16 place 50 fresh
Scientists are digging into why heart disease risk in type 2 diabetes differs between men and women—and sex hormones may be part of the story. In a large Johns Hopkins study, men with higher testosterone had lower heart disease risk, while rising estradiol levels were linked to higher risk. These hormone effects were not seen in women. The results point toward more personalized approaches to heart disease prevention in diabetes.
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Four women have taken the stand to accuse the wealthy Alexander brothers of rape. Here are their stories —and what defense lawyers say in response. Read more ›
1,085 fresh
New data shows AI bots pushing deeper into the web, prompting publishers to roll out more aggressive defenses. Read more ›
1,058 fresh
Western Digital to give large customers a tool to manage storage fleets of 200+ PB consisting of SSDs, HAMR HDDs, and UltraSMR drives. Read more ›
418 fresh
Susan Freeman, 72, put her career on hold to care for her aging mother. She now works four days a week at her sister's store to pay the bills. Read more ›
367 fresh
Wang said on LinkedIn that the strategy he ran for Sequoia averaged more than 17% a year for over a decade. Read more ›
354 fresh
It's shaping up to be a banner year for Airbnb hosts near sports stadiums in World Cup cities. But not every homeowner will come out a winner. Read more ›
326 fresh
The Pixel 9a is an incredible phone, but waiting for the Pixel 10a is the right call. Read more ›
294 fresh
Samsung's next flagship earbuds ditch subtlety, embrace stems, and spark AirPods déjà vu, raising questions about originality, positioning, and whether design copying is industry standard. Read more ›
258 fresh
"I really didn't think I could lose weight anymore, being in midlife and perimenopause and all those things," Melissa Joan Hart said. Read more ›
250 fresh
Despite expectations for some IPO and venture activity in 2026, fewer investors feel as confident as they did last year, according to the latest CfC St. Moritz report. Read more ›
227 fresh
Media and analytics businesses have fallen sharply following release of new Anthropic tools Read more ›
214 fresh
The Nevada Gaming Control Board (NGCB) has filed a civil enforcement action against cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase to restrict what the… Continue reading Nevada Gaming Control Board files civil enforcement action against Coinbase Read more ›
192 fresh
Corsair's Galleon 100 SD is a premium gaming keyboard with a built-in Stream Deck. We like the way it feels, but is it worth $350? Read more ›
192 fresh
It will be more widely available than other special edition foldables from Samsung. Read more ›
187 fresh
Nvidia has narrowed how certain 'Top 5 Things' emails are shared, a system long used to give CEO Jensen Huang insight into daily operations. Read more ›
174 fresh
A group of researchers has built an AI-powered system that uses five agents to monitor 3D printers and correct for errors after each printed layer. Read more ›
166 fresh
Helsinki-based Optivian has raised $2 million in a pre-seed round led by Failup Ventures and Tero Ojanperä, the former Silo AI co-founder whose company exited to AMD in Europe’s largest AI acquisition. The startup is building an AI Sales Execution platform that goes beyond analytics to autonomously handle the execution-heavy work of complex B2B deals, […] Read more ›
152 fresh
Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos was launched into the middle of a congressional culture war on Tuesday as he testified before a Senate subcommittee about the company's attempt to buy a large part of Warner Bros Discovery. The hearing before the Senate Judiciary antitrust subcommittee highlighted an array of traditional merger concerns on both sides of […] Read more ›
147
French judicial authorities have launched a broad investigation into X, the social media platform owned by Elon Musk, and have recently taken more assertive legal steps as part of the case. The inquiry focuses on whether the platform and some of its executives may have breached French law through a range of alleged offenses linked to the platform’s operations. As part of the investigation, French police carried out searches on... Read more ›
121 fresh
Researchers have discovered a hidden quantum geometry inside materials that subtly steers electrons, echoing how gravity warps light in space. Once thought to exist only on paper, this effect has now been observed experimentally in a popular quantum material. The finding reveals a new way to understand and control how materials conduct electricity and interact with light. It could help power future ultra-fast electronics and quantum technologies. Read more ›
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Where your body stores fat may matter just as much as how much you carry—especially for your brain. Using advanced MRI scans and data from nearly 26,000 people, researchers identified two surprising fat patterns tied to faster brain aging, cognitive decline, and higher neurological disease risk. One involves unusually high fat buildup in the pancreas, even without much liver fat, while the other—often called “skinny fat”—affects people who don’t appear... Read more ›
74
Even in some of the most isolated corners of the Pacific, plastic pollution has quietly worked its way into the food web. A large analysis of fish caught around Fiji, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu found that roughly one in three contained microplastics, with Fiji standing out for especially high contamination. Reef and bottom-dwelling fish were most affected, linking exposure to where fish live and how they feed. Read more ›
60
A new light-based breakthrough could help quantum computers finally scale up. Stanford researchers created miniature optical cavities that efficiently collect light from individual atoms, allowing many qubits to be read at once. The team has already demonstrated working arrays with dozens and even hundreds of cavities. The approach could eventually support massive quantum networks with millions of qubits. Read more ›
57
Scientists studying ancient ocean fossils found that the Arabian Sea was better oxygenated 16 million years ago, even though the planet was warmer than today. Oxygen levels only plunged millions of years later, after the climate cooled, defying expectations. Powerful monsoons and ocean circulation appear to have delayed oxygen loss in this region compared to the Pacific. The discovery suggests future ocean oxygen levels may not follow a simple warming-equals-deoxygenation... Read more ›
51
Middle age is becoming a tougher chapter for many Americans, especially those born in the 1960s and early 1970s. Compared with earlier generations, they report more loneliness and depression, along with weaker physical strength and declining memory. These troubling trends stand out internationally, as similar declines are largely absent in other wealthy nations, particularly in Nordic Europe, where midlife well-being has improved. Read more ›
41
Two decades after a breast cancer vaccine trial, every participant is still alive—an astonishing result for metastatic disease. Scientists found their immune systems retained long-lasting memory cells primed to recognize cancer. By enhancing a key immune signal called CD27, researchers dramatically improved tumor elimination in lab studies. The findings suggest cancer vaccines may have been missing a crucial ingredient all along. Read more ›
36
Statins are a cornerstone of heart health, but muscle pain and weakness cause many patients to quit taking them. Scientists have now identified the precise molecular trigger behind these side effects. They found that statins jam open a critical muscle protein, causing a toxic calcium leak. The discovery could lead to safer statins that keep their life-saving benefits without the muscle damage. Read more ›
33
A new brain imaging study reveals that remembering facts and recalling life events activate nearly identical brain networks. Researchers expected clear differences but instead found strong overlap across memory types. The finding challenges decades of memory research. It may also help scientists better understand conditions like Alzheimer’s and dementia. Read more ›
33
Scientists at Mount Sinai have unveiled a bold new way to fight metastatic cancer by turning the tumor’s own defenses against it. Instead of attacking cancer cells head-on, the experimental immunotherapy targets macrophages—immune cells that tumors hijack to shield themselves from attack. By eliminating or reprogramming these “bodyguards,” the treatment cracks open the tumor’s protective barrier and allows the immune system to flood in and destroy the cancer. Read more ›
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04.02.2026 07:12
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