19
1
Building a highly accurate digital twin of the Earth (destination-earth.eu)
4
Engineered human cartilage graft exhibits full skeletal repair capacity (pnas.org)
1
Halley's Comet wrongly named: 11th-century monk predates British astronomer (universiteitleiden.nl)
2
Coast Guard breaks up ice in Hudson River as NYC Ferry remains suspended (gothamist.com)
2
Meta, YouTube face trial over allegations their tech is addictive (cbsnews.com)
4
48 hours without lungs: artificial organ kept man alive until transplant (nature.com)
4
Memory-safety exploits account for 70 percent of vulnerabilities (ieee.org)
3
Malicious AI swarms can threaten democracy (science.org)
2
Largest Battery-Electric Ship Begins Harbour Trials (incat.com.au)
1
Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy (uni-freiburg.de)
6
African nations now send more money to China than they receive in new loans (reuters.com)
1
'Fiber chip' could be a boon for healthcare (fudan.edu.cn)
2
New chip-sized optical amplifier can intensify light 100 times (stanford.edu)
1
Powering AI from Space, at Scale (upenn.edu)
1
Yale to offer free tuition to families with incomes below $200k (yale.edu)
37
[flagged] US population growth slows as immigration declines (reuters.com)
3
It is now 85 seconds to midnight (thebulletin.org)
10
Trump's use of AI images pushes new boundaries, further eroding public trust (apnews.com)
4
French lawmakers approve bill banning social media for children under 15 (apnews.com)
3
AI videos of fake NYPD–ICE clashes spread in a 'perfect storm' for propaganda (gothamist.com)
2
Saudi Arabia suspends work on Mukaab megaproject (reuters.com)
2
Low-cost system turns smartphones into emergency radiation detectors (hiroshima-u.ac.jp)
3
Ending tax refunds by check risks sidelining people who don't have bank accounts (theconversation.com)
1
New Data Show Reduced Overall PFAS Exposures in Subarctic Ocean (seas.harvard.edu)
1
California Post brings brash New York-style tabloid news to the West Coast (apnews.com)
1
Consumer Food Purchases After GLP-1RA Initiation (jamanetwork.com)
2
Technology is changing how we write – and how we think about writing (nature.com)
1
NVIDIA Launches Earth-2 Family of Open Models and Tools for AI Weather (nvidia.com)
1
Brax open_slate Android/Linux tablet (braxtech.net)
73
Alarm overload is undermining safety at sea as crews face thousands of alerts (lr.org)
2
Divergent creativity in humans and large language models (nature.com)
3
Speculative frenzy catapults silver above $100/oz (reuters.com)
2
California becomes first state to join WHO disease network (thehill.com)
1
Bringing Optical Color to Ultrasound (caltech.edu)
1
The Vic/VolksComputer Series (zimmers.net)
15
Scientists used the same data, but their politics predicted the results (psypost.org)
1
A terminal solution to the browser wars (theregister.com)
4
Space station's ultrasound machine was critical during medical crisis (apnews.com)
1
Us-vs-Them Bias in Large Language Models (arxiv.org)
5
US set to quit World Health Organization (reuters.com)
4
Japan suspends restart of world's biggest nuclear plant (france24.com)
2
Coming Winter Storm to Test Our Fragile Grid (forbes.com/sites/mattrandolph)
1
Brain stimulation device cleared for ADHD in the US is safe but ineffective (kcl.ac.uk)
2
Spain's rail network under scrutiny after second deadly crash in three days (theguardian.com)
1
480k-Year-Old Elephant Bone Tool Is the Oldest Ever Found Outside Africa (iflscience.com)
3
Hemostasis in 1 Second. Boosting Survival Rates for Soldiers (kaist.ac.kr)
2
Meta's new AI team delivered first key models internally this month (reuters.com)
1
Creative talent: has AI knocked humans out? (umontreal.ca)
5
Pentagon moves to cut U.S. participation in some NATO groups (washingtonpost.com)
4
It started with a cat: How 100 years of quantum weirdness powers today's tech (tamu.edu)
1
Mapping comedic timing with a computational framework (phys.org)
3
AI impacting labor market 'like a tsunami' as layoff fears mount (cnbc.com)
1
Netflix Upgrades Warner Bros. Deal to All Cash (variety.com)
2
'Revoice' device gives stroke patients their voice back (cam.ac.uk)
1
Viruses that evolved on the space station are more effective at killing bacteria (livescience.com)
1
What comes after 'seeing is believing' (washingtonpost.com)
1
Why London's Chimney Sweeps Are Enjoying a Resurgence (nytimes.com)
2
Is Sienna Rose AI? All Signs Point to 'Yes' (rollingstone.com)
2
The Missing Semester of Your CS Education (2026) (csail.mit.edu)
2
Hybrid imaging system could address limitations of MRI, CT and ultrasound (medicalxpress.com)
3
Californians have a new privacy tool for deleting their data (apnews.com)
12
Earth from Space: The Fate of a Giant (esa.int)
3
Pebble Brings Open Wearables to Your Wrist (Or Finger) (ieee.org)
1
First-in-human drug trial lowers high blood fats (epfl.ch)
108
European troops arrive in Greenland to boost the Arctic island's security (npr.org)
2
Locust swarms destroy crops – scientists found a way to stop it (asu.edu)
1
A Robot Learns to Lip Sync (columbia.edu)
3
For 21 years, enthusiasts used their home computers to search for ET (news.berkeley.edu)
2
Nitrous oxide for the treatment of depression: a systematic review (thelancet.com)
1
Citigroup set to cut about 1k jobs this week (reuters.com)
3
Pentagon is embracing Grok AI chatbot as it draws global outcry (apnews.com)
2
Aligning Games and Sets in Determining Tennis Matches (nyu.edu)
3
America's AI Boom Is Running into an Unplanned Water Problem (forbes.com/sites/kensilverstein)
12
Trump announces one-year 10% cap on credit card interest rates (theguardian.com)
1
SpaceX gets FCC approval to launch 7,500 more Starlink satellites (techcrunch.com)
1
Evidence of upright walking found in 7M-year-old fossils (phys.org)
4
The world has too much oil – Will companies want Venezuela's? (npr.org)
1
Amazon Has Big Hopes for Wearable AI – Starting with This $50 Gadget (bloomberg.com)
2
NYC to quadruple intersections with red light cameras (gothamist.com)
74
[flagged] Iran vows regime will "not back down" as web blackout continues (cbsnews.com)
4
More than a quarter of adults worldwide could benefit from GLP-1 medications (medicalxpress.com)
9
Stem cell engineering breakthrough paves way for next-generation living drugs (ubc.ca)
5
OpenAI Would Like You to Share Your Health Data with ChatGPT (scientificamerican.com)
2
AI starts autonomously writing prescription refills in Utah (arstechnica.com)
2
Trump Crypto Venture World Liberty Applies for Bank Charter (bloomberg.com)
3
Lego's 'SMART brick' is designed for interactive play without screens (designboom.com)
4
New California law requires a working fridge in all apartments (calmatters.org)
2
Some farmers report as many as 70 tick encounters over a 6-month period (binghamton.edu)
3
One year of congestion pricing in NYC, 27M fewer vehicles, $550M in revenue (6sqft.com)
3
US cuts the number of vaccines recommended for every child (apnews.com)
1
Smartphone Use During School Hours by US Youth (jamanetwork.com)
3
Self-driving cars could prevent over 1M injuries across the US by 2035 (techxplore.com)
1
Artificial Empathy in Therapy and Healthcare (science.org)
6
Trump signals US may expand focus to Cuba (reuters.com)
7
RICO Lawsuit Accuses Drake of Fake Streams (digitalmusicnews.com)
5
California lawmaker wants to ban AI from children's toys (fastcompany.com)
8
Wood-derived safer alternative for thermal receipt paper coatings (phys.org)
3
Stardust study resets how life's atoms spread through space (chalmers.se)
8