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fromHigh Country News
1 hour ago

'My history is a blip' - High Country News

Personal lives feel like brief blips against cosmic deep time, prompting greater appreciation for present relationships, places, and limited time.
fromOpen Culture
10 hours ago

A Brief Introduction to Buckminster Fuller and His Techno-Optimistic Ideas

For all the inventions presented as revolutionary that never really caught on - the Dymaxion house and car, the geodesic dome - as well as the countless pages of eccentrically theoretical writing and even more countless hours of talk, it can be difficult for us now, here in the actual twenty-first century, to pin down the civilizational impact he so earnestly longed to make.
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fromBig Think
3 hours ago

How a solar radiation storm created January 2026's aurora

A fast, intense solar radiation storm on January 19, 2026 produced global auroras by dramatically increasing solar-wind charged-particle density and speed, causing rapid space-weather impacts.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

Rock up to London: discovering stones and fossils from around the world on an urban geology tour

Central London's streets and buildings visibly preserve diverse ancient rocks and fossils that reveal Earth's deep-time environments and global stone provenance.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 hours ago

So a cow can use a stick to scratch its backside. When will we learn that humans are really not that special? | Helen Pilcher

Cows can deliberately use tools flexibly, demonstrating problem-solving, manipulation, and underestimated intelligence.
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fromNature
1 day ago

US Congress set to reject Trump's sweeping science budget cuts

US Congress moves to reject the administration's proposed deep science cuts, approving a small NIH increase and averting large-scale reductions across research agencies.
#helix-nebula
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Readers respond to the October 2025 issue

Cuts to government funding push researchers toward billionaire and private funding, offering resources and freedom but creating risks from narrow priorities and donor motivations.
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fromNature
1 day ago

To gain public trust, make art central to science communication

Art-science collaborations should be supported and normalised to communicate science, strengthen public trust, and develop researchers' observational, creative, and empathetic skills.
#artemis-ii
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fromABC7 Los Angeles
2 days ago

NASA's new moon rocket moves to the pad ahead of astronaut launch as early as February

NASA's Artemis II Space Launch System and Orion crew capsule rolled to the pad for a crewed lunar fly-around, potentially launching as soon as February.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Nasa moon rocket creeps to its launch pad in preparation for astronaut flight

NASA's 98-meter SLS rocket moved to the launch pad for Artemis II, preparing a February crewed lunar fly-around after earlier capsule issues delayed the mission.
Science
frominsideevs.com
13 hours ago

Why LFP Became The Dominant EV Battery Chemistry In 2025

LFP batteries became the world's dominant EV chemistry in 2025, growing 48% and overtaking nickel-based packs, led primarily by China.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

February 2026: Science history from 50, 100 and 150 years ago

Highly excited atoms with very large principal quantum numbers can expand to sizes comparable to bacteria and lie on the verge of ionization.
fromNature
1 day ago

'Shattered': US scientists speak out about how Trump policies disrupted their careers

The speed, the scope and the severity of the attacks on science are beyond anything we've ever seen,
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fromFuturism
17 hours ago

Astronauts Helicoptered to Hospital After Mystery Evacuation From Space Station

A medical emergency aboard the ISS prompted NASA to evacuate four Crew-11 astronauts, reducing crew from seven to three and returning them to Earth.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Inside the incredible, infuriating quest to explain consciousness

Brains evolved during the Cambrian to integrate sensory input, enabling organisms to experience pain, pleasure, emotions, curiosity, and eventually self-awareness, fueling art, science, and philosophy.
fromBig Think
14 hours ago

Computational model discovers new types of neurons hidden in decade-old dataset

There was a group of neurons that predicted the wrong answer, yet they kept getting stronger as the model learned. So we went back to the original macaque data, and the same signal was there, hiding in plain sight. It wasn't a quirk of the model - the monkeys' brains were doing it too. Even as their performance improved, both the real and simulated brains maintained a reserve of neurons that continued to predict the incorrect answer.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Future of the Astronaut and Its Impact on Our Psychology

A serious medical issue forced early evacuation of four astronauts from the ISS, highlighting human-health risks and implications for future crewed deep-space and lunar missions.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Are we about to see the first stars ever born?

Supermassive black holes existed when the universe was about 3% of its current age, creating formation puzzles possibly linked to early Population III stars.
#lunar-tourism
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
15 hours ago

Rare sight: Northern lights seen in Northern California

Rare southern auroras were visible from Placerville due to a coronal mass ejection, drawing observers who saw faint colors mainly through camera lenses.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

A bright light in the dark

The week leading up to the awards is stacked with lectures, concerts, exhibitions and discussions, and Stockholm is decorated with light displays and video shows. The whole thing feels like the Oscars. People line up on the street to catch a glimpse of celebrities as they leave the Stockholm Concert Hall. National public television dedicates more than five hours to a live broadcast of the ceremony and subsequent banquet.
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fromFast Company
14 hours ago

The northern lights could be visible in dozens of states tonight - here's why this storm is different

On Tuesday night, the Aurora borealis may be visible in parts of more than half of all U.S. states. That's a few more than the usual six or so Northern states that are used to seeing the lit up skies. That's because solar storms can change visibility, making the spectacle visible to more locations in times of heightened geomagnetic activity.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

The most underappreciated achievement in theoretical physics

Modern physics explains luminous matter, black holes, gravity, cosmic expansion, and particle interactions through the Standard Model, quantum field theory, and General Relativity.
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fromWIRED
23 hours ago

He Went to Prison for Gene-Editing Babies. Now He's Planning to Do It Again

He Jiankui created the first gene-edited babies, was jailed and banned, and now seeks to resume controversial genetic research despite widespread germline-editing prohibitions.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
16 hours ago

Why did Jeffrey Epstein cultivate famous scientists?

DOJ files include a four-second video of Steven Pinker on Jeffrey Epstein's plane and reveal extensive ties between Epstein and prominent scientists and public figures.
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fromArs Technica
13 hours ago

Macaque facial gestures are more than just a reflex, study finds

Multiple cortical regions jointly generate facial gestures in macaques, with distinctions between social and non-social actions arising from different temporal neural codes rather than separate anatomical loci.
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fromSFGATE
12 hours ago

Rare solar storm sparks northern lights sightings across the Bay Area

A severe S4 solar radiation storm from a coronal mass ejection caused rare aurora sightings across Northern California, the strongest since October 2003.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Life's evil twins, called mirror cells, could wipe us out if scientists don't stop them

Engineered mirror-image bacteria used to manufacture durable drugs can evade immune detection and cause uncontrollable infections and environmental spread.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Intense geomagnetic storms could make auroras visible in southern US

The aurora could be visible across Canada and much of the northern tier of US states on Monday night, and possibly even further south, following a major disturbance in the Earth's magnetic field, a forecast shows. The forecast, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's space weather prediction center, comes amid intense geomagnetic and solar radiation storms, said Shawn Dahl, service coordinator at the center.
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fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

My Generation Is Finally Facing the Midlife Crisis. I Resolved to Confront My Own in the Most Deranged Way Possible.

In fact, it's common for them to travel modest distances via stints of explosive flapping. This phenomenon, known as "burst flight," is sort of beautiful to watch: Chickens leap upward at a sharp angle, then start pumping with manic abandon. As their wings cut tight figure eights, they shoot forward and drop into a glide. They never get very far, but there's something existentially profound in the effort. Chickens fly as if they're trying to escape the inevitable.
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fromTheregister
16 hours ago

CO and water help pull lithium from dead batteries

The team, from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Beijing Institute of Technology, recently published their findings in Nature Communications. According to their research, the process not only avoids conventional leaching chemicals and extreme heat to extract lithium from old batteries, but it also uses carbon dioxide in what the authors call a sequestration step, and turns other battery transition metals into new catalysts - with CO₂-rich water doing most of the chemical work.
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fromFuturism
14 hours ago

Scientists Suddenly Discover That Cow Tools Are Real

A cow spontaneously selected, adjusted, and used a broom handle to scratch itself, demonstrating tool use and suggesting cattle possess underestimated cognitive abilities.
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fromWIRED
14 hours ago

'Veronika' Is the First Cow Known to Use a Tool

A pet Austrian cow, Veronika, flexibly uses branches as tools to scratch herself, demonstrating goal-directed tool use and adaptive problem-solving.
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fromPsychology Today
17 hours ago

"The Videmus Moment": Why Eureka! Is Not Enough

A eureka moment sparks creativity but sustained external validation, iterative work, and supportive feedback are needed to turn ideas into successful innovations.
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fromNature
1 day ago

How much protein do you actually need?

Most healthy adults require less protein than commonly promoted, and routinely consuming high-protein products or supplements is often unnecessary.
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fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Author Correction: Anthropogenic influences on major tropical cyclone events

Christina M. Patricola-DiRosario's surname was corrected from Patricola to Patricola-DiRosario in the HTML and PDF versions.
Science
fromEngadget
1 day ago

Dr. Gladys West, whose mathematical models inspired GPS, dies at 95

Gladys West developed satellite-based mathematical models of Earth's shape that became the foundational backbone of the global positioning system (GPS).
Science
fromSFGATE
22 hours ago

What Californians get wrong about earthquakes

San Ramon-area earthquake swarms do not necessarily indicate an imminent larger quake; similar clustered small quakes have repeatedly occurred without producing a major earthquake.
#tool-use
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Researchers find Antarctic penguin breeding is heating up sooner

Rapid Antarctic warming has shifted Adelie, chinstrap, and gentoo penguin breeding about two weeks earlier, risking food mismatches and increasing extinction threat by century's end.
fromABC7 San Francisco
1 day ago

Lick Observatory repairs continue 3 weeks after devasting Christmas storm

"I couldn't believe what I was seeing," Astronomer Elinor Gates said. "I couldn't believe that a storm could do that sort of dramatic damage to this historic telescope dome."
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fromNature
1 day ago

Mistaken identity and the psychology of human recognition

Eyewitness evidence reliability is questioned while a geological society's fossil collection is examined during its move from its London home.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Meet the extremophile molds wreaking havoc in museums

Mold is a perennial scourge in museums that can disfigure and destroy art and artifacts. To keep this microbial foe in check, institutions follow protocols designed to deter the familiar fungi that thrive in humid settings. But it seems a new front has opened in this long-standing battle. I'd recently heard rumblings that curators in my then home base of Denmark have been wrestling with perplexing infestations that seem to defy the normal rules of engagement.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Symbols on ancient pottery could be earliest evidence of mathematics

Ancient Halafian pottery reveals numerical symmetry; engineered TimeVaults record mRNA; US science faces further disruption under the Trump administration in 2026.
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago
Science

Publisher Correction: A fault-tolerant neutral-atom architecture for universal quantum computation

Figure 3d label corrected from 'Transversal (corrected decoding)' to 'Transversal (correlated decoding)'.
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

The race to build a super-large ground telescope is likely down to two competitors

At the time the proposed telescope was one of three contenders to make a giant leap in mirror size from the roughly 10-meter diameter instruments that existed then, to approximately 30 meters. This represented a huge increase in light-gathering potential, allowing astronomers to see much further into the universe-and therefore back into time-with far greater clarity.
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fromWIRED
2 days ago

Capturing the Moment a White Dwarf Exploded

Near-infrared interferometry captured high-resolution, early-stage images of two 2021 novae, revealing asymmetric, multi-flow ejecta and differing eruption timescales.
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fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Author Correction: An autonomous laboratory for the accelerated synthesis of inorganic materials

Prediction platform correctly identified 36 of 40 synthesized compounds; four were inconclusive, and novelty claims were clarified as 'new to the prediction platform', not new to science.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Healing Power of Real Human Attention

Titchener's attensity — the qualitative power of attention — was lost while empathy prevailed, enabling modern attention models that fueled the harmful attention economy.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Did you solve it? Are you cut out for these puzzling slices?

Three geometrical puzzles: a tiling impossibility by color-count invariant; a dissection-to-square challenge; and a pizza-division minimal pieces solution of ten.
fromNature
2 days ago

Floating science stations: my month on a research vessel looking after buoys

In this photo, I'm preparing drifting buoys for deployment. This was my main responsibility aboard the RV Falkor (too), during a 27-day research expedition in October 2025 exploring the Malvinas Current, an ocean current that runs alongside Argentina. The expedition included biologists, geologists and physical oceanographers such as myself; I'm a PhD candidate at the Sea and Atmosphere Research Center (CIMA) in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
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fromWIRED
1 day ago

The Search for Alien Artifacts Is Coming Into Focus

Scientists develop rigorous techniques to search for potential alien artifacts in the solar system, including using pre-1957 archival sky images, while maintaining high evidence standards.
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fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day ago

From a refugee family to Nobel Laureate: Omar Yaghi's story

Omar Yaghi developed metal-organic frameworks that capture carbon, store hydrogen, and enable atmospheric water harvesting, inspired by his refugee upbringing to pursue climate solutions.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Precision Weapons That Shifted Combat From Firepower to Patience

Precision weapons shifted military emphasis from massed firepower to patience, timing, and disciplined decision-making, making individual strikes decisive.
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fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Editorial Expression of Concern: En passant neurotrophic action of an intermediate axonal target in the developing mammalian CNS

Figures 5a and 5b exhibit unexpected background similarities; illustrative panels show the same explant at 24h and 52h; original data are unavailable, so interpret results cautiously.
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Outer Space Is a Viscous Fluid, New Paper Claims

Outer space behaves like a viscous, stretchy fluid with "spatial phonons" that resist dark energy, producing nonuniform cosmic expansion and explaining ΛCDM discrepancies.
Science
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Free public science lectures occur monthly on the third Saturday at UC Berkeley, starting at 11 am in 159 Mulford Hall with first-come seating.
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Science@Cal is proud to present a series of free public science lectures on the third Saturday of every month. These talks are given by renowned UC Berkeley scientists and aimed at general audiences. Talks take place on the UC Berkeley campus at 11 am. Doors open thirty minutes before the talk and seating is on a first-come, first-served basis. Each talk is planned to last an hour, plus time for at least a few questions at the end.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Microbiome and the Good Life

A diverse, high-fiber, plant-rich diet plus sleep, exercise, and stress management support a healthy microbiome that influences brain and overall health.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Meet Veronika, the tool-using cow

A Swiss brown cow named Veronika uses sticks as multipurpose tools to scratch herself, indicating cow cognition has been underestimated.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

What's scarier than a spider? A fake giant spider

What's scarier than a spider? A really big spider, of course. A newfound defensive tactic takes advantage of this idea: researchers documented spiders building giant spiderlike silhouettes on their webs to ward off predators. These decoys are an example of web decorations that some spiders are known to produce, often to prevent getting eaten, avoid bird strikes or attract prey.
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#embodied-tooling
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Meet Baseodiscus the Eldest,' a record-setting worm more than 27 years old

A wild-caught ribbon worm named Baseodiscus the Eldest is estimated to be at least 27 years old, setting a new longevity record for ribbon worms.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Is it true that you lose most body heat from your head?

You can lose 4045% of body heat from an unprotected head. That's the advice in a 1970s US Army Survival Manual, which is probably where this myth originated, says John Tregoning, a professor of vaccine immunology at Imperial College London. The reality is that there is nothing special about your head. When you go out in the cold, you lose more body heat from any area you leave exposed than from those parts protected by clothing.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Astronomers aim to take revolutionary' moving image of black hole

Astronomers will use the Event Horizon Telescope to record the first movie of the M87 supermassive black hole to study its rotation and jet-launching mechanisms.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The Guardian view on microplastics research: questioning results is good for science, but has political consequences | Editorial

Studies measuring micro- and nanoplastics in humans show methodological flaws that cast doubt on reported quantities and reveal preventable systemic problems.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

Teenagers up to 30: It's false that the brain suddenly becomes an adult at 25

Frontal-lobe development continues into the 30s, so the claim that brain maturation finishes at 25 is an oversimplified misconception.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

The technology that reveals what happens in 0.00000000000000000000001 second

Attosecond-scale light pulses reveal ultrafast electron dynamics, enabling new studies of materials, quantum processes, and biological structures, and have earned major scientific awards.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Uncover Secret Landscape Hiding Miles Below Antarctica's Ice

A new satellite-based map reveals extensive previously hidden bedrock mountains, hills, and ridges beneath Antarctica's ice, improving predictions of ice behavior under climate change.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Neuroemergence and the Screen Generation

Innate newborn face-attention mechanisms (CONSPEC) scaffold visual development, but altered early input like deprivation or screen-based conditions can permanently affect primary visual cortex.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Adolescent Brain and Delinquency

Adolescence is second only to early childhood in the rapidity and sheer volume of changes occurring in brain development. Three different brain systems (and their interconnections) are at play: reward-driven behavior, harm avoidance, and regulatory behavior. At the same time, teens are experiencing powerful changes to their physical and sexual selves, accompanied by the hormonal cascade of puberty. During this period, there is an increase in brain receptors for dopamine, a neurotransmitter that has a strong effect on the experience of pleasure.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Inventor says robo-vaccination machine could be used to combat bovine TB

So Tony Cholerton, a zookeeper who had been a motorcycle engineer for many years, invented Robovacc a machine to quickly administer vital jabs without the presence of people. The result, a clever contraption he controlled from an adjacent room with a handset taken from remote-control toy aeroplanes, successfully administered vaccinations to Cinta in a feeding area. The tiger sat up briefly, mid-meal, as the needle penetrated her rear end, then calmly continued eating.
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fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

From fuzzy flowers to see-through sea slugs, here are some of the new species discovered last year by California scientists

Scientists discovered 72 previously undocumented species, including a new sea slug, underscoring biodiversity richness and the need for species identification and conservation.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

From fuzzy flowers to see-through sea slugs, here are some of the new species discovered last year by California scientists

But as he swept his flashlight through the dark waters, something unexpected emerged. Inching through the beam of light, an alien creature crawled across the surface of the sand, resembling an inch-long cluster of ghostly leaves fringed with silvery filigree and capped with a pair of antennae-like stalks. It immediately caught my eye, said Gosliner, Invertebrate Zoology Curator for the California Academy of Sciences. I've been diving there for 30 years and this one immediately struck me as different.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Preparing to Simulate Human Brain on Supercomputer

A Jülich team plans to simulate the entire human brain by scaling spiking neural networks on the JUPITER exascale supercomputer to billions of neurons.
fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Who gets to inherit the stars? A space ethicist on what we're not talking about | TechCrunch

In October, at a tech conference in Italy, Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos predicted that millions of people will be living in space " in the next couple of decades " and "mostly," he'd said, "because they want to," because robots will be more cost-effective than humans for doing the actual work in space.
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fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

Inside Selkirk's high-tech pickleball lab, where they use a 'performance cannon' and 'Thor's hammer' to make top-of-the-line paddles

Selkirk builds advanced pickleball paddles and operates a private sports science lab conducting high-speed durability testing and investing heavily in R&D to stay ahead.
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fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

Opinion: Remembering Ai, a remarkably intelligent chimpanzee

Ai, a West African-born chimpanzee at Kyoto University's Primate Research Institute, displayed exceptional cognitive abilities and died of natural causes at age 49.
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 days ago

Rare genetic form of diabetes detected in newborn babies for first time

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
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fromInsideHook
4 days ago

Environmental Changes May Make Sharks Less Dangerous

Ocean acidification can corrode and degrade shark teeth, reducing serrations and root structures and threatening foraging efficiency, energy uptake, and elasmobranch fitness.
fromTasting Table
3 days ago

10 Ways To Use Hydrogen Peroxide To Keep Your Kitchen Spotless - Tasting Table

If you were a child of the '70s or '80s, you may remember the bubbling sound of hydrogen peroxide fizzing on an open wound. Back then, it was the go-to for parents who were looking to disinfect the cuts and scrapes that their kids would come home with. Since then, science has shown that it's actually not all that great for a wound, but there's no need to throw out that bottle if you do find one.
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fromFast Company
4 days ago

The power that'll fuel NASA's Gateway Lunar Space Station

NASA's Gateway will use two roll-out solar arrays (ROSAs), each football-end-zone sized, delivering 60 kilowatts continuously to power the lunar station.
Science
fromLondon On The Inside
5 days ago

Learn How to Biohack Your Mind and Body at the 1N Labs Pop-Up

1N Labs Shoreditch pop-up offers biohacking experiences, free immersive weekend sessions, brain-mapping, cognitive drinks, and nicotine lozenge tastings through Feb 6, 2026.
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