Articles by Brajeshwar
5

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

NotepadNext – A cross-platform, reimplementation of Notepad++ (github.com/dail8859)

2

Little dinosaur is forcing a rethink of evolution (sciencedaily.com)

2

How long does it take the sun to rotate? (livescience.com)

12

Preserved hair reveals just how bad lead exposure was in the 20th century (livescience.com)

1

A mathematical framework for optimizing robotic joints (techxplore.com)

2

Explore the Stratosphere with a DIY Pico Balloon (ieee.org)

1

Want more ads on your web pages? Try the AdBoost extension (theregister.com)

2

Techie's one ring brought darkness by shorting a server (theregister.com)

3

Ask HN: Is there a surge of spam emails slipping past filters across providers?

2

Training four-legged robots as if they were dogs (techxplore.com)

4

48 hours without lungs: artificial organ kept man alive until transplant (nature.com)

2

Saudi gigaproject opens with largest and fastest roller coaster (newatlas.com)

14

We have lost so much of ourselves to smartphones: can we get it back? (theguardian.com)

1

Banning Syntax Highlighting Steroids (brainbaking.com)

2

Trust in Ranking (marginalia.nu)

5

The humans are screenshotting us (moltbook.com)

1

Is Time a Fundamental Part of Reality? Quiet Revolution in Physics Suggests Not (singularityhub.com)

1

CERN supercollider gets sustainable side hustle heating local homes (newatlas.com)

1

Ode to Small Devices (ieee.org)

93

Ode to the AA Battery (jeffgeerling.com)

2

The systems that build star performers (bigthink.com)

1

India's electric bus push has a deadly blind spot (restofworld.org)

2

Why the government is trying to make coal cute (grist.org)

25

Days numbered for 'risky' lithium-ion batteries (livescience.com)

1

Accidental climate scientist who uncovered an unexpected force of global warming (cnn.com)

1

Government Comic Books (2023) (beautifulpublicdata.com)

1

Everyone's okay with their AI, just not yours (idiallo.com)

1

Recreating the Smells of History (knowablemagazine.org)

2

Ancient humans were seafaring far earlier than we realised (newscientist.com)

1

Apple Creator Studio (apple.com)

4

Overshoot: The World Is Hitting Point of No Return on Climate (yale.edu)

1

Amazon's 180 internet satellites are too bright. It wants 3k more (popsci.com)

2

From bones to steel: Why ice skates were a terrible idea that worked (popsci.com)

3

Death of an Indian Tech Worker (restofworld.org)

2

The surprisingly big health benefits of just a little exercise (nature.com)

1

Climbers accidentally discovered evidence of an 80M year-old sea turtle stampede (livescience.com)

2

Dinosaur that vanished twice: How WWII nearly erased Spinosaurus from history (bigthink.com)

1

Challenger: The disaster five people saw coming (abc.net.au)

1

A Lesson in Coexistence (aeon.co)

1

OpenAI's Big Play for Science (technologyreview.com)

1

Humans Could Have as Many as 33 Senses (singularityhub.com)

1

No One Is Quite Sure Why Ice Is Slippery (wired.com)

1

The daring idea that time is an illusion and how we could prove it (newscientist.com)

1

CLI – GitHub's official command line tool (cli.github.com)

1

The Mysterious Electrides (knowablemagazine.org)

1

A drying climate is making East Africa pull apart faster (livescience.com)

1

An ultra-high-resolution map of (dark) matter (arxiv.org)

2

'Mother of all deals': EU and India sign free trade agreement (theguardian.com)

1

The Most Expensive Assumption in AI (philippdubach.com)

2

The Essence of Frigidity (computer.rip)

3

Spectrum Slit to turn Wi-Fi signals into wall art (rootkid.me)

4

The new forensic science of proving what's real (scientificamerican.com)

1

Cleaner air is (inadvertently) harming the Great Barrier Reef (phys.org)

2

Ancient Spanish trees reveal Mediterranean storms are intensifying (phys.org)

1

What happens when you train an LLM only on limited historical data (popsci.com)

1

'Life-threatening' storm forecast in US as states declare emergency (sky.com)

3

Lawsuit Claims Meta Can See WhatsApp Chats in Breach of Privacy (bloomberg.com)

2

Did Edison accidentally make graphene in 1879? (arstechnica.com)

3

Shapeshifting materials could power next generation of soft robots (techxplore.com)

2

Crash Clock Measures Dangerous Overcrowding in Low Earth Orbit (ieee.org)

2

UN Declares That the World Has Entered an Era of 'Global Water Bankruptcy' (smithsonianmag.com)

3

Why "read more" may be the most underrated thinking advice we have (bigthink.com)

1

Computers Can't Surprise (aeon.co)

1

TR-49 is interactive fiction for fans of deep research rabbit holes (arstechnica.com)

1

In 1932, Australia Started an 'Emu War'–and Lost (atlasobscura.com)

1

Qualcomm CEO pockets 15% pay rise as profits fall 45% (theregister.com)

5

Parents might age faster or slower based on how many kids they have (scientificamerican.com)

2

Plant Produces Plump, Fake Berries to Trick Birds into Spreading Its Offspring (smithsonianmag.com)

2

Engineers invent wireless transceiver that rivals fiber-optic speed (techxplore.com)

1

Whales may divide resources to co-exist under pressures from climate change (phys.org)

1

Scientists may have discovered a new extinct form of life (phys.org)

4

The AI-Powered Web Is Eating Itself (noemamag.com)

2

DNA found in ancient Colombian skeleton may hold answers to origin of syphilis (abc.net.au)

1

Earthquake Sensors Detect Sonic Booms from Incoming Space Junk (sciencealert.com)

1

What will tech jobs look like in 2026? (restofworld.org)

2

People imperiled through sign-in links sent by SMS (arstechnica.com)

2

Hand stencils discovered in an Indonesian cave are oldest-known rock art (abc.net.au)

1

Schrödinger's cat got bigger: physicists create largest ever 'superposition' (nature.com)

3

Sending babies to nursery reshapes their microbiomes (nature.com)

3

Mystery tower fossils may come from a newly discovered kind of life (scientificamerican.com)

1

The Messy Human Drama That Dealt a Blow to One of AI's Hottest Startups (wsj.com)

1

When AI and Human Worlds Collide (noemamag.com)

2

China steers the Gulf's driverless future as U.S. rivals stay home (restofworld.org)

2

Is a billion dollars still cool? (restofworld.org)

2

Autonomous helicopter built to hunt submarines takes first flight (newatlas.com)

3

The new breed of 'zero bills' homes where you pay nothing for your energy (sky.com)

2

Life Resembles 'The Addams Family' with Thing-Like Robotic Hand (nytimes.com)

2

Computational model discovers new types of neurons hidden in decade-old dataset (bigthink.com)

3

Webb reveals a planetary nebula with clarity, and it is spectacular (arstechnica.com)

1

From Veritasium: What If You Keep Slowing Down? (media.mit.edu)

1

The UK government is backing AI that can run its own lab experiments (technologyreview.com)

0

In Bangladesh, volunteers are battling climate-fueled disease at its source (grist.org)

2

"AI has taught us that people are excited to replace human beings" (theguardian.com)

3

NASA launches Pandora, taking JWST's search for habitable worlds to a new level (theconversation.com)