1
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)
4
Urban Greenery Is Making Some Cities Hotter, Study Finds (yale.edu)
1
The most underappreciated achievement in theoretical physics (bigthink.com)
1
Book Towns Are Made for Book Lovers (atlasobscura.com)
1
Toxic Hydrogen Cyanide and Its Role in the Origins of Life (universetoday.com)
1
Observing the positronium beam as a quantum matter wave (phys.org)
1
South Korea Customs Uncovers $102M Crypto Laundering Scheme (decrypt.co)
1
Astronomers discover an enormous iron bar in the famous Ring Nebula (space.com)
7
Tell HN: If you submit an article, please don't be the first commenter
1
Stop Consuming Spam at the First Sign (idiallo.com)
2
Hiring at India's Big Four outsourcers stalls, as AI seemingly makes an impact (theregister.com)
2
We used to celebrate science and innovation (2025) (freethink.com)
1
Monsanto's House of the Future: A Plastic Dream of Tomorrow in Photos (rarehistoricalphotos.com)
45
Why the Tech World Thinks the American Dream Is Dying (wsj.com)
3
Ocean damage nearly doubles the cost of climate change (insideclimatenews.org)
9
Meta retreats from metaverse after virtual reality check (theregister.com)
2
We Were Never Good Programmers (idiallo.com)
3
How to make a Blockbuster VHS sleeve for any movie (popsci.com)
2
Why the EU is ready to drop high tariffs on China-made EVs (restofworld.org)
1
A 'time capsule for cells' stores the secret experiences of their past (nature.com)
2
Fastest drone hits 408 MPH to reclaim speed record (newatlas.com)
1
Meat may play an unexpected role in helping people reach 100 (newscientist.com)
4
Mysterious 'iron bar' discovery in space may reveal Earth's future (bbc.com)
2
Leonardo Proteus: Royal Navy flies UK's first autonomous full-size helicopter (aerotime.aero)
3
Wormholes may not exist. They reveal something deeper about time and universe (phys.org)
2
Data centers are amazing. Everyone hates them (technologyreview.com)
3
Windows App forgets how to log in with first security update of the year (theregister.com)
2
I Turn Scientific Renderings of Space into Art (nautil.us)
3
Apple sits out AI arms race to play kingmaker between Google and OpenAI (ft.com)
2
How to be a great mentor in business and life (bigthink.com)
2
Many Bluetooth Devices with Google Fast Pair Vulnerable to "WhisperPair" Hack (arstechnica.com)
2
Chinese AI Developers Say They Can't Beat America Without Better Chips (wsj.com)
3
India Issues Final Warning to Apple in Ongoing Antitrust Case (macobserver.com)
1
Utah's other Great Salt Lake is underground, ancient, deep .and fresh (phys.org)
1
Mystery sounds under review for signs of extraterrestrial life (popsci.com)
3
Why almost no homes burned in LA have been rebuilt since last year's fires (grist.org)
2
Why child prodigies rarely become elite performers (economist.com)
2
The Mythology of Conscious AI (noemamag.com)
2
AI-Designed Antibodies Are Racing Toward Clinical Trials (singularityhub.com)
2
To Have Machines Make Math Proofs, Turn Them into a Puzzle (quantamagazine.org)
2
How did birds evolve? The answer is wilder than anyone thought (nature.com)
1
We're about to simulate a human brain on a supercomputer (newscientist.com)
1
After 40k Years Sealed, Gibraltar's Cave Rewrites Human Origins (modernengineeringmarvels.com)
54
Never-before-seen Linux malware is "more advanced than typical" (arstechnica.com)
1
Umami: You never say its name, yet you taste it every day (bigthink.com)
1