40
3
Google rolls out Street View time travel to celebrate 20 years of Google Earth (arstechnica.com)
5
Putin knows we are spreadsheet warriors (unherd.com)
2
Matter vs. Force: Why There Are Two Types of Particles (quantamagazine.org)
2
Strong link between Earth's oxygen level and geomagnetic dipole revealed (science.org)
10
HIV vaccine candidate could offer strong protection with just one dose (news.mit.edu)
1
IBM Tackles New Approach to Quantum Error Correction (ieee.org)
2
A smarter, simpler Firefox address bar (blog.mozilla.org)
1
Startups Boost Light in Phone Cameras (ieee.org)
3
Vital for Bone Health, Vitamin D May Also Slow Aging at the Cellular Level (discovermagazine.com)
2
How the Non-Essential Spleen Could Regenerate Vital Organs Inside the Body (discovermagazine.com)
4
Only one country in the world produces all the food it needs (sciencefocus.com)
3
Lidar Can Permanently Damage Your Phone's Camera (jalopnik.com)
5
Marked decline in semicolons in English books (theguardian.com)
2
The 'Great Hesitation' That's Making It Harder to Get a Tech Job (msn.com)
182
Why does the U.S. always run a trade deficit? (newyorkfed.org)
3
Why we're unlikely to get artificial general intelligence anytime soon (msn.com)
14
It's Not Just a Feeling: Data Shows Boys and Young Men Are Falling Behind (nytimes.com)
2
MIT Says It No Longer Stands Behind Student's AI Research Paper (msn.com)
2
Stress Can Change the Heart's Shape (discovermagazine.com)
1
NASA's Voyager 1 revives backup thrusters that have been inoperable since 2004 (nasa.gov)
1
Dark matter formed when fast particles slowed down and got heavy new theory says (phys.org)
1
Why Do People Tell Sad Stories in YouTube Comments? (cantgetmuchhigher.com)
5
iPhone Shipments Crash 50% in China as Local Brands Dominate (slashdot.org)
3
YouTube introduces an interactive product feed for shoppable TV ads (techcrunch.com)
8
A Simple Spit Test Could Reveal Prostate Cancer, Outperforming a Blood Test (discovermagazine.com)
1
A privately developed Australian rocket is ready for a historic launch (arstechnica.com)
4
What If Your Salary Is Too High for Today's Job Market? (msn.com)
4
Student Loan Delinquencies Are Back and Credit Scores Take a Tumble (newyorkfed.org)
2
Theranos Fraudster's Boyfriend Starts New Blood-Testing Company (thedailybeast.com)
5
More People Use Illicit Fentanyl in the U.S. Than Previously Thought (discovermagazine.com)
12
Linux kernel is leaving 486 CPUs behind, only 18 years after the last one made (arstechnica.com)
1
How Pop Music Became a Sport (cantgetmuchhigher.com)
2
All Major U.S. Cities Are at Risk of Sinking, Not Just Coastal Urban Areas (discovermagazine.com)
6
AI use damages professional reputation, study suggests (arstechnica.com)
3
DoD announces overhaul of 'outdated' software procurement (theregister.com)
2
OpenAI scraps controversial plan to become for-profit after mounting pressure (arstechnica.com)
1
My Visit with My Dead Father's Brain (nautil.us)
63
SpaceX pushed "sniper" theory with the feds (arstechnica.com)
4
Chips aren't improving like they used to, killing game console price cuts (arstechnica.com)
2
KDE Plasma LTS Releases Are Dead (itsfoss.com)
4
Tesla's board reportedly sought a successor while Musk wheeled around Washington (techcrunch.com)
3
NASA's Psyche spacecraft hits a speed bump on the way to a metal asteroid (arstechnica.com)
2
Google Play sees 47% decline in apps since start of last year (techcrunch.com)
3
Getting Nothing Done (bitfieldconsulting.com)
5
AI-generated code could be a disaster for the software supply chain (arstechnica.com)
84
Oracle engineers caused five days software outage at U.S. hospitals (cnbc.com)
1
Asus GeForce GPUs feature built-in gyroscope and accelerometer to detect GPU sag (videocardz.com)
4
Tech Workers Are Just Like the Rest of Us: Miserable at Work (msn.com)
1
Russian satellite linked to nuclear weapon program appears out of control (msn.com)
2
Microsoft kills Windows Maps app (neowin.net)
2
Gauging the Strength of China's Economy in Uncertain Times (newyorkfed.org)
3
Wait, how did a decentralized service like Bluesky go down? (techcrunch.com)
12
Why American Men Think It's Not Worth Going to College Anymore (bloomberg.com)
5
Orcas start wearing dead salmon hats again after ditching the trend for 37 years (livescience.com)
2
Hubble celebrates 35th year in orbit (esahubble.org)
1
Quantum messages travel 254 km using existing infrastructure (phys.org)
21
UN says scam call centers are epidemic and expanding globally (theregister.com)
68
Google won't ditch third-party cookies in Chrome after all (arstechnica.com)
15
Columbia student suspended over interview cheating tool raises $5.3M (techcrunch.com)
42
Viral ChatGPT trend is doing 'reverse location search' from photos (techcrunch.com)
83
I analyzed chord progressions in 680k songs (cantgetmuchhigher.com)
5
Climate change will make rice toxic, say researchers (insideclimatenews.org)
5
Judge rules Google illegally monopolized adtech, opening door to breakup (techcrunch.com)
4
Porting COBOL Code and the Trouble with Ditching Domain Specific Languages (hackaday.com)
80
When College Might Not Be Worth It (newyorkfed.org)
2
Android phones will soon reboot themselves after sitting unused for 3 days (arstechnica.com)
19
China has stopped exporting rare earths to everyone, not just the U.S. (msn.com)
9
CT scans could cause 5% of cancers, study finds (arstechnica.com)
1
To Make Language Models Work Better, Researchers Sidestep Language (quantamagazine.org)
4
Silicon Valley crosswalk buttons hacked to imitate Musk, Zuckerberg's voices (techcrunch.com)
5
How a Secretive Gambler Called 'The Joker' Took Down the Texas Lottery (msn.com)
6
Cofertility's "Freeze your eggs for free by donating half of them" plan (techcrunch.com)
1
Chrome preps fix for browser history spying (theregister.com)
2
'Paraparticles' Would Be a Third Kingdom of Quantum Particle (quantamagazine.org)
4
Facebook Is Just Craigslist Now (theatlantic.com)
1
The Jupiter Ace: 40 years on (2012) (theregister.com)
7
Titanic digital scan reveals new details of ship's final hours (bbc.com)
2
Google fixes two Android zero-day bugs actively exploited by hackers (techcrunch.com)
5
Google is paying some AI staff to do nothing for a year rather than join rivals (techcrunch.com)
4
Intelligence Evolved at Least Twice in Vertebrate Animals (quantamagazine.org)
6
Study shows women can hear better than men (bath.ac.uk)
3
[dupe] Global scam industry evolving at 'unprecedented scale' despite recent crackdown (cnn.com)
2
Why Everything in the Universe Turns More Complex (quantamagazine.org)
4
Cheap TVs' Incessant Advertising Reaches Troubling New Lows (slashdot.org)
1
Mozilla is working on new Thunderbird "Pro" email offerings (techspot.com)
3
Ente wants to take on Google Photos with its privacy-first photo storage service (techcrunch.com)
1
Static Electricity Is Critical to the Formation of Planets (nautil.us)
2
ChatGPT's new image generator is good at faking receipts (techcrunch.com)
4
Microsoft turns 50: Four employees recall their early years (seattletimes.com)
1
Javice found guilty of defrauding JPMorgan in $175M startup purchase (techcrunch.com)
4
Programmer vs. Developer: 1 in 4 programming jobs have vanished (msn.com)
2
The early 2000s capacitor plague was probably not just a stolen recipe (arstechnica.com)
2
Nvidia sells RTX GPUs from a 'food truck' (pcworld.com)
1
Microsoft's Topological Qubit Claims Create Mixed Reactions (ieee.org)
1
Tips for Stellar Technical Presentations (ieee.org)
1
Checking in on the ISA Wars and Its Impact on CPU Architectures (hackaday.com)
23
Ownership of High-Risk ("Vicious") Dogs as a Marker for Deviant Behaviors (researchgate.net)
1
The Matrix film producer files for bankruptcy (bbc.com)
211