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A sweeping new review of ADHD treatments—drawing on more than 200 meta-analyses—cuts through years of mixed messaging and hype. To make sense of it all, researchers have launched an interactive, public website that lets people with ADHD and clinicians explore what actually works, helping them make clearer, evidence-based decisions—while also highlighting a major gap: most solid evidence only covers short-term effects, even though long-term treatment is common.
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Palestinian journalist Plestia Alaqad on bearing witness, the fragile power of social media, and why documenting lived reality matters more than ever. Read more ›
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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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The National Tax Service said it had intended to provide a vivid shot of the seizure by sharing a photo. Read more ›
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NVIDIA's $5.5 billion China chip sale exploited the predictable gap between Washington's policy announcements and enforcement. The timing reveals how corporations don't resist regulation — they learn its rhythm and move faster. Read more ›
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I've been working out with my elderly mom for over 30 years, and watching her approach to exercise has changed how I view fitness and aging. Read more ›
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Agentic finance firm becomes 19th largest public Bitcoin holder as BRR rises 2%. Read more ›
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The PlayStation Pulse Explore earbuds are brilliant for PS5 and PlayStation Portal, and at this discounted rate we're highlighting today, superb value for money. Read more ›
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Pokémon has always excelled at the strange spin-off. This isn't to say they're always good (looking at you PokéPark games), but they're always guaranteed to make you think, 'What? Really?' From watching TV with Pikachu, a Nobunaga's Ambition crossover, and Pokémon Project Studio (which I'm sure we all hold dear to our hearts), I do feel like I should be immune to Pokémon spin-off bizarreness by now. And yet, the... Read more ›
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It's finally happening: Windows 11 appears to be shoving Windows 10 firmly aside. Read more ›
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Pokémon Pokopia has broadly remained a mystery since its first announcement, with little given away about its gameplay mechanics and storyline; I’ve spent two weeks playing, and it’s a surprise worth waiting for. Read more ›
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Now that Netflix has backed out of trying to get Warner Bros., Sarandos looks back on his failed deal and what's next. Read more ›
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Nintendo has a history of fleshing out the larger Pokémon world through spinoffs. What games from the Pokémon Snap and Detective Pikachu series lacked in terms of action, they made up for in the way they made pokémon feel like creatures with rich lives outside of their relationships with trainers. And as the mainline series […] Read more ›
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A Corefy study finds 58.5% of firms still use disconnected payment systems, with operational maturity lagging rising payment complexity despite less manual handling. Read more ›
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cargo.one, a Berlin-based AI technology provider for logistics, today announced the acquisition of Lisbon’s ocean rate platform Cargofive – complemented by a near €17 million ($20 million) investment round. The round saw participation from investors including Bessemer Venture Partners. Today also sees the launch of an AI-native OS for multimodal freight. The platform unifies air ... Read more ›
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Есть старая шутка (говорят, что с 1874г.): «Половина моего рекламного бюджета тратится впустую. Проблема в том, что я не знаю, какая именно половина».Performance-маркетинг — это когда вы точно знаете, какая половина работает. И перестаёте тратить на вторую.В этой статье попробую объяснить всё максимально просто и понятно. Читать далее Read more ›
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Internally at Apple, the rumored low-end MacBook is being described as "incredible value," so much so that the company believes its imminent launch is going to drive a serious number of switchers from Windows machines and Chromebooks, reports Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Writing in his Power On newsletter over the weekend, Gurman says that Apple believes the device "could even compel iPhone users without computers to buy their first Mac." We... Read more ›
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Helsinki-based Tangled has raised $4.5 million to position itself as a European, open-source alternative to GitHub. The funding round was led by byFounders, the community-powered VC firm, with participation from Bain Capital Crypto and existing investor Antler. Notable angel investors also joined the round, including Thomas Dohmke, the former CEO of GitHub, Avery Pennarun, CEO […] Read more ›
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Modern cars have swapped regular keys for key fobs, and most of them use a CR2032 button cell battery. How can you tell if it's weak? How long do they last? Read more ›
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Scientists at Stanford Medicine have unveiled a bold new kind of “universal” vaccine that could one day protect against everything from COVID-19 and the flu to bacterial pneumonia and even common allergens. Instead of targeting a specific virus or bacterium, the nasal spray vaccine supercharges the lungs’ own immune defenses, keeping them on high alert for months. In mice, it slashed viral levels, prevented severe illness, and even blocked allergic... Read more ›
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A century after Erwin Schrödinger sketched out a bold vision for how we perceive color, scientists have finally filled in the missing pieces. A Los Alamos team used advanced geometry to show that hue, saturation, and lightness aren’t shaped by culture or experience — they’re built directly into the mathematical structure of how we see color. By defining a crucial missing element known as the “neutral axis,” the researchers repaired... Read more ›
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Far beneath the Atlantic Ocean, about 1,000 kilometers off Portugal’s coast, lies a colossal underwater canyon system that dwarfs even the Grand Canyon. Known as the King’s Trough Complex, this 500-kilometer stretch of trenches and deep basins formed not from rushing water, but from dramatic tectonic forces that once tore the seafloor apart. Read more ›
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People whose sugar intake was restricted before birth and in early childhood had markedly lower rates of heart disease later in life. Compared to those never exposed to rationing, their risks of heart attack, stroke, heart failure, and cardiovascular death were cut by roughly 20–30%. Read more ›
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A UCLA study in mice reveals that aging muscle stem cells accumulate a protein that slows repair but boosts survival. This protein, NDRG1, acts like a brake, preventing cells from activating quickly after injury. When researchers blocked it in older mice, muscle healing sped up dramatically — but stem cells became less resilient over time. The work suggests aging may reflect a survival trade-off rather than straightforward decline. Read more ›
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Training harder may do more than build muscle—it could transform your gut. Researchers found that intense workouts change the balance of bacteria and important compounds in athletes’ digestive systems. When training loads dropped, diet quality slipped and digestion slowed, triggering different microbial shifts. These hidden changes might influence performance in ways scientists are only beginning to understand. Read more ›
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A new 30-year analysis reveals that melting land ice is now the main force behind rising global sea levels. Researchers discovered that oceans rose about 90 millimeters since 1993, with most of the increase coming from added water mass rather than just warming expansion. Ice loss from Greenland and mountain glaciers accounts for the vast majority of this gain. Even more concerning, the rate of sea-level rise is accelerating. Read more ›
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A sweeping nationwide study has found that U.S. counties located closer to operating nuclear power plants have higher cancer death rates than those farther away. Researchers analyzed data from every nuclear facility and all U.S. counties between 2000 and 2018, adjusting for income, education, smoking, obesity, environmental conditions, and access to health care. Even after accounting for those factors, cancer mortality was higher in communities nearer to nuclear plants, particularly... Read more ›
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CU Boulder researchers have designed microscopic “racetracks” that trap and amplify light with exceptional efficiency. By using smooth curves inspired by highway engineering, they reduced energy loss and kept light circulating longer inside the device. Fabricated with sub-nanometer precision, the resonators rank among the top performers made from chalcogenide glass. The technology could lead to compact sensors, microlasers, and advanced quantum systems. Read more ›
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Researchers are engineering bacteria to invade tumors and consume them from the inside. Because tumor cores lack oxygen, they’re the perfect breeding ground for these microbes. The team added a genetic tweak that helps the bacteria survive longer near oxygen-exposed edges — but only once enough of them are present to trigger the change. It’s a carefully programmed biological attack that could one day offer a new way to destroy... Read more ›
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02.03.2026 08:14
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