers are affiliated with the University of Science and Technology of China and Nanjing Tech University; correspondence directed to Jian-Ping Qu and Yan-Biao Kang.
Science
fromThe Hacker News
6 hours ago

Shai-Hulud v2 Campaign Spreads From npm to Maven, Exposing Thousands of Secrets

Shai-Hulud v2 compromised npm and Maven artifacts, infecting PostHog-linked releases to backdoor developer machines and exfiltrate API keys, cloud credentials, and tokens.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Why the world must wake up to China's science leadership

China is rapidly building scientific and technological self-reliance through large R&D spending, innovation-focused policy, and growing STEM graduate capacity.
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fromNature
1 day ago

The Venus project

Afrodi passionately prefers Venus's volatile, potentially habitable past and sisterly danger to the popular Mars colonization obsession.
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fromNature
1 day ago

This is what lightning on Mars sounds like

Mars' Perseverance recorded 55 'micro-lightning' electrical discharges, revealing electrostatic activity that influences Martian chemistry and instrument design.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 hours ago

China's Giant Underground Neutrino Observatory Just Released Its First ResultsAnd They're Promising

JUNO's 59-day run produced world-leading measurements of two neutrino oscillation parameters and advances prospects for determining the neutrino mass ordering.
fromArs Technica
8 hours ago

Russia's Soyuz 5 will soon come alive. But will anyone want to fly on it?

The Soyuz 5 rocket, also named Irtysh for a river that flows through Russia and Kazakhstan, answers to that purpose. Its first stage is powered by a single RD-171MV engine, which at sea level has three times the thrust of a single Raptor 3 engine, and is part of a family of engines that are the most powerful liquid-fueled rocket engines in the world. The RD-171MV uses only Russian components.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Thalamocortical transcriptional gates coordinate memory stabilization

The molecular mechanisms that enable memories to persist over long timescales from days to weeks and months are still poorly understood1. Here, to develop insights into this process, we created a behavioural task in which mice formed multiple memories but only consolidated some, while forgetting others, over the span of weeks. We then monitored circuit-specific molecular programs that diverged between consolidated and forgotten memories. We identified multiple distinct waves of transcription, that is, cellular macrostates, in the thalamocortical circuit that defined memory persistence.
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fromFuturism
10 hours ago

This Video of a Robot Playing Basketball Is EXTREMELY Impressive

Unitree G1 humanoid robot was programmed to play basketball using SkillMimic to mimic human and ball motions, executing dribbles, jump shots, and pivots.
#boeing-starliner
fromBig Think
3 hours ago

How your body could outlive the genome you were born with

As humans, we all want the same thing, a life that's full of good experiences, more time with family, with friends, more time to love, but sometimes genetic illness can cut that short or really, for all of us at some point, our body breaks down. And our bodies are genetic machines. For many diseases, the cause of the disease is a mutation in the genome. Gene therapy is a vision that many have had for decades, more than 50 years.
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fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago

When Math Meets Mind

Observer-relative time dilation can make long computations feasible for local observers near strong gravity, altering notions of computational efficiency for finite minds.
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fromArs Technica
1 hour ago

ULA aimed to launch up to 10 Vulcan rockets this year-it will fly just once

Vulcan launches face delays driven by solid rocket motor performance concerns and inspections despite available hardware and ongoing launch infrastructure upgrades.
#brain-development
fromMail Online
14 hours ago

Radical new theory of consciousness explains what happens when you die

Consciousness does not emerge from human brains, according to Professor Maria Strømme, a professor of nanotechnology at Uppsala University. Instead, she claims that it exists as a fundamental field. If this is correct, 'mysterious' phenomena such as telepathy, near-death experiences, and even life after death could finally be explained by science. According to Professor Strømme's theory, consciousness does not end when we die. Instead, when a person passes away, their consciousness simply returns to the background field.
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fromFast Company
1 day ago

Time for a CRISPR discussion about genetic engineering

Gene editing in agriculture requires consistent regulatory oversight because exempting edited crops risks unchecked entry into the food supply and uneven safety standards.
#dark-matter
Science
fromMail Online
13 hours ago

Forget Yellowstone! Hidden volcanoes pose the greatest risk

Poorly monitored 'hidden' volcanoes can erupt unexpectedly and cause severe, far-reaching hazards, as shown by the long-dormant Hayli Gubbi eruption.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Slipknot-gauged mechanical transmission and robotic operation - Nature

Slipknot-gauged mechanical transmission encodes and transmits force information via peak force signals enabling intelligent control in constrained environments.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Vicarious body maps bridge vision and touch in the human brain - Nature

174 participants (104 female, 70 male; mean age 29.3) underwent 7T fMRI while watching concatenated film clips across four runs with REST periods.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Mars Has Lightning, Scientists Prove

Mars experiences electrical activity and lightning caused by triboelectrification of wind-blown dust and sand, confirmed by Perseverance acoustic and electromagnetic detections.
#earthquake
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fromNature
1 day ago

Building compositional tasks with shared neural subspaces - Nature

Two adult male rhesus macaques performed a fixation-based task discriminating morphing stimuli varying continuously in colour and shape along circular continua.
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

Lab Beagles: What Science and All of Us Owe To Research Dogs

Beagles are very popular companion dogs and also very popular among breeding facilities and research laboratories where they live highly compromised lives, all "in the name of research" to help humans. 1 Many, if not most people, have no idea what goes on behind these closed doors. I've often wondered why these wonderful dogs rather than others wound up being used for a sorts of research, and now I know because of Dr. Brad Bolman's excellent new book Lab Dog.
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Science
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

How studying lions' roars with AI can help with conservation efforts

AI analysis revealed a previously unrecognized lion roar type and enabled individual identification, offering a new tool for lion monitoring and conservation.
fromThe Atlantic
11 hours ago

A Cascade of Lies About Turkey

There's a fairy tale about Thanksgiving that gets refuted every fall. Does eating turkey really make you fall asleep? When science writers check in with the experts, they always get the same response: No, no, no, and no. Also no and no. These holiday debunkers tell you what the science says: Turkey meat is not a sedative. They tell you what the studies show: Drumsticks don't produce fatigue.
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#urban-wildlife
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
13 hours ago

Flam: James Watson had a brilliant mind and a broken moral compass

James Watson co-discovered DNA's double helix yet later expressed racist, bigoted views, tarnishing his legacy despite genetics showing recent common human origins in Africa.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Ethylene modulates cell wall mechanics for root responses to compaction - Nature

Reduced cellulose synthesis enables roots to penetrate compacted soil by promoting ethylene-driven radial cortical expansion and soil fissure formation.
Science
fromSFGATE
13 hours ago

A California geological wonder sits just off Highway 395

Fossil Falls is an accessible, fossilized waterfall shaped by ancient basalt lava flows and Ice Age rivers, revealing the region's volcanic and glacial geological history.
Science
fromBig Think
18 hours ago

The Moon's two faces don't match, and we think we know why

The Moon dominates Earth's night sky, appearing much larger and brighter than Venus and showing varied surface features—craters and maria—that reveal its geological history.
fromArs Technica
12 hours ago

Many genes associated with dog behavior influence human personalities, too

Many dog breeds are noted for their personalities and behavioral traits, from the distinctive vocalizations of huskies to the herding of border collies. People have worked to identify the genes associated with many of these behaviors, taking advantage of the fact that dogs can interbreed. But that creates its own experimental challenges, as it can be difficult to separate some behaviors from physical traits distinctive to the breed-small dog breeds may seem more aggressive simply because they feel threatened more often.
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fromMail Online
23 hours ago

Scientists uncover dark new behavior among bloodthirsty rats

Brown rats ambush and kill bats in darkness using whisker sensing, potentially decimating colonies and increasing risk of zoonotic pathogen transfer.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Scientists Finally Solve Mystery of Ancient Fossil Foot

Sixteen years ago a group of anthropologists discovered 3.4-million-year-old fossilized foot bones in Ethiopia. While they suspected the foot belonged to an ancient human that likely lived alongside the species we know as Lucy, Australopithecus afarensis, without a skull or teeth to analyze, they couldn't be sure. What they did know is that unlike Lucy, which walked upright on arched feet like our own, the mystery foot had a grasping toe that was adapted for climbing trees.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
11 hours ago

Wild Turkeys Went from Almost Gone to Millions Strong

Wild turkey populations rebounded from near-extinction due to habitat loss and overhunting, recovering to more than six million across the U.S.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
14 hours ago

The origins of your dog's unique look may be older than you think

Most physical diversity in domestic dogs, including varied skull shapes, had already emerged by about 10,000–11,000 years ago, predating Victorian selective breeding.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Dying for fame: Singers die 4 YEARS earlier than non-famous people

Fame among singers is associated with higher mortality: famous singers die about four years younger than comparable lesser-known singers.
fromDefector
8 hours ago

Why Won't Nora The Leopard Seal Abandon Her Dead Pups? | Defector

He was thrilled; this was the first leopard seal he'd ever seen in Chile, where he is from. As he peered through his binoculars, he noticed another, smaller seal: a pup. "I got so excited, and then we got there, and it's dead," he said. As the boat drew nearer, he could see the pup was still haloed in downy white hairs, suggesting it was less than a week old. Its head was submerged and its limp body was frozen to the ice.
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fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Fleet Space finds massive lithium deposit using AI and satellites | TechCrunch

Satellite-powered AI and subsurface sensing expanded the known extent of a massive Quebec lithium deposit and reduced drilling-targeting time to 48 hours.
Science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Boeing's troubled Starliner won't carry astronauts on its next mission

Boeing and NASA will fly the next Starliner as a cargo-only test to validate propulsion and safety before resuming crewed missions.
fromFuturism
1 day ago

NASA Says Boeing's Busted Starliner Spacecraft Won't Be Allowed to Carry Astronauts on Next Mission

In a statement, NASA revealed that it agreed to modify Boeing's existing 2014 Commercial Crew contract to have Starliner carry cargo only for its first operational flight, Starliner-1, which is tentatively scheduled for "no earlier than April 2026." "Following Starliner certification, and a successful Starliner-1 mission, Starliner will fly up to three crew rotations to the International Space Station," NASA's statement reads.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

China launches an emergency lifeboat to bring three astronauts back to Earth

A rapid Shenzhou 22 launch restored Tiangong's crew lifeboat after Shenzhou 20 damage, reflecting standard orbital emergency-response practice and recent spacecraft incidents.
#spacex
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

NASA pares back Boeing's Starliner deal after 2024 calamity

NASA reduced Boeing Commercial Crew missions from six to four, designating one uncrewed Starliner flight to validate post-test-flight upgrades before crewed use.
#shenzhou-22
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fromNature
2 days ago

Earthquakes, hurricanes and floods: protecting the people who live in hazardous places

People face exposure to natural disasters and intense fires; historical archive material contains images and language now considered offensive and harmful.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Formation of oceans within icy moons could cause the waters to boil

Periodic orbital interactions can cause subsurface oceans in small icy moons to cyclically form and boil as interiors melt and shrink beneath the ice.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Harnessing the Power of Memory

Memories can be actively manipulated by targeting specific hippocampal neurons, enabling recall modulation and altering mood-related behaviors in animal models.
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fromNature
2 days ago

We are all mosaics: vast genetic diversity found between cells in a single person

Single individuals can harbour extensive mosaic genetic variation, including chromosome arm gains or losses, Y-chromosome loss, and diverse DNA deletions or duplications across cells.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Which Thanksgiving Pie Gives You the Biggest Sugar Rush?

Pecan pie has the most sugar, but its higher protein and fiber slow glucose release; pumpkin ranks next, and apple has the least sugar.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Supermassive black holes came before stars in ancient galaxies

Supermassive black holes appear far earlier and larger than theoretical limits allow, despite the early Universe's extreme near-uniformity.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

This Fossil Is Rewriting the Story of How Plants Spread across the Planet

Around 410 million years ago, terrestrial life was relatively simple. There were no forests or prairiesland was largely dominated by slimy microbial mats. The types of plants that would eventually give rise to trees and flowers had only just evolved and would take another several million years to fully flourish and diversify. A new discovery is rewriting the story of how these vascular plants, as they are called, spread onto land.
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fromScienceDaily
1 day ago

Cocoa and tea may protect your heart from the hidden damage of sitting

Regularly consuming flavanol-rich foods like tea, berries, apples, nuts, and cocoa can protect men's blood vessels from vascular decline caused by prolonged sitting.
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fromNature
2 days ago

The ocular microbiome: more than meets the eye

The eye hosts a low-density yet influential microbiome, including slow-growing Corynebacterium mastitidis, which affects ocular health and requires extended culture or sequencing to detect.
Science
fromTechCrunch
2 days ago

Exclusive: This startup wants to build a fusion reactor - on a boat | TechCrunch

Fusion-powered marine reactors could provide clean, long-duration ship propulsion and may become commercially viable due to advances in AI, computing, and superconducting magnets.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

X-energy scores $700M investment to make SMR dream come true

X-energy secured $700 million funding, pre-booked 144 SMRs totaling over 11 GW, and aims to deploy Xe-100 reactors using TRISO-X fuel across US and UK.
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fromBusiness Matters
2 days ago

Nammo UK chosen as main engine supplier for ESA's Argonaut lunar lander

Nammo UK will supply the RELIANCE 6kN bi-propellant main engine for ESA's Argonaut lunar lander, supporting Artemis lunar logistics in 2031.
Science
fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: Where pigeons get their sense of direction

Pigeons detect Earth's magnetic fields via tiny electrical currents in inner-ear cells; Paradromics begins an FDA-approved BCI trial and COP30 faces fossil-fuel phase-out disputes.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

The Real Fight Over Geoengineering Is Beginning

Research into geoengineering is increasingly seen as urgently needed despite risks, because worsening climate projections push scientists to reconsider intervention options.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientists issue ominous warning over mind-altering 'brain weapons'

Advanced neuroscience enables development of CNS-acting weapons capable of altering perception, memory, and behavior, posing increased risk as tools become more precise and accessible.
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Professor Says Mysterious Interstellar Object May Be Releasing Sentinels Around Jupiter

Specifically, it's going to zip right past Jupiter's Hill radius, the boundary inside which the gas giant can keep an object in its own orbit without it being stolen by the Sun. In the Earth's vicinity, Lagrange points L1 and L2 are close to the boundary of our planet's Hill radius, a perfect place of equilibrium for satellites and other human-made objects, such as the James Webb Space Telescope, to orbit the Sun while using minimal amounts of fuel.
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fromFast Company
2 days ago

This CEO just sold his company for $21 billion. It wouldn't have happened without federally funded research

Life sciences CEOs face high scientific, clinical, regulatory, and business risks amid declining public trust and increasing political and funding pressures.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Are We Puppets of Our Brain?

Movement arises from a mixture of stochastic neural buildup and conscious or semiconscious intentions, with agency tied to alignment with goals, identity, and values.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Mysterious burst of 90 quakes jolts California's Bay Area

A swarm of at least 90 small earthquakes centered near San Ramon on the Calaveras Fault has rattled the Bay Area since November 9.
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fromScienceDaily
2 days ago

Immune cells use a surprising trick to heal muscle faster

Macrophages deliver a rapid, synaptic-like ionic signal directly to muscle fibers to facilitate fast repair and enable potential therapies for injury and muscle-wasting diseases.
#moss
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Did you solve it? Are you smarter than a soap bubble?

What is the road system that connects all four towns using the smallest total length of road? What perhaps feels like the right answer is a network where opposing towns are connected in straight lines. If the square has side length 1km, the total length is about 2.83km In fact, the minimal network is the one below, which shaves off about 4 per cent of the length of the X solution.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

A bowhead whale's DNA offers clues to fight cancer

In cancer biology, there's a conundrum known as Peto's paradox: Large animals have lots of cells, which in theory should mean more chances to develop cancer. And long-lived organisms have more time to acquire the mutations needed to transform healthy cells into cancerous ones. And yet "that's not what happens," says Vera Gorbunova, a biologist at the University of Rochester. "It suggests that these large and longer-lived animals have additional protections from cancer that they evolved."
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fromNature
3 days ago

Chasing crayfish and the leeches that live on them

Branchiobdellidan leeches on crayfish clean hosts at low numbers, become mildly parasitic in large colonies, and serve as bioindicators of crayfish and river health.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientist reveals the gruesome effects of walking into a black hole

The gravitational forces of a primordial black hole would be so strong that they would tear the cells of your brain apart from the inside out. Professor Scherrer says: 'A sufficiently large primordial black hole, about the size of an asteroid or larger, would cause serious injury or death if it passed through you. 'It would behave like a gunshot.'
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

How far back in time can the naked eye see?

Observing distant astronomical objects means seeing them as they were in the past, from milliseconds to billions of years ago.
fromwashingtonian.com
2 days ago

Asian Elephant Is Pregnant at DC's National Zoo

The Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, DC, announced today that one of its Asian elephants, Nhi Linh (pronounced NEE-lin), is pregnant and could give birth to the first baby calf born at the facility in nearly a quarter century. If the pregnancy continues on track, the calf should be born between mid-January and early March. According to a press release, the zoo's 44-year-old male elephant, Spike, mated with 12-year-old Nhi Linh in April 2024.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

World's longest underwater cave extends 325 MILES beneath Mexico

Beneath the idyllic resort towns of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, daring explorers have uncovered a hidden world of grand chambers and twisting tunnels. The Ox Bel Ha, Mayan for 'Three Paths of Water', is a sprawling water 'web' that makes up the world's longest underwater cave system. In this vast network, researchers have found giant sink holes, huge crystal chambers known as ice palaces, and 38 unique species of cave-dwelling animals.
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fromNews Center
2 days ago

Genetic Mechanisms Promote Antimicrobial Resistance in Gonorrhea - News Center

Mutation in N. gonorrhoeae hpaC and Type IV pilus–mediated iron homeostasis drive novel antimicrobial resistance pathways, informing potential treatment strategies.
fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

What California's big, gross elephant seals can teach us about life

What can an elephant seal - a 4,000 pound, bellowing monstrosity that looks like a melted Yankee Candle - teach us about the world? Plenty, it turns out. "The animals are amazing. I mean, everything they do is extreme," says Daniel Costa, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz. "They're the deepest-diving pinniped and they dive for longer than any other seal or sea lion. They also fast for longer. Everything they do is just pushing the limits."
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Why synthetic emerald-green pigments degrade over time

Humidity from museum visitors' breath, more than light exposure, contributes to emerald-green pigment degradation; synchrotron X-ray and mockups were used to test light and humidity effects.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

The Guardian view on animal testing: we can stop sacrificing millions of lives for our own health | Editorial

Science is a slaughterhouse. We rarely acknowledge the degree to which animal life underwrites the research that provides us with medicines, or the regulation that keeps us safe. Live animals were used in 2.64m officially sanctioned scientific procedures in the UK in 2024, many of them distressing or painful and many of them fatal. But the government's new strategy to phase out animal testing published earlier this month suggests that in the near future emerging technologies
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fromThe Drum
3 days ago

National Geographic leverages Einstein Messenger chatbot in Genius promo

National Geographic launched a Facebook Messenger bot portraying Albert Einstein to educate users about physics and promote the series Genius premiering April 25.
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Bonkers NASA Mission Next Year Will Drop Rocket Out of Plane, Blast Off From There

NASA officials are facing that exact predicament as the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory is set to fall from its orbit at the end of 2026, - but the agency has green lit an audacious plan that's one for the history books: a plane drops a rocket in mid air that's carrying a robotic satellite, which will then blast into space and boost the telescope's altitude, thereby saving it.
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fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Stop Posting Your Citation Count

Citation counts measure attention, not research quality, and often reward prestige and novelty over methodological rigor.
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fromKotaku
3 days ago

LEGO Clearly Isn't Prioritizing Profit as the NASA Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle Goes Cheaper Than Expected This Black Friday - Kotaku

Lego's Technic NASA Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle set is discounted 30% to $154 for a limited-time early Black Friday sale.
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

How a twangy voice can help you be heard

So in a lot of country music, you might describe the singer's voice as bright or brassy or sharp. But I bet the word you really want to use is twangy. TZU-PEI TSAI: Twangy voice, it refers to a bright timbre that sounds like a children's taunting - nya na nya na nya na nya - or a witch's cackling (cackling).
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Find Evidence That Humans Made Out With Non-Human Creatures

Humans and Neanderthals very likely kissed, as kissing likely evolved among large apes roughly 20 million years ago.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Do Brain-Decoding Devices Threaten People's Privacy?

A brain-computer interface implanted in motor and parietal cortex enabled a paralyzed pianist to produce music by decoding imagined movements, sometimes anticipating her intention.
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