5
2
Benchmarking Permutations (koaning.io)
3
Indonesian Mega-Farm Drives Surge in Deforestation (yale.edu)
1
Portkey open-sources its AI gateway after processing 2T tokens a day (thenewstack.io)
3
Google Drive ransomware detection now on by default for paying users (bleepingcomputer.com)
1
How physicists proved that quantum weirdness is a feature, not a bug (scientificamerican.com)
1
JetBrains: AI agents are about to repeat the cloud ROI crisis (thenewstack.io)
1
The gig workers who are training humanoid robots at home (technologyreview.com)
7
Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Human-Controlled (gizmodo.com)
2
The Marco saga as a case for 10x engineering (natemeyvis.com)
3
Over hiring, not AI, behind recent tech industry redundancies (disassociated.com)
2
Bash Owns the Loop (nibzard.com)
2
Can NASA launch a nuclear mission to Mars by 2028? (scientificamerican.com)
3
The Costs of 'Helpful' AI (nature.com)
1
The world’s largest humanoid robot maker is going public (restofworld.org)
2
Workers around the world are not getting what they want from AI (restofworld.org)
2
Dutch Finance Ministry takes treasury banking portal offline after breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
2
Arm says agentic AI needs a new kind of CPU. Intel's DC chief isn't buying it (theregister.com)
1
Authors' lucky break in court may help class action over Meta torrenting (arstechnica.com)
1
AI benchmarks are broken. Here's what we need instead (technologyreview.com)
2
Raspberry Pi Pico chess timer (raspberrypi.com)
2
Why the lack of water on Mars is so mysterious (newscientist.com)
4
The weird physics of plant-based milks is only just coming to light (newscientist.com)
2
Cloudflare Client-Side Security: smarter detection, now open to everyone (cloudflare.com)
1
A Man Making Music with His Brain Implant (wired.com)
5
New 'Cicada' Covid variant is spreading in the U.S. (scientificamerican.com)
2
The Turin Shroud bears DNA from many people, plants and animals (newscientist.com)
1
The Anatomy of an LLM Benchmark (cameronrwolfe.substack.com)
4
Facial Recognition Is Spreading Everywhere (ieee.org)
8
Hackers now exploit critical F5 BIG-IP flaw in attacks, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
3
Citrix NetScaler bug exploited in days, may be multiple flaws in a trench coat (theregister.com)
1
Drowning Doesn't Look Like Drowning (army.mil)
1
"How to be a 10x engineer" – interview with a standout dev (pragmaticengineer.com)
1
App Defaults in March 2026 (brainbaking.com)
3
Anthropic struggling with Chinese competition, its own safety obsession (theregister.com)
2
Internal waves transport energy miles across the ocean (phys.org)
2
Where should we send a real 'Hail Mary' spacecraft? A new study has the answers (space.com)
1
Molecular 'anchors' could be key to weather-resistant perovskite solar cells (techxplore.com)
4
Astronaut's Condition That Led to Space Station Evacuation Remains a Mystery (nytimes.com)
1
A Secret History of Psychosis (nytimes.com)
2
Bees and hummingbirds aren't just buzzing – they're sipping trace booze (theregister.com)
3
Photos Are Probably Giving Away Your Location (wired.com)
1
The AI doomsday everyone's worried about is the wrong one (fortune.com)
2
Researchers examine how AI chatbots are shaping government operations (phys.org)
1
The first thing vibe coding builds is confidence it will help you succeed (theregister.com)
1
At 50, Apple confronts its next big challenge: AI (techxplore.com)
2
Anthony Leggett pushed the boundaries of quantum physics (newscientist.com)
1
AI wrote a scientific paper that passed peer review (scientificamerican.com)
1
Synesthesia isn't just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real (livescience.com)
3
I almost drowned in space when my helmet filled with water (newscientist.com)
27
Wikipedia bans AI-generated content in its online encyclopedia (theguardian.com)
23
Militarized snowflakes: The accidental beauty of Renaissance star forts (bigthink.com)
4
When Coupled Volcanoes Talk, These Researchers Listen (quantamagazine.org)
11
AI data centres can warm surrounding areas by up to 9.1°C (newscientist.com)
4
Brewers are turning Coca-Cola into a boozy wine (popsci.com)
2
The inner life we're trading away (bigthink.com)
175
Folk are getting dangerously attached to AI that always tells them they're right (theregister.com)
3
Can humans have babies in space? It may be harder than expected (space.com)
1
When Fake Supplements Work (nautil.us)
1
The Science Behind Being One of a Kind (nautil.us)
7
Outbreak linked to raw cheese grows; 9 cases total, one with kidney failure (arstechnica.com)
2
Robert Trivers, Eccentric Scientist Who Probed Human Nature, Dies at 83 (nytimes.com)
1
Playing Wolfenstein 3D with one hand in 2026 (arstechnica.com)
1
Ancient bones show dogs have been woven into human life for nearly 16,000 years (phys.org)
1
Why use living cells? Researchers are making chemicals with enzymes alone (phys.org)
6
Data centers aren't breaking the grid. A broken grid is (fortune.com)
1
Why does cannabis give people 'the munchies'? (livescience.com)
1
The rise of 'social offloading'–when AI replaces your boss's empathy (fortune.com)
3
OpenAI is narrowing its focus on things that make money (axios.com)
2
Vape Wants to Know How Old You Are (wired.com)
3
Human neurons on a chip learned to play Doom (scientificamerican.com)
2
Study explains Antarctic sea ice growth and sudden decline (phys.org)
2
A SECOND Sphinx detected in Egypt as scans hint at 'underground megastructure' (dailymail.co.uk)
3
18M-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place (livescience.com)
4
Delivery robots keep crashing into bus shelters (popsci.com)
2
Giant armadillo, Mastodon, and sloth fossils found in flooded Texas cave (popsci.com)
3
Sun storms are powered by a magnetic engine 16 Earths deep, study finds (space.com)
2
Internet Yiff Machine: We hacked 93GB of "anonymous" crime tips (arstechnica.com)
5
Spotify seeks $300M from Anna's Archive, which ignores all court proceedings (arstechnica.com)
2
The Mystery of the Legless Lizards of Taiwan (nautil.us)
2
An Invisible Bottleneck: A Helium Shortage Threatens the Chip Industry (nytimes.com)
109
Author of Red Mars calls 'bullshit' on emigrating to the planet (newscientist.com)
2
AI glasses are catching on in China, from shopping to cheating (restofworld.org)
1
Scientists watch sperm whales work as a team to assist a birth (npr.org)
1
Japan's giant caldera volcano is refilling 7,300 years later (phys.org)
3
Microsoft Set for Worst Quarter Since 2008 as AI Takes Two Bites (bloomberg.com)
1
Is the universe swarming with tiny black holes? (scientificamerican.com)
1
NASA spots comet reversing its spin in a first for science (scientificamerican.com)
2
One Way or Another, Most of Our Electricity Comes from Solar Power (wired.com)
1
Lloyds app glitch turned transactions into shared experience for 447k users (theregister.com)
2
Just Eat and Autotrader among firms investigated in fake reviews probe (bbc.com)
2
Please Compensate the Work You Appreciate (brainbaking.com)
2
Merchants of Certainty (asteriskmag.com)
2
Oldest dog identified at ancient hunter-gatherer site (science.org)
2
Hot things can freeze faster than cool ones. Now, this paradox has gone quantum (science.org)
1
Writing Changes Mathematical Thought (quantamagazine.org)
1
Reverse Game Theory Could Solve the Housing Shortage (noemamag.com)
2
Earth's magnetic field may be more powerful than we thought (scientificamerican.com)
1
30 Years Ago, Robots Learned to Walk Without Falling (ieee.org)
2