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fromFuturism
1 day ago

Elon Musk Announces Huge Change: Self-Growing City on Moon Now Top Priority at SpaceX

Elon Musk shifted SpaceX focus from Mars colonization to building a self-growing lunar city, citing faster timelines and greater feasibility within a decade.
Science
fromEngadget
1 day ago

SpaceX is pivoting to focus on a moon base before Mars

SpaceX shifted near-term focus from Mars to building a self-growing city on the Moon, targeting completion in under ten years while Mars would take over twenty.
fromFuturism
1 day ago
Science

Elon Musk Announces Huge Change: Self-Growing City on Moon Now Top Priority at SpaceX

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fromThe Verge
11 hours ago

Microsoft wants to rewire data centers to save space

High-temperature superconductors could enable data centers and power grids to transmit electricity with near-zero resistance, reducing energy loss, infrastructure size, and community impact.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: The dark side of the battery boom

Cleaner technologies often shift environmental burdens onto vulnerable human populations through hidden labor, exposure, and social impacts.
#science-communication
fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Public-speaking tips from the experts: what scientists can learn from comics, musicians and actors

fromFuturism
12 hours ago
Science

If Scientists Ever Find Strong Evidence of Alien Life, Communicating It Will Pose Serious Issues

fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Public-speaking tips from the experts: what scientists can learn from comics, musicians and actors

fromFuturism
12 hours ago
Science

If Scientists Ever Find Strong Evidence of Alien Life, Communicating It Will Pose Serious Issues

#jeffrey-epstein
fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

Ex-Stanford professor's relationship with Epstein detailed over years of emails

fromFuturism
2 days ago
Science

Jeffrey Epstein Had a Bizarre Obsession With "Improving" Human DNA, and He Was Emailing With Top Scientists About It

fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

Ex-Stanford professor's relationship with Epstein detailed over years of emails

fromFuturism
2 days ago
Science

Jeffrey Epstein Had a Bizarre Obsession With "Improving" Human DNA, and He Was Emailing With Top Scientists About It

Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
14 hours ago

Astronomers celebrate cancellation of $10bn Chile project that threatened clearest skies in the world

Chile's withdrawal of the INNA green hydrogen project preserves Atacama skies and underscores the urgent need for legal protection of astronomical sites.
Science
fromHarvard Gazette
7 hours ago

A 'cocktail' recipe for brain cells - Harvard Gazette

Engineered molecular signals convert brain progenitor stem cells into corticospinal neurons, enabling lab growth and potential regeneration for ALS and spinal cord injuries.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

Scientists may have discovered a pulsar at the Milky Way's hearta result that could reveal new physics

A pulsar near Sagittarius A* would enable more precise measurements of spacetime and gravitational effects around the Milky Way's central supermassive black hole.
fromMail Online
8 hours ago

The truth about the erased NASA moon landing videos revealed

Tapes containing the original, high-quality transmission of the Apollo 11 moon landing were wiped after being quietly shelved in an unmarked storage area by NASA. While other recordings of the historic 1969 mission survived, the revelation that at least some moon landing video disappeared has fueled wild conspiracies that NASA has been covering up what astronauts saw or even that the whole mission was faked.
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fromTheregister
21 hours ago

Dijkstra's algorithm won't be replaced in production routers

A new shortest-path algorithm avoids sorting to beat Dijkstra's performance, but its practical benefit depends on real routing scaling limits and implementation trade-offs.
Science
fromMail Online
17 hours ago

Scientists discover how building blocks of LIFE formed on an asteroid

Amino acids formed on asteroid Bennu in cold, radioactive conditions, showing life's building blocks can form without warm liquid water and may have seeded Earth.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

Earth's core may contain 45 oceans' worth of hydrogen

Earth's core may contain up to 45 oceans' worth of hydrogen, indicating formation from a hydrogen-rich protoplanetary disk and primordial retention of water.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
16 hours ago

Rules of mysterious ancient Roman board game decoded by AI

It was the summer of 2020, and researcher Walter Crist was wandering around the exhibits inside a Dutch museum dedicated to the presence of the ancient Roman empire in the Netherlands. As a scientist who studies ancient board games, one exhibit stuck out to Crist: a stone game board dating to the late Roman Empire. It was about eight inches across and etched with angular lines that roughly formed the shape of an oblong octagon inside a rectangle.
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fromBrooklyn Paper
8 hours ago

SUNY Downstate's Dr. Riccardo Bianchi carries Olympic torch through his hometown * Brooklyn Paper

Dr. Riccardo Bianchi, a neuroscientist and educator, carried the Olympic torch through his hometown La Spezia and has spent over 30 years at SUNY Downstate.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
17 hours ago

Houseplant hacks: is candle wax useful for taking cuttings?

Dipping pothos cuttings in candle wax offers no propagation benefit and may introduce contaminants; a clean cut, fresh water changes, and bright indirect light suffice.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
15 hours ago

An ape, a tea party and the ability to imagine

Kanzi the bonobo demonstrated pretend play, indicating imaginative abilities existed in common ancestors of humans and great apes.
Science
fromEngadget
9 hours ago

Hubble showcases the Egg Nebula in all its dying-star glory

The Egg Nebula, a preplanetary nebula 3,000 light-years away, shows four starlight beams escaping a gas-and-dust shell with concentric rippled rings.
Science
fromWIRED
6 hours ago

The Physics Behind the Quadruple Axel, the Most Difficult Jump in Figure Skating

Achieving a quadruple axel requires exceptional height—about 20 inches of airtime—and mastery of four and a half rotations from a forward takeoff.
fromwww.theguardian.com
22 hours ago

Six planets line up for rare parade throughout February

At the time of the alignment, Greg Brown, an astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, told PA Media: Groups of three, four or even five planets being visible aren't uncommon, regularly appearing throughout each year But the more planets are involved, the more things need to be aligned to be visible at once. According to Nasa, multi-planet viewing opportunities can last from weeks to more than a month, as planetary movements are slow and gradual.
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fromLos Angeles Times
8 hours ago

A SoCal beetle that poses as an ant may have answered a key question about evolution

A rove beetle suppresses its own pheromones, adopts ant cuticular hydrocarbons to infiltrate colonies, and permanently sacrifices its waxy waterproofing.
Science
fromMail Online
15 hours ago

Cats and dogs are quietly spreading invasive WORMS through Europe

Invasive flatworms stick to cats and dogs' fur using sticky mucus, enabling pet-mediated spread across Europe and threatening native insects and soil.
fromJernesto
1 day ago
Science

I miss thinking hard.

A persistent tension exists between a Builder drive for rapid, practical creation and a Thinker need for prolonged, solitary struggle to solve difficult problems.
Science
fromWIRED
1 day ago

This Startup Thinks It Can Make Rocket Fuel From Water. Stop Laughing

General Galactic aims to demonstrate water-based in-orbit propulsion to enable satellite refueling and advance deep-space mission logistics.
fromNature
2 days ago

Jupiter gets downsized - and squashed

The gas giant's shape and size, previously known only from data collected more than 45 years ago, have been updated at last. The biggest planet in the Solar System just got smaller and flatter. Access Nature and 54 other Nature Portfolio journals Get Nature+, our best-value online-access subscription Subscribe to this journal Receive 51 print issues and online access $199.00 per year only $3.90 per issue. Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout.
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fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

Elon Musk said we'd reach Mars in 2026. Now, he says SpaceX is building a city on the moon.

SpaceX is prioritizing building a self-growing moon city because lunar launch cycles allow faster iteration, while Mars development remains planned for five to seven years.
#artemis-ii
fromWIRED
4 days ago
Science

Why the Artemis II Crew Stays in Quarantine Before Their Journey to Moon

fromWIRED
4 days ago
Science

Why the Artemis II Crew Stays in Quarantine Before Their Journey to Moon

Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Yellowstone's earthquakes spark microbial boom deep underground

Earthquakes fracture deep rock, increase abiotic hydrogen production, and cause large, temporary boosts and compositional shifts in subsurface microbial communities.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientists on red alert as 'doom volcano' stirs after years of silence

Researchers have detected rising temperatures, bubbling gases and unusual sulfur formations inside Mexico's El Chichón volcano, also known as Chichonal. The changes were recorded by scientists from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) during monitoring between June and December 2025. The volcano last erupted in 1982, killing at least 2,000 people in one of Mexico's deadliest volcanic disasters. Scientists observed elevated heat, shifting crater-lake chemistry, and gas emissions including hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide, which can be hazardous in high concentrations.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The true story behind Mariano Barbacid's first effective therapy against pancreatic cancer'

The biochemist revealed his results on February 2 on Spain's most-watched television program, El Hormiguero. The host, Pablo Motos, proclaimed: It's a miracle. Colleagues at his own center criticize Barbacid for not better explaining his conflict of interest. He and his colleagues Carmen Guerra and Vasiliki Liaki have applied for a patent for the commercial exploitation of their experimental therapy, should it ever become a reality.
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fromNature
2 days ago

My mission to make life more user friendly for the disability community

Josh Miele is a blind scientist and adaptive-technology inventor who uses lived experience, activism, and rule-breaking to advance accessibility and inclusive design.
#astrobiology
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How the Quad God' cracked a seemingly impossible jump

Ilia Malinin's successful quad axel exemplifies how advances in training, biomechanics, and technique are enabling ever-more difficult multi-rotation figure skating jumps.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientists pinpoint the most EXHAUSTING decade of life

Midlife energy dips peak in the 40s due to converging small biological changes and peak life demands, but imbalances are temporary with possible later recovery.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Ancient seafarers helped shape Arctic ecosystems

In the pristine High Arctic sits the Kitsissut island cluster, also known as the Carey Islands, nestled between northwest Greenland and northeast Canada. The surrounding seas are perilous, and traveling there is difficult even with modern boats. But new archaeological evidence suggests ancient humans managed to sail to the islands, too. Early settlers lived on the islands between 4,500 and 2,700 years ago.
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fromScienceDaily
2 days ago

Gut bacteria can sense their environment and it's key to your health

Beneficial gut bacteria, especially Clostridia, detect diverse digestive chemical signals and move toward nutrients like lactate and formate to fuel the microbiome.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Mission to drill into Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier ends in DISASTER

A drilling mission to access Thwaites Glacier's remote main trunk was abandoned after a mooring instrument became stuck in the borehole, forcing project termination.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Expert reveals gruesome reality of Elon Musk's Mars dream

From changing size, to crushed immune systems and childbirth complications, humanity colonizing Mars could come with a host of problems for the human body. Elon Musk believes Mars settlement is possible by 2050, but there are considerable challenges and questions that still need to be answered before a permanent presence on the planet can be seriously considered, Rice University professor Scott Solomon believes.
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Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Is it true that hair grows faster when you cut it?

Cutting visible hair does not speed follicle-driven growth; trims remove dead shaft and improve appearance while minimizing chemical or heat damage supports length retention.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The science behind why some auroras have such stunning wave patterns

Auroras are nature's most special light show: when charged particles from the sun hit our atmosphere, they can generate bright colors that dance across the night sky near the Earth's poles. Auroras can come in various forms, including bands, rays, patches and more. But why auroras form these patterns is less clear. Now, researchers say they've identified the battery that powers at least one kind of auroraaurora arcs.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Say Heck, Just Nuke a Killer Asteroid Heading for Earth

Plenty of asteroids can survive their fiery plunge through the Earth's atmosphere. If they're big enough, they can prove incredibly destructive, like the 60-foot Chelyabinsk meteor that exploded over the southern Ural region in Russia in 2013, releasing a blast equivalent to 30 times the energy of the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima. And in case an even larger space rock were to ever threaten humanity, we'd have to get creative to keep it from colliding with our planet.
Science
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago

The navy veteran guiding cruises away from storms

A former Royal Navy meteorologist remotely monitors global weather to guide cruise ships, advising captains to avoid storms and ensure passenger safety and comfort.
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Intrigued by Possible Hollow Structures Under Surface of Venus

Venus has long been known as Earth's evil twin. While they both are roughly the same size and formed in the same inner region of the solar system, Venus is far less hospitable to life as we know it. Its surface temperatures can reach over 900 degrees Fahrenheit. Its clouds are made of sulfuric acid, and its surface atmospheric pressure is almost 100 times that of Earth, the equivalent of being 3,000 underwater.
Science
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Gladys West obituary

Gladys West developed geodesic systems that enabled GPS, overcoming segregation and decades of computational work to transform global mapping and navigation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Archaeology against the clock: the race to salvage fragments of early Brisbane

In a white and sterile office that could belong to any one of the warehouses that dot this industrial strip between Brisbane's airport and horse-racing precinct, a young woman is engrossed in a puzzle. Only this puzzle comprises, perhaps, three different sets, each almost (but not quite) identical to the other and none likely to be completed. Emily Totivan wears blue plastic gloves. She is an archaeology student helping to catalogue artefacts.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The sneeze secret: how much should you worry about this explosive reflex?

Alongside the obvious nasal hairs that a few people choose to trim, all of us have cilia, or microscopic hairs in our noses that can move and sense things of their own accord. And so if anything gets trapped by the cilia, that triggers a reaction to your nerve endings that says: Right, let's get rid of this.' And that triggers a sneeze.
Science
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Physicists Think They Saw a Black Hole Explode

Primordial black holes can evaporate via Hawking radiation and may explosively release particles, potentially explaining a powerful 2023 neutrino detection.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Why has Elon Musk merged his rocket company with his AI startup?

The merger creates a $1.25tn company valuing SpaceX at $1tn and xAI at $250bn while proposing solar-powered orbital datacentres, amid technical and shareholder concerns.
fromEngadget
3 days ago

NASA is sending Crew-12 astronauts to the ISS on February 11

The Crew-12 astronauts will soon make their way to the ISS, joining the three remaining spacefarers on board after the previous mission was cut short due to a medical concern. NASA was originally planning a February 15 launch date for the mission, but it has moved it up to February 11. It's now targeting a liftoff of no earlier than 6:01 AM Eastern that day from Cape Canaveral in Florida.
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fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

The Mysterious Devices Speeding Mining Exploration in Utah

Mountain guides located and retrieved 200 GPS-marked hexagonal sensor nodes planted across Utah's Tushar Range above 10,000 feet, navigating rough alpine terrain.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Butterfly Emerges From Chrysalis in Zero Gravity

A butterfly successfully hatched and adapted to microgravity inside an unmanned, minimally shielded chrysalis experiment aboard China's Tiangong space station.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

NASA Telescope Discovers Nearby Planet With Deep Similarities to Earth

HD 137010 b is an Earth-sized exoplanet candidate 150 light-years away with a 355-day orbit that likely receives far less heat, making it very cold.
Science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Starts With A Bang Podcast #126 - The origin of dust

Cosmic dust pervades the Universe, is observationally challenging, and its cosmic origins and evolution remain poorly understood despite identified sources and infrared signatures.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Lindsey Vonn has knees of steelor at least, titanium

Elite downhill skiing places extreme forces on the knees, enabling comebacks like Lindsey Vonn's despite repeated ligament damage and serious surgeries.
Science
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 days ago

Dinosaurs for sale: Is the global fossil market harming science?

Asia's wealthy collectors drive a booming multimillion-dollar dinosaur fossil market, producing record sales and profits while raising ethical and scientific concerns.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

U.S. physicists have bid farewell to the nation's last remaining particle collider, which spun gold into revolutionary discoveries

RHIC recreated the universe's primordial quark–gluon plasma, enabling breakthroughs in antimatter production, proton spin understanding, and glimpses of the Big Bang over a 25-year run.
Science
fromInfoQ
5 days ago

Conductor Quantum Introduces Coda, a Natural Language Interface for Quantum Computing

Coda provides a natural-language interface that translates user intent into validated quantum circuits and orchestrates execution on real quantum hardware and simulators.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: Tumours use neurons as hotline to the brain

Tumours hijack sensory neurons to suppress local immune responses; snakes lack ghrelin genes; open-source AI OpenScholar improves literature-review accuracy.
Science
fromTechCrunch
4 days ago

How AI is helping solve the labor issue in treating rare diseases | TechCrunch

AI multiplies scientific productivity, automating drug discovery tasks to tackle workforce shortages and accelerate development of treatments for thousands of neglected and rare diseases.
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Rocket Report: SpaceX probes upper stage malfunction; Starship testing resumes

The big news in rocketry this week was that NASA still hasn't solved the problem with hydrogen leaks on the Space Launch System. The problem caused months of delays before the first SLS launch in 2022, and the fuel leaks cropped up again Monday during a fueling test on NASA's second SLS rocket. It is a continuing problem, and NASA's sparse SLS launch rate makes every countdown an experiment, as my colleague Eric Berger wrote this week.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

UK could lose generation of scientists' with cuts to projects and research facilities

Significant UK physics funding cuts and cancelled projects risk losing a generation of early-career researchers to overseas positions, undermining fundamental science.
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

To reuse or not reuse-the eternal debate of New Glenn's second stage reignites

The first stage, of course, would be fully reusable. But what about the upper stage of New Glenn, powered by two large BE-3U engines? Around the same time, in the early 2010s, SpaceX was also trading the economics of reusing the second stage of its Falcon 9 rocket. Eventually SpaceX founder Elon Musk abandoned his goal of a fully reusable Falcon 9, choosing instead to recover payload fairings and push down manufacturing costs of the upper stage as much as possible.
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Science
fromwww.bbc.com
5 days ago

Can robots ever be graceful?

Efficient, precise, and intelligent actuators are essential for robots to move gracefully and enable the transition from primitive to sophisticated robots.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

Psychology says if you need a full day alone to recover after social events, you likely possess these 7 cognitive gifts - Silicon Canals

Needing solitude after social events reflects deeper, resource-intensive cognitive and emotional processing rather than a social deficit.
Science
fromEuro Weekly News
4 days ago

Catalan scientists join first all-female Mars analogue mission

An all-female scientific team will conduct an Arctic Mars analogue mission on Devon Island in 2027, confronting extreme-environment challenges and involving Catalan research participation.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

How can galaxies ever collide in an ever-expanding universe?

Okay, first thing first: the universe is in fact expanding. We've known this for more than a century now, and it's the basis for modern cosmology. This idea is called the big bang modelwhich is an unfortunate name because it brings to mind a cosmos expanding like an explosion, with galaxies moving away from each other through space like shrapnel. But in fact space itself is expanding, and that's different.
Science
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

New critique debunks claim that trees can sense a solar eclipse

"Granted, "[p]lants have extensive and well established mechanisms of communication, with that of volatiles being the most well studied and understood," he added. "There is also growing recognition that root exudates play a role in plant-plant interactions, though this is only now being deeply investigated. Nothing else, communication through mychorriza, has withstood independent investigation."
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fromEngadget
4 days ago

NASA will now allow astronauts to take their smartphones to space

NASA will allow Crew-12 and Artemis II astronauts to bring iPhones and other modern smartphones to the ISS and lunar missions.
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fromBig Think
4 days ago

The profound life lesson at the heart of chaos theory

Chaotic systems exhibit sensitivity to initial conditions where tiny input differences produce disproportionately large, unpredictable differences in outcomes.
Science
fromTheregister
4 days ago

DARPA asks labs to outsmart physics with photonic circuits

DARPA is funding efforts to scale photonic integrated circuits to perform larger-scale computing with light using existing photonic components to overcome current physical limitations.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

From the US to Malaga: the world of chemistry chooses Spain

IUPAC relocated its headquarters from the United States to Europe, establishing offices in Rome and Malaga and boosting Spain's role in global chemistry governance.
fromWIRED
5 days ago

Two Titanic Structures Hidden Deep Within the Earth Have Altered the Magnetic Field for Millions of Years

A team of geologists has found for the first time evidence that two ancient, continent-sized, ultrahot structures hidden beneath the Earth have shaped the planet's magnetic field for the past 265 million years. These two masses, known as large low-shear-velocity provinces (LLSVPs), are part of the catalog of the planet's most enormous and enigmatic objects. Current estimates calculate that each one is comparable in size to the African continent, although they remain buried at a depth of 2,900 kilometers.
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fromBig Think
4 days ago

Ask Ethan: How long can the longest-lived star shine?

Lowest-mass red dwarf stars can live for tens to hundreds of trillions of years, with lifetime primarily determined by mass and composition (metallicity).
Science
fromianVisits
4 days ago

Photos from NASA's manned space missions go on display in London

Three-day exhibition displays newly digitised Mercury and Gemini photographs, revealing unprecedented clarity of early Earth-from-orbit images; restored prints and Andy Saunders’s book available.
Science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Milky Way may NOT have a supermassive black hole at its centre

The Milky Way's central gravity may come from a dense fermionic dark-matter core and surrounding halo rather than a supermassive black hole.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
4 days ago

can desert sand with plant-based materials be used to build houses and roads?

Researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and the University of Tokyo have made a prototype of botanical cement made of desert sand and plant-based additives in hopes that it can be used to build houses and roads. Once mixed, the team adds tiny pieces of wood together and presses them all with heat to produce the cement.
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fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

5 unlikely animal friendships that prove connection has no species barrier - Silicon Canals

Animals form deep, unexpected interspecies bonds that transcend instinct, demonstrating that genuine connection can override species boundaries and learned categories.
fromSFGATE
4 days ago

Study shows turbulence on flights to Hawaii has increased up to 30%

About 45 minutes prior to landing in Honolulu on Dec. 18, 2022, the pilots of Hawaiian Airlines Flight 35, a widebody Airbus A330, saw a white, plume-like cloud swiftly rising vertically ahead of them, caused by a storm cell. Moments later came a hard jolt. Then the airplane dropped rapidly, creating a brief free-falling sensation inside the cabin. Phones, water bottles, blankets and service carts lifted into the air. Passengers were affected as well, with some held down by a seatbelt while others rose upward.
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fromFast Company
4 days ago

The 'planet parade' starts this weekend. Saturday is your best chance to see it

Six planets will briefly align and be visible together in a 2026 planet parade around an hour after sunset on February 28, looking west.
fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Author Correction: Environmentally driven immune imprinting protects against allergy

Author Correction: Environmentally driven immune imprinting protects against allergy Correction to: Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-10001-5 Published online 28 January 2026
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

The houseplant that thrives on neglect and actually prefers when you forget to water it - Silicon Canals

I killed seven houseplants before I discovered the secret: I was literally loving them to death. Every morning, I'd check on them with my watering can in hand, convinced that more water meant more love. Turns out, some plants thrive when you basically ignore them. In fact, there's one particular plant that actually prefers when you forget it exists for weeks at a time.
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Science
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

Mark Cuban weighs in on Elon Musk's view that money can't buy happiness

Money reduces financial stress and amplifies existing personality, but beyond modest wealth, additional income yields diminishing returns for happiness.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Snakes on a train? King cobras may be riding the rails in India

King cobras are appearing far outside their natural ranges in India, often being transported inadvertently via trains and railway infrastructure.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Why Your Eyes Like What Your Eyes Like

Real estate with ocean views, stunning mountain vistas, and wide-open green spaces sell at premium prices because humans find those settings pleasing [1-5]. Certain color combinations in fashion-such as brown and forest green-blend harmoniously, while others, such as hot pink and orange, clash. And our eyes like certain proportions in visual objects (like buildings and human faces) but not others.
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