1
1
AI system TongGeometry generates and solves olympiad-level geometry problems (phys.org)
1
Antarctica Has a Gravity Hole – and It Dates Back 70M Years (discovermagazine.com)
2
Even in Antarctica, Insects Are Eating Microplastics (yale.edu)
1
The oldest known vertebrates had two pairs of eyes (newatlas.com)
1
5k-year-old bacteria thawed in Romanian ice cave (popsci.com)
5
A fluid can store solar energy and then release it as heat months later (arstechnica.com)
1
Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) (googleblog.com)
1
A Comparative Security Analysis of Three Cloud-Based Password Managers [pdf] (iacr.org)
2
"Signal sniffer" to detect Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker deployed (cbsnews.com)
1
Manager Is Not the Problem (philippdubach.com)
2
What's Left for Humans? (wsj.com)
2
Ancient Mars was warm and wet, not cold and icy (theconversation.com)
2
Unsinkable Tubes Could Help Harvest Energy from the Ocean (nytimes.com)
1
Nautilus, high-performance algorithmic trading platform, event-driven backtester (github.com/nautechsystems)
1
How to Build an Island (atlasobscura.com)
2
I Have Nothing but Red Herring to Hide (theprivacydad.com)
3
AI Hunts for the Next Big Thing in Physics (ieee.org)
3
Where There Is Connectivity There Is Surveillance (noemamag.com)
2
System Prompts Define Agent Behavior (dbreunig.com)
45
Backblaze Drive Stats for 2025 (backblaze.com)
2
Why Parenting Is Similar to JavaScript Development (brainbaking.com)
3
AI is making online crimes easier. It could get worse (technologyreview.com)
86
So many trees planted in Taklamakan Desert that it's turned into a carbon sink (livescience.com)
1
A French Region Safeguarded the Louvre's Treasures During World War II (smithsonianmag.com)
1
How and When the Memory Chip Shortage Will End (ieee.org)
4
New experiments suggest Earth's core contains up to 45 oceans' worth of hydrogen (phys.org)
2
Physicists Make Electrons Flow Like Water (quantamagazine.org)
3
Hunter-gatherers took refuge in European 'water world' for millennia (nature.com)
1
Robots with human-inspired eyes have better vision (economist.com)
1
Humans are not the only animals that treat each other's injuries (economist.com)
2
Did you want that link to be permanent? (thehistoryoftheweb.com)
1
Scratch–minimalist, open-source, offline-first Markdown note-taking app for Mac (github.com/erictli)
1
Chipping Away (weisser.io)
1
Is a secure AI assistant possible? (technologyreview.com)
1
Apple and Google pledge not to discriminate against third-party apps in UK deal (theguardian.com)
1
The big AI job swap: why white-collar workers are ditching their careers (theguardian.com)
2
How Your Camera Works (2015) (objc.io)
5
Why reading a book 100 times is a great idea (2015) (theguardian.com)
1
A Note on File History in Emacs (brainbaking.com)
1
Revisionist History – Aliens, Secrets and Conspiracies (steveblank.com)
2
Life on Earth is lucky: A rare chemical fluke may have made our planet habitable (space.com)
17
Lost Soviet Moon Lander May Have Been Found (nytimes.com)
2
Scientists traced roses' thorny origins, solved a 400M-year-old mystery (cnn.com)
1
Pain. Or, Why Learning to Code Is Like Learning Chinese. (2010) (amandapeyton.com)
13
Obsidian Introduces Obsidian CLI (help.obsidian.md)
1
How old were you when you decided to start giving up? (2010) (inklingmarkets.com)
3
An Asteroid Might Slam into the Moon in 2032–and Create a Fiery Flash (smithsonianmag.com)
4
Using an Engineering Notebook (ntietz.com)
2
Scientists camouflage heart rate from invasive radar-based surveillance (techxplore.com)
1
Drone-launching underwater drone hitches a ride on ship and sub hulls (newatlas.com)
1
The deep history of AI began 3k years ago (bigthink.com)
11
Edinburgh councillors pull the plug on 'green' AI datacenter (theregister.com)
1
Structural differences found in brains of people with panic disorder (medicalxpress.com)
1
A Critical AI Niche Is Dominated by One Little-Known Japanese Company (wsj.com)
4
Mathematicians Are Putting A.I. To the Test (nytimes.com)
1
Can robots ever be graceful? (bbc.com)
68
Humans peak in midlife: A combined cognitive and personality trait perspective (sciencedirect.com)
5
Never Work with Bad People (arseniy.wtf)
2
Adding Bits Beats AI Slop (2025) (gwern.net)
1
Whether they are building agents or folding proteins, LLMs need a friend (theregister.com)
10
Containers, cloud, blockchain, AI – all the same old BS, says veteran Red Hatter (theregister.com)
2
JWST Spots Unexpected Abundance of Organic Molecules in Nearby Galaxy (discovermagazine.com)
1
Psychedelics may rewire the brain to treat PTSD (livescience.com)
2
Anthropic's team cut ad creation time from 30 minutes to 30 seconds (claude.com)
1
Student makes cosmic dust in a lab, shining a light on the origin of life (cnn.com)
1
'Hermès orange' iPhone sparks Apple comeback in China (ft.com)
2
Solid-State Freezer Needs No Refrigerants (ieee.org)
6
Moltbook was peak AI theater (technologyreview.com)
3
Why Claude Cowork is a math problem Indian IT can't solve (restofworld.org)
1
Why a 175-Year-Old Glassmaker Is Suddenly an AI Superstar (wsj.com)
1
What happens when a neighborhood is built around a farm (grist.org)
4
Every major galaxy is speeding away from the Milky Way, except one (livescience.com)
2
Extreme Inequality Presages the Revolt Against It (noemamag.com)
2
The Rise of Spec Driven Development (dbreunig.com)
3
The first good Raspberry Pi Laptop (jeffgeerling.com)
2
Seas to Rise Around the World – But Not in Greenland (yale.edu)
1
New hire fixed a problem so fast, their boss left to become a yoga instructor (theregister.com)
1
Four horsemen of the AI-pocalypse line up capex bigger than Israel's GDP (theregister.com)
12
Ad blocking is alive and well, despite Chrome's attempts to make it harder (theregister.com)
1
Structures Within the Earth Have Altered Magnetic Field for Millions of Years (wired.com)
1
The Epidemic Born Out of Poverty (nautil.us)
2
FDA approves first dual-action eye drop for age-related vision loss (newatlas.com)
2
Nasal spray could prevent infections from any flu strain (newscientist.com)
1
Should you move to San Francisco to build your startup? (solofounders.com)
3
The volunteer Wikipedia army protecting against AI slop (restofworld.org)
3
The most misunderstood graph in AI (technologyreview.com)
2
Google set to double AI spending to $185B after strong earnings (ft.com)
1
Why our ancestors had straight teeth without braces (popsci.com)
2
China Trader Who Made $3B on Gold Bets Big Against Silver (bloomberg.com)
1
A programmable, Lego-like material for robots emulates life's flexibility (techxplore.com)
1
Physicists achieve near-zero friction on macroscopic scales (phys.org)
1
Pipe organ playing a single, nonstop song until 2640 (popsci.com)
6
My Eighth Year as a Bootstrapped Founder (mtlynch.io)
1
The Green River flows 'uphill.' Geologists think they know why (popsci.com)
2
Enormous 'mega-blob' under Hawaii is solid rock and iron (livescience.com)
2
Scientists discover molecule in space that hints at origin of life (cnn.com)
1
Modern and Antique Technologies Reveal a Dynamic Cosmos (quantamagazine.org)
2
Microbes could extract the metal needed for cleantech (technologyreview.com)
2