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Heart disease is on track to tighten its grip on American women. New projections from the American Heart Association warn that over the next 25 years, cardiovascular disease will rise sharply, driven largely by a surge in high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity. By 2050, nearly 60% of women in the U.S. could have high blood pressure, and close to one in three women ages 22 to 44 may already be living with some form of heart disease.
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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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Lynsi Snyder-Ellingson said her goal is to "preserve and continue" In-N-Out's business and honor her family's legacy, not trade control for growth. Read more ›
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A Windows user’s honest list of macOS features that still feel smarter, smoother, and frustratingly ahead of Windows PCs in 2026. Read more ›
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Lowe's carries more than just the basics. These lesser-known tools offer unique designs and clever solutions you might not expect to find in-store. Read more ›
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Может ли ИИ чему-то научиться, читая промпт? Вот один из примеров того, что сегодня требуется воспринимать ан-масс на почти бытовом уровне.Мы хорошо знаем, что когда ИИ-модель отвечает, она в этот момент не учится, её веса заморожены. Обучение - это отдельная операция, связанная с обратным пересчётом десятков и сотен миллиардов весов, которая потребовала бы непропорционально много ресурсов.Давеча пытал ИИ на тему эффективных стратегий промптинга, т.е., стратегий объяснения ему, чего я от... Read more ›
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As NASA’s Artemis II astronauts journey back to Earth following their breathtaking close encounter with the moon earlier this week, the space agency has just shared some stunning footage (below) of the rocket launch that sent the crew on its way on April 1. The close-up tracking shot shows the awesome power of the Space […] Read more ›
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Google's Gemini is getting a feature called "notebooks" to help you organize things about certain topics in a single place while using the AI chatbot, the company announced on Wednesday. You can pull in things like files, past conversations, and custom instructions into notebooks that Gemini can then use as context while you're talking with […] Read more ›
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Dyson has now entered the handheld fan space. The company just unveiled the HushJet Mini Cool, a 7.5-oz fan with five speeds and a boost mode for airflow up to 55 mph. It comes in three colors: blush pink, available now; red, available in May; and blue, available in June. Dyson's Senior Design Manager Stuart Thompson gave us a walkthrough of the device. Read more ›
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Dyson just announced its first-ever handheld fan, the HushJet Mini Cool. As the name suggests, it uses the company's proprietary HushJet air projection system. This tech first showed up on an air purifier that we found to be exceptionally quiet. Dyson promises the fan can deliver focused airflow of up to 25m/s, which works out to 55mph. The brushless motor spins up to 65,000 RPM. This thing looks like a... Read more ›
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Nearly 17 years after Dyson first announced its Air Multiplier fans - one of its first big consumer products after vacuums - the company has miniaturized their design to create a handheld personal cooler called the HushJet Mini Cool. Like Dyson's larger Air Multipliers, humidifiers, air purifiers, and heaters, the HushJet Mini Cool doesn't have […] Read more ›
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Dyson has announced its first portable handheld fan. The new HushJet Mini Cool is priced at only $99 and launches April 9. Read more ›
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RGB is the next big premium TV tech, right? Well, you'll get a different answer depending on whether you ask LG, Samsung, Sony, TCL or Hisense… Read more ›
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Garmin wearables now offer fertility tracking thanks to a partnership with Natural Cycles. Read more ›
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Stranger Things: Tales from '85 is an animated Netflix spinoff set in winter 1985, bringing back Eleven, Mike, and the gang alongside a new character named Nikki Baxter and a fresh monster called the Snowshark. Read more ›
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The man who spent forty years being emotionally closed off didn't transform because of self-help books—it took his father dying without ever saying "I love you" to make him realize the price of staying the same had become unbearable. Read more ›
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Chinese researchers develop sodium-ion battery design that forms internal heat barrier to stop thermal runaway reactions linked to battery fires. Read more ›
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The Munbyn RealWriter 405b Bluetooth Thermal Label Printer is a surprisingly simple-to-use, handy, and entertaining piece of hardware. Read more ›
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Tractive announces two new smart collars armed with GPS tracking, AI-powered health monitoring and other tech tools. Read more ›
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High in a South American rainforest canopy, scientists have discovered a bizarre new termite species that looks strikingly like a miniature sperm whale. Named Cryptotermes mobydicki, this tiny insect has an elongated head and concealed mandibles that give it an uncanny resemblance to the iconic marine giant. Researchers were so surprised by its unusual appearance that they initially thought it belonged to an entirely new genus. Read more ›
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Colorectal cancer may carry a unique microbial “fingerprint,” setting it apart from other cancers and opening a new frontier in diagnosis and treatment. By analyzing DNA from over 9,000 patients, researchers discovered that only colorectal tumors consistently host distinct microbial communities—challenging the long-held belief that all cancers have their own microbial signatures. Read more ›
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A deadly parasite responsible for sleeping sickness has been found using a surprisingly precise trick to stay hidden in the human bloodstream. Scientists discovered a protein called ESB2 that acts like a “molecular shredder,” cutting up specific genetic instructions as they are produced. This allows the parasite to flood its surface with protective proteins while suppressing other signals that might give it away. Read more ›
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A new era of lunar exploration has begun as NASA launches four astronauts on Artemis II—the first crewed mission to fly around the Moon in over 50 years. Riding aboard the powerful SLS rocket, the Orion spacecraft is now on a 10-day journey that will test critical systems, push human spaceflight farther than it’s gone in decades, and set the stage for future Moon landings and eventual missions to Mars. Read more ›
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Fusion scientists have solved a long-standing mystery inside tokamaks, the donut-shaped machines designed to harness fusion energy. For years, experiments showed that escaping plasma particles hit one side of the exhaust system far more than the other, but simulations couldn’t explain why. Now, researchers have discovered that the rotation of the plasma itself plays a crucial role—working together with sideways particle drift to create the imbalance. Read more ›
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A mysterious Greek inscription found beneath the Great Mosque of Homs could pinpoint the long-debated location of an ancient sun temple. Scholars now think the mosque sits atop a sacred site that transitioned from pagan worship to Christianity and then Islam. The find supports the idea that religious change in the region happened gradually, with overlapping beliefs rather than sudden shifts. It also reconnects the site to the powerful cult... Read more ›
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Hara hachi bu, a traditional Japanese practice of eating until you’re about 80% full, is gaining attention as a simple yet powerful way to improve health and reshape our relationship with food. Rather than promoting strict dieting, it encourages slowing down, tuning into hunger cues, and eating with awareness and gratitude. Research suggests it may help reduce calorie intake, support healthier food choices, and prevent long-term weight gain. Read more ›
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More than 12,000 years ago, Native American hunter-gatherers were already making and using dice—thousands of years before similar tools appeared elsewhere. These bone “binary lots” acted like primitive coins, producing random outcomes for games of chance. A new study shows these weren’t accidental objects but carefully designed tools used across many regions and cultures. Read more ›
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Hundreds of millions of years ago, Earth’s magnetic field behaved in a way that has long baffled scientists, showing wild and seemingly chaotic shifts unlike anything seen before or since. A new study suggests this chaos may actually hide a deeper pattern: instead of random fluctuations, the magnetic field may have followed a global, organized structure. Read more ›
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Scientists have taken a major step toward protecting the very cells that make sharp, colorful vision possible. By testing more than 2,700 compounds in thousands of lab-grown human retinal models, researchers uncovered several molecules that can shield cone photoreceptors—the cells responsible for reading, recognizing faces, and seeing color—from degeneration. They also identified a key protective mechanism involving casein kinase 1, offering a promising new target for treatment. Read more ›
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08.04.2026 21:32
Last update: 21:16 EDT.
News rating updated: 04:20.
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