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fromBusiness Matters
1 hour ago

UK invests 14m in new quantum projects to boost health, defence and transport innovation

The UK Government has announced more than £14 million in new funding to accelerate the commercial use of quantum technology across healthcare, defence, transport and energy, in a move it says will help power Britain's next industrial revolution. The investment, unveiled on Friday at the National Quantum Technologies Showcase in London, marks a major milestone in the country's National Quantum Technologies Programme - part of its wider plan to translate cutting-edge science into real-world applications that drive economic growth.
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fromWIRED
1 hour ago

How to Follow the Trajectory of Comet 3I/Atlas

Comet 3I/Atlas will pass 270 million kilometers from Earth on December 19 and will be observable only through powerful telescopes.
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fromBig Think
4 hours ago

Ask Ethan: Can Weber bars detect gravitational waves?

Weber-style bar detectors are critically limited by their small size compared with modern interferometers, making them unlikely to achieve sensitivity required to detect gravitational waves.
#interstellar-comet
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fromwww.bbc.com
10 hours ago

Fire-blocking chemicals promise safer buildings

Burnblock is a wood flame retardant that forms protective char, releases water to absorb heat, and uses undisclosed, reportedly natural components.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

The COVID Pandemic May Have Aged Your BrainEven If You Never Got Sick

Living through the COVID-19 pandemic corresponded with an average brain age increase of about five and a half months in uninfected adults.
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fromLos Angeles Times
9 hours ago

Baby pictures: Brown eyes, long arms, very hairy. L.A. Zoo welcomes new orangutan

A baby male Bornean orangutan was born at the Los Angeles Zoo on Oct. 10, the first such birth there in nearly 15 years.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: UK science is 'bleeding to death', says report

A remote black hole produced a record-breaking superflare, antibodies show promise against diverse viral strains, and UK research commercialization failures threaten its science sector.
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago
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An ATP-gated molecular switch orchestrates human messenger RNA export

DDX39/UAP56 ATPase directs remodeling and routing of mRNPs from TREX to NPC-anchored TREX-2 via an ATP-gated mRNA-binding cycle.
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fromTheregister
1 day ago

Boffins: cloud computing's on-demand biz model is failing us

Commercial cloud pricing and procurement models misalign with scientific workflows, causing unreliable, costly access to specialized compute for budget-constrained research projects.
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fromState of the Planet
16 hours ago

Repairing Global Navigation Satellite Systems in the Land of Tea

A GNSS network in Bangladesh measures tectonic motion and delta land subsidence with millimeter precision, but most stations are not currently transmitting.
fromNextgov.com
12 hours ago

NASA wants you to help kick some tires - on the moon

The agency is once again calling on citizen innovators to help design the future, this time through a new HeroX challenge to develop better wheels and more robust tires for lunar rovers. The competition, called the Rock and Roll with NASA Challenge, offers $155,000 in prizes for top designs that can handle the punishing surface of the moon. As with previous NASA and HeroX challenges, everyone from amateur inventors working out of their garages to teams of students or professional companies are welcome to participate.
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#mind-captioning
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fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

Sleep Is the Line AI Cannot Cross

Sleep nightly rewrites memory and identity via slow-wave consolidation; AI cannot replicate this self-editing because it lacks sleep and temporal recalibration.
fromBusiness Insider
14 hours ago

Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, are shifting their philanthropy's focus to science and AI

On the same day, Biohub said it wouldpartner with EvolutionaryScaleto leverage AI to "dramatically accelerate scientific progress toward understanding and addressing human disease." "When we started, our goal was to help scientists cure or prevent all diseases this century," Zuckerberg said in a press release. "With advances in AI, we now believe this may be possible much sooner. Accelerating science is the most positive impact we think we can make. So we're going all in on AI-powered biology for our next chapter."
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fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

A 400-Year-Old Ring that Unfolds to Track the Movements of the Heavens

Rings have long combined jewelry and concealed utility, serving as poison containers, hidden keys, weapons, spy gadgets, and scientific instruments.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
16 hours ago

Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan shift bulk of philanthropy to science, focusing on AI and biology to curb disease

For the past decade, Dr. Priscilla Chan and her husband Mark Zuckerberg have focused part of their philanthropy on a lofty goal to cure, prevent or manage all disease if not in their lifetime, then in their children's. But during that time, they also funded underprivileged schools, immigration reform and efforts around diversity, equity and inclusion. Now, the billionaire couple is shifting the bulk of their philanthropic resources to Biohub, the pair's science organization, and focusing on using artificial intelligence to accelerate scientific discovery.
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fromFuturism
20 hours ago

Mysterious Interstellar Object Showing Signs of "Non-Gravitational Acceleration"

In early July, astronomers spotted a mysterious object, later dubbed 3I/ATLAS after it was confirmed to be the third-ever interstellar visitor cruising through our solar system. Last week, the object, which is now generally believed to be a comet, reached its closest point to the Sun, or its perihelion, brightening up at an unexpected rate and turning " distinctly bluer." And it may be getting a major boost that's unaccounted for by the Sun's gravitational pull as well.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

Our first terraforming goal should be the Moon, not Mars

Earth's finite land and volume will eventually force expansion off-planet, making terraforming another body — possibly the Moon — necessary for continued civilizational growth.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Universe expansion may be slowing, not accelerating, study suggests

The universe's expansion may be decelerating as dark energy weakens over time, raising the possibility of eventual contraction into a big crunch.
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fromNature
1 day ago

First ever atlas of brain development shows how stem cells turn into neurons

High-resolution cell atlases map molecular events driving brain cell differentiation from stem cells during embryonic and early postnatal development in humans and mice.
#tom-brady
#black-holes
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fromSFGATE
1 day ago

Dramatic burst of light in the cosmos spotted from California

A supermassive black hole produced the brightest recorded flare, emitting light equal to ten trillion suns due to a tidal disruption of a massive star.
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fromState of the Planet
21 hours ago

What Really Happened on Easter Island? Ancient Sediments Rewrite the "Ecocide" Story

A reconstructed 800-year rainfall record shows a severe, century-long drought began around 1550 on Rapa Nui and communities remained resilient despite climate stress.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
15 hours ago

An Opera Explores the Story of Rosalind Franklin and the Discovery of DNA

Rosalind Franklin's x-ray crystallography was crucial to revealing DNA's double helix, yet her contributions were underrecognized amid ambition, rivalry, and betrayal.
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fromBig Think
15 hours ago

Why general relativity would've been discovered without Einstein

Scientific breakthroughs arise from lengthy, collaborative dialogue, errors, and corrections across many thinkers, not from solitary genius.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The ultimate free Uber around the sea': suckerfish find dream solution to transport woes

The clutch of remora fish are holding on tight, but collectively release their grip just as the humpback whale they are riding breaches the surface of the ocean. Moments later, everyone is back on board, as the whale re-enters the water, all hurtling together off the coast of south-east Queensland. This rare footage of suckerfish was captured by marine scientist Dr Olaf Meynecke from Griffith University using camera tags attached to humpback whales. The remora are able to sense the change in speed and water depth, he said. It was amazing to see how fast and nimble they were during several different rides with the whales.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
18 hours ago

Why Drugs Like Ozempic Can Make People Drink Less Alcohol

GLP-1 diabetes and weight-loss drugs reduce alcohol consumption and intoxication by affecting both brain reward pathways and gut physiology.
fromESPN.com
1 day ago

F1 title battle: Verstappen feeling 'no pressure'

For me, there is no pressure. Even if I don't win it, I still know that I drove a really good season and I can happily say that to try and replicate the season that I have done, most people on the grid would find that very tough. So, you just need to be realistic with the chances we have had throughout the season and to still be talking about being in this fight is already remarkable in the first place.
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fromNews Center
19 hours ago

Understanding How Hearing Organs Develop - News Center

Inner hair cells direct the development and spatial arrangement of supporting cells in the organ of Corti, establishing precise cochlear cellular patterning.
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fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

How Much Do Your Sex Chromosomes Really Determine?

Sex development is governed by many genes across multiple chromosomes; calling X and Y 'sex chromosomes' wrongly implies sole causation and should be retired.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Meet the 'Wee-rex'. Tiny tyrannosaur is its own species

Nanotyrannus was a distinct dinosaur species, not a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex, based on limb-bone evidence indicating near-complete growth.
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fromTheregister
1 day ago

Oak Ridge lab gets $125M to combine HPCs with quantum

Oak Ridge's Quantum Science Center will receive up to $125 million by 2030 for hybrid quantum–HPC systems, software, algorithms, and applications across multiple quantum technologies.
fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

China is the new science power: How will Europe respond? DW 11/05/2025

"Scientia potestas est Knowledge is power!" That phrase was coined by English philosopher Sir Francis Bacon at the end of the 16th century, when England was one of the world's leading empires, both in terms of science and power politics. It was Bacon's aim to point out to his contemporaries that knowledge is of strategic use a motto that's still valid today.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

AI Uses Physics to Illuminate the Dark Proteome

AI combined with applied physics can design unstable, intrinsically disordered proteins from the dark proteome, enabling new biological and therapeutic opportunities.
fromNature
2 days ago

Chinese scientists increasingly lead joint projects with the UK, US and Europe

The number of Chinese scientists taking on leadership roles in international science projects is growing rapidly. They now lead more than half of all research projects with the United Kingdom, and are expected to lead an equal number of projects with Europe and with the United States in the next couple of years, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences last week. Hongjun Xiang, a physicist at Fudan University in Shanghai, China, says the projections are consistent with what he has observed in the country, particularly in fields such as physics and engineering. But China needs to strengthen its leadership capabilities in disruptive basic research, "as Nobel-level original breakthroughs remain rare", he adds.
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fromFuturism
1 day ago

China Says Mystery Object Appears to Have Struck Ship That Its Space Station Astronauts Were Supposed to Return Home In

The Shenzhou-20 crewed spacecraft is suspected to have been struck by a small piece of orbital debris, and assessment of the impact and associated risks is currently under way,
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fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

The new frontier in understanding human and mammalian brain development

Gidziela, A. et al. A meta-analysis of genetic effects associated with neurodevelopmental disorders and co-occurring conditions. Nat. Hum. Behav. 7, 642656 (2023). PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Buescher, A. V. S., Cidav, Z., Knapp, M. & Mandell, D. S. Costs of autism spectrum disorders in the United Kingdom and the United States. JAMA Pediatr. 168, 721728 (2014). PubMed Google Scholar
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

New quantum hardware puts the mechanics in quantum mechanics

Quantinuum introduced a new trapped-ion quantum computer that significantly increases qubit count and employs novel technologies to manage high-fidelity, all-to-all connected qubits.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Myriad Aryne Derivatives from Carboxylic Acids - Nature

A single-step derivatization of carboxylic acids yields an aryne precursor that generates diverse aminated arynes when activated by blue light or heat.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Retrain Your Brain's Reward System

I was a third-year medical student at Northwestern on my ICU rotation the first time I saw a dopamine drip. The patient was pale and motionless, his blood pressure dropping by the minute despite large volumes of IV fluids. My senior resident said to the bedside nurse, "Let's start a dopamine drip at five micrograms per kilogram per minute." I stood at the foot of the bed, watching the monitor as the patient's heart rate and pressure began to climb.
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fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Blue Origin plans second launch of New Glenn mega-rocket on November 9 | TechCrunch

Blue Origin will attempt New Glenn's second launch as early as November 9, carrying NASA's twin ESCAPADE spacecraft and a Viasat demonstrator.
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fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

New 'brain atlases' may change fight against Alzheimer's, MS DW 11/05/2025

New dynamic brain atlases map cellular development and changes across species, enabling improved diagnosis, neurosurgery planning, and targeted treatments for neurological disorders.
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fromBoston.com
2 days ago

Tom Brady just revealed that his dog Junie is a clone of Lua, his deceased furry friend

Tom Brady cloned his late dog Lua by partnering with Colossal Biosciences using a pre-death blood sample, producing a nearly identical dog named Junie.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

"So much more menacing": Formula E's new Gen4 car breaks cover

Gen4 Formula E cars emphasize efficiency, regenerative capacity, road-relevant driver aids, recyclable construction, and selective aero options to improve performance cost-effectively.
#shenzhou-20
fromNature
2 days ago

Vector-stimuli-responsive magnetorheological fibrous materials - Nature

Magnetorheological (MR) materials, a class of smart materials that can reversibly change rheological and mechanical properties under magnetic fields15,16,17, are composed of soft magnetic particles within a fluid or elastomeric carrier18,19. Under external magnetic fields, the magnetized particles attract each other through dipole-dipole interaction to form fibre-like structures-known as the MR effect-that increase the viscosity and stiffness of the MR materials20,21. Among these materials, anisotropic MR elastomers with predefined fibre-like soft magnetic structures exhibit directional responses, including sheer stiffening22 and rotational actuation23, to magnetic fields.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Secretome translation shaped by lysosomes and lunapark-marked ER junctions - Nature

Historically, ER sheets have been considered the predominant site of secretome mRNA translation, largely owing to their enrichment in membrane-bound polysomes5. Yet, recent reconstructions from diverse mammalian cell types reveal that ribosomes, including polysome-associated and monosome-bound forms, are distributed across nearly all ER morphologies, encompassing sheets, tubules and tubule-tubule junctions6. Notably, a substantial subset of ER-bound ribosomes corresponds to non-translating subunits, particularly the 60S7,8, suggesting that ribosome association is not synonymous with active elongation and may reflect regulatory or pre-initiation states.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago

This Contra Costa festival is a dazzling showcase for gems and minerals

Contra Costa Mineral & Gem Society's 75th show features minerals, gems, fossils, demonstrations, vendors, interactive exhibits, family activities, and a mascot in Concord Nov. 8–9.
fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

This Contra Costa festival is a dazzling showcase for gems and minerals

Taking place at Centre Concord, the show is meant not just for collectors of glittery, hard things, but for anybody curious about the way the planet's put together. "Step inside and explore a dazzling world of minerals, gems, fossils, meteorites, crystals, beads, jewelry and slabs from expert vendors and collectors," the organizers write. "Discover Earth's hidden beauty up close through live lapidary demonstrations, educational displays and interactive exhibits that bring geology to life."
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

These Cosmic Outbursts Normally Last for Minutes. This One Went on for HoursAnd Nobody Knows Why

GRBs are extremely energetic explosions that rank among the most powerful astrophysical events in the universe, so luminous they can be seen from billions of light-years away. They're most commonly caused by either a merging pair of neutron stars or a very massive star ending its life in a supernova called a collapsar; in both of these classical cases, the resulting stellar cataclysm can spit out a giant, tightly focused jet of radiation and particles.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

There's a Monumental Cosmic Map Hidden beneath Mexico's Oldest Maya Site

Aguada Fenix contains a cross-shaped cosmogram aligned with canals and cardinal-direction pigments, challenging assumptions about early Maya social hierarchy and monumental construction.
fromFuncheap
1 day ago

53rd San Francisco Fungus Fair: Celebration of Wild Mushrooms (2025)

The Mycological Society of San Francisco Fungus Fair includes the latest collection of expertly identified fungi collected in various locations in the Bay Area. These annual collections constitute a 50-year record of the early winter fungal diversity in our area. This historical information may become an important contribution to science as climate change affects our local ecosystems. In the San Francisco Bay Area, when the first rains tease up the chanterelles and porcini, fungus lovers head to the Fungus Fair.
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fromHarvard Gazette
1 day ago

Memorial Minute for Ralph Mitchell, 90- Harvard Gazette

Ralph Mitchell was a pioneering microbial scientist whose career spanned Trinity College Dublin, Weizmann Institute, and Harvard, advancing interface and environmental microbial ecology.
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fromPadailypost
2 days ago

John A. Keyes

John A. Keyes pioneered communication satellites and enabled the first maritime satellite ship-to-shore telephone, living to 100.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Targeting FSP1 triggers ferroptosis in lung cancer - Nature

Ferroptosis is oxidative, lipid-peroxidation-driven cell death controlled by GPX4 and FSP1, with significant implications for cancer sensitivity and therapeutic targeting.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

How to understand Einstein's relativity without math

Space and time are not absolute; measured distances and durations depend on observer location and motion, while the speed of light in vacuum remains invariant.
#supermoon
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Hallucinations Happen When the Brain Fills in the Blanks

Visual hallucinations in Parkinson's and psychedelic experiences arise from overlapping neural disruptions where weakened sensory input allows internally generated predictions to dominate perception.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: Custom-made gene-editing therapy for children to enter clinical trial

Personalized CRISPR base-editing therapy that rescued an infant will enter a clinical trial for at least five more children.
fromwww.sciencefriday.com
2 days ago
Science

Senior Social Media Manager

Senior Social Media Manager role at Science Friday to lead social strategy, grow audience, and coordinate across teams with hybrid remote/NYC work requirement.
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fromWIRED
3 days ago

The EV Battery Tech That's Worth the Hype, According to Experts

Small, incremental changes to battery materials and pack design can notably boost EV range and reduce costs, but safety, testing, and economics delay adoption into production for years.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Neuralink Head of Surgery Says Robot-Human Interface Happening "Very Soon"

Neuralink signals imminent human brain-to-humanoid robot control despite mixed implant reliability and Tesla's Optimus remaining technologically immature.
fromFuturism
2 days ago

China Installs Oven in Space Station, Astronauts Use It to Enjoy Succulent Barbecue Feast

The footage shows astronauts aboard the Tiangong space station - the PRC's low earth orbit research platform, first launched in 2021 - roasting half a dozen wings in a small oven onboard the craft. Both drums and flats are loaded onto a tray, which locks the floating bits of meat up in a cage-like apparatus so they don't drift off.
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fromBusiness Matters
3 days ago

Ukrainian businessman Max Polyakov invests in Scottish space firm Skyrora

In August 2025, Glasgow's Skyrora became the first British manufacturer licensed to conduct vertical launches from the United Kingdom. This licence will allow the company to launch its suborbital Skylark L rocket from the SaxaVord spaceport in the Shetland Islands, which previously received the necessary approvals from the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA). This marks a major milestone for the UK, which has finally gained sovereign launch capabilities.
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fromNextgov.com
2 days ago

Energy allocates $625M for national labs' quantum research

The Department of Energy will allocate $625 million over five years to revitalize five National Quantum Information Science Research Centers housed at major national labs.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Google's new hurricane model was breathtakingly good this season

Google DeepMind's AI cyclone track forecasts outperformed the US GFS model this Atlantic hurricane season, reducing five-day track errors by more than half.
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fromMedium
6 days ago

Hoping for the long-term

Human perception of time is fluid, shaped by memory, emotion, context, and culture, producing subjective experiences of time speeding or slowing.
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

The start-up creating science kits for young Africans

Stemaide's goal is to bring science and technology skills to all young Africans. Started in 2022 in Ghana, it has developed a science kit that will work in areas without the internet. Prince Boateng Asare, CEO of Stemaide, says the firm wants to prepare young Africans for the jobs of the future. This is the second in a six-part series on technology in Africa. More on Technology in Africa
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fromFast Company
2 days ago

'De-extinction' startup Colossal Biosciences makes its first acquisition: a company that clones pets

Colossal Biosciences acquired ViaGen Pets and Equine, increasing cloning capacity and access to Roslin Institute technologies for de-extinction and endangered species conservation.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

Opinion: California universities broke the silence of ALS with federal funds now at risk

Sustained federal investment in university research is vital to preserve breakthroughs like brain-computer interfaces that restore communication for ALS patients.
fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

Salamanders can regrow limbs. Could humans someday? - Harvard Gazette

Biologists long have been fascinated by the ability of salamanders to regrow entire limbs. Now Harvard researchers have solved part of the mystery of how they accomplish this feat - by activating stem cells throughout the body, not just at the injury site. In a new paper published in the journal Cell, researchers documented how this bodywide response in axolotl salamanders is triggered by the sympathetic nervous system, or the "fight or flight" network.
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fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Beyond Broca: The Two Routes to Speaking

Human speech relies on two parallel frontal-lobe systems: a ventral hierarchy for articulation and a unique dorsal laryngeal motor cortex for voluntary pitch control.
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fromTravel + Leisure
2 days ago

This Viral Science Hack Can Help You Find Your Car in a Crowded Parking Lot

Holding a key fob against the head or a full water bottle amplifies its radio signal, extending remote range to locate a parked car.
fromNature
3 days ago

From the archive: Do sunspots affect the price of corn?

Crop prices correlate with an 11-year solar period, and a meteor detonates over Ireland, in this week's pick from the Nature archive. 100 years ago doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-025-03455-0 This article features text from Nature's archive. By its historical nature, the archive includes some images, articles and language that by twenty-first-century standards are offensive and harmful. Find out more.
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fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago

Tom Brady Revealed That He Cloned His Dog Before Its Death

Tom Brady cloned his late family dog Lua using a blood-based, non-invasive cloning process, resulting in a new pet named Junie and involving Colossal Biosciences.
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 days ago

Scientists watch flare with 10 trillion suns' light from massive black hole

Scientists have documented the most energetic flare ever observed emanating from a supermassive black hole, a cataclysmic event that briefly shone with the light of 10 trillion suns. The new findings were published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Astronomy, with astronomer Matthew Graham of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) leading the study.
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fromFortune
2 days ago

3 monkeys still on the loose after research transport truck crashes in rural Mississippi | Fortune

Research monkeys escaped after a truck overturned in Mississippi, leaving missing primates, undisclosed ownership and transport details, and conflicting reports about their health.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

What Sheep Think About the Weather: Hearing What Animals Say

As our world becomes increasingly clogged with human noise, we must listen to what animals are saying to us. Even the smallest creature, you'll find when you take time to listen, is a somebody with something to say. Key questions include: What are animals saying, how much are we missing, and how can we be better listeners? Nonhuman animals of all varieties must live and thrive in an increasingly human-dominated world.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

In 'Morbidly Curious,' a psychologist explores the human draw to ghosts and gore

Morbid curiosity is an interest in potentially dangerous phenomena that can be healthy and evolutionarily adaptive by informing people about threats.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

How to Avoid Holiday Overspending This Year

Set a clear holiday spending limit early, share goals with a trusted person, and prioritize generosity beyond monetary value.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Galapagos had no native amphibians. Then it was invaded by hundreds of thousands of frogs

Fowler's snouted treefrogs have established on Isabela and Santa Cruz, exploding to hundreds of thousands and posing significant ecological threats.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

This week's Short Wave news roundup

Orb-weaving spiders sometimes add stabilimenta silk decorations that reflect light; these may aid prey localization and compensate for the spiders' low vision.
fromTravel + Leisure
2 days ago

Tonight's Supermoon Is the Largest and Brightest of 2025-and It's the Closest the Moon Has Come to Earth This Year

For the best moon gazing, head to one of America's top Dark Sky parks, protected areas with exceptionally low light pollution, where the night sky is the perfect backdrop for a star show. From the Appalachian Mountains to wide Texas plains, these top Dark Sky sanctuaries offer some of the clearest views in the country, according to research shared with Travel + Leisure from Inghams Walking, a travel company specializing in outdoor adventures.
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

Astounding stream of stars caught escaping from nearby galaxy

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will rapidly survey the entire sky with an unprecedented 3200-megapixel camera to discover Solar System objects, transients, and advance cosmology.
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fromTravel + Leisure
3 days ago

This Rare 'Swarm Year' Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight-and You Won't See Another Like It Until 2032

The Southern Taurids peak Nov. 4–5 in a swarm year with extra fireballs, but the Super Beaver Moon will likely obscure most meteors.
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