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Scientists at Tufts have found a way to turn common glucose into a rare sugar that tastes almost exactly like table sugar—but with far fewer downsides. Using engineered bacteria as microscopic factories, the team can now produce tagatose efficiently and cheaply, achieving yields far higher than current methods. Tagatose delivers nearly the same sweetness as sugar with significantly fewer calories, minimal impact on blood sugar, and even potential benefits for oral and gut health.
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An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more ›
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A PG&E Corp. unit has bought a San Jose building in a move to bolster the utility's South Bay operations. Read more ›
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YouTube creator ScuffedBits re-did their experiment and was able to eke out 30 minutes of game time (and a benchmarking session!) while running their desktop PC on 64 AA batteries. Read more ›
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JetBlue opened its first luxury lounge at JFK International Airport last year. As a lounge rookie, I knew this was my chance to elevate my experience. Read more ›
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If extraction shooters are games in which you duck out of the fray between matches to look at what you just collected, I guess I'm almost playing Marathon the right way. I struggle to keep up with a team, let alone support other players in any meaningful manner, and I'm truly useless in most gunfights. But when the game is over I'm still eagerly checking through my winnings. Read more Read more ›
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The calls started coming after midnight — not emergencies, just adult children "checking in" — and that's when these men realized the world had quietly reassigned their roles without sending a memo. Read more ›
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All the ways to watch Ireland vs Scotland live streams online – including for FREE – as both sides can still win the Six Nations 2026, plus the Triple Crown. Read more ›
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Do you really need a $300 trail running shoe? We test the treads, and the creds, of the Norda 001A G+. Read more ›
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There are many bad Android stereotypes, and Samsung isn't helping by shipping such a bad keyboard to millions of users. Read more ›
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A tech enthusiast has shared their DVD rewritable durability findings, following six months of testing. Read more ›
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Привет! Меня зовут Денис, я 3D-художник и Linux-энтузиаст. Более 8 лет Arch Linux является моей основной и единственной операционной системой. Сегодня хочу рассказать об установке Arch Linux на ZFS.Почему ZFS? Однажды я решил собрать stripe (RAID0) на ноутбуке с двумя дисками. Хотелось сохранить привычную структуру директорий и не думать о том, на каком диске что лежит. На тот момент я уже использовал ZFS на файловом сервере, а на ноутбуках -... Read more ›
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Chine Mmegwa's experience at Match Group reflects a broader trend in Corporate America, as companies cut down on middle managers. Read more ›
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After their kids left home, a couple took the opportunity to sell their home and build a tiny home. It helps them feel financially secure. Read more ›
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Spark plugs are a key component of your gasoline engine, and they have a key role in the ignition process. How long can you expect them to last? Read more ›
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Ukraine has sent drone interceptors and training crews to the U.S. and its Gulf State allies as the Iran War rumbles on. Read more ›
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Я написал CLAUDE.md на 200 строк. Исследование ETH Zurich на 138 репозиториях говорит: мой агент стал от этого тупее на 3%, а я плачу на 20% больше за токены. Разбираюсь, что пошло не так. Читать далее Read more ›
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Strict parenting often wasn't about distrust — it was the only language of love available to people who grew up in worlds that punished mistakes permanently. Recognising that creates a particular kind of grief that's harder to process than simple resentment. Read more ›
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The gigs at the Yellowstone Club offer an opportunity to get inside an exclusive club, whose members include billionaires and celebrities. Read more ›
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The unique flat-bottom design of the Kalita Wave makes brewing exceptional coffee dead simple—especially if you can’t summon the rigor required to make perfect pour-over. Read more ›
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Researchers in Sweden have engineered a cell-free cartilage scaffold that can guide the body to rebuild damaged bone. By removing the cells but preserving the structure and natural growth signals, the material acts as a blueprint for the body’s own repair process. In animal studies, it helped regenerate bone without triggering strong immune reactions. The team now plans to scale up production and begin testing the approach in humans. Read more ›
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Mayo Clinic researchers have identified a rare mutation in the MET gene that can directly cause metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. The mutation disrupts the liver’s ability to process fat, leading to inflammation, scarring, and potentially cirrhosis. The discovery began with a father and daughter who had the disease without typical risk factors. Large-scale genomic data suggests similar rare variants may quietly contribute to the disease in many more people. Read more ›
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Scientists studying 1,300 golden retrievers have uncovered genetic clues explaining why some dogs are more anxious, energetic, or aggressive than others. Remarkably, several of the same genes linked to canine behavior are also tied to human traits like anxiety, depression, and intelligence. The discovery suggests dogs and humans share biological roots for emotions and behavior. Understanding these links could help owners better interpret their pets’ reactions and even improve training... Read more ›
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Solid-state batteries could be safer and more energy-dense than today’s lithium-ion technology, but finding materials that allow ions to move quickly through solid electrolytes has been difficult. Researchers developed a machine learning pipeline that predicts Raman spectra and identifies a distinctive low-frequency signal linked to liquid-like ion motion inside crystals. This signal appears when rapid ion movement temporarily disrupts a crystal’s symmetry. The approach could dramatically speed up the disco Read more ›
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New research suggests seabird guano helped transform the Chincha Kingdom into one of the most prosperous societies in ancient Peru. Chemical clues in centuries-old maize show farmers fertilized their crops with guano gathered from nearby islands, dramatically boosting yields in the desert landscape. The resulting agricultural surplus fueled trade, population growth, and regional influence. Read more ›
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Researchers have uncovered a surprising molecular chain reaction in the brain that may play a role in some forms of autism. The study suggests that nitric oxide, a tiny signaling molecule normally involved in fine-tuning communication between brain cells, can sometimes trigger a cascade of changes inside neurons. When nitric oxide activity rises, it can alter a protective protein called TSC2, weakening an important cellular brake and allowing the mTOR... Read more ›
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A sweeping new study from Northwestern University reveals that scientific fraud is no longer just the work of a few rogue researchers—it has evolved into a global, organized enterprise. By analyzing massive datasets of publications, retractions, and editorial records, researchers uncovered networks involving “paper mills,” brokers, and compromised journals that systematically produce and sell fake research, authorship slots, and citations. Read more ›
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Scrolling on your phone while sitting on the toilet might be doing more harm than you think. A new study found that people who use smartphones during bathroom visits had a 46% higher risk of hemorrhoids compared to those who don’t. Researchers discovered that phone users tend to spend significantly longer on the toilet, often getting distracted by news or social media, which may increase pressure on anal tissues. Read more ›
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Asteroids with tiny moons may be quietly trading material across space. Images from NASA’s DART mission revealed faint streaks on the moon Dimorphos—evidence of slow “cosmic snowballs” drifting from its parent asteroid, Didymos. The discovery provides the first direct visual proof that sunlight can spin asteroids fast enough to shed debris that lands on nearby companions. It also shows that near-Earth asteroids are much more active and constantly reshaped than... Read more ›
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Physicists have discovered a surprising new “Island of Inversion” in a place no one expected: among nuclei where the number of protons equals the number of neutrons. For decades, these strange regions—where atomic nuclei abandon their usual orderly structure and become strongly deformed—were thought to exist only in highly neutron-rich isotopes far from stability. But experiments on molybdenum isotopes revealed that molybdenum-84 behaves dramatically differently from its close neighbor molybdenum-86,... Read more ›
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14.03.2026 06:36
Last update: 06:30 EDT.
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