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Scientists at Texas A&M are turning an everyday pick-me-up into a high-tech medical switch. By combining caffeine with CRISPR gene editing, researchers have created a system that allows cells to be programmed in advance — and then activated simply by consuming a small dose of caffeine from coffee, chocolate, or soda. The approach, known as chemogenetics, lets scientists precisely turn gene-editing activity on and off inside targeted cells, including powerful immune T cells that can fight cancer.
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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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На старте у клиента уже были дашборды, но они не закрывали текущие задачи бизнеса. Данные находились в разных системах — 1С, Excel, Google Таблицы, XML-выгрузки и внутренняя система. Клиент принял решение выстроить аналитику заново и выбрал Apache Superset как инструмент визуализации. Сначала собрали единый слой в PostgreSQL, настроили загрузку через Python, привели метрики к одной логике и зафиксировали правила расчётов.После этого уже собрали дашборды под управленческие задачи клиента. Визуализация строил Read more ›
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На старте у клиента уже были дашборды, но они не закрывали текущие задачи бизнеса. Данные находились в разных системах — 1С, Excel, Google Таблицы, XML-выгрузки и внутренняя система. Клиент принял решение выстроить аналитику заново и выбрал Apache Superset как инструмент визуализации. Сначала собрали единый слой в PostgreSQL, настроили загрузку через Python, привели метрики к одной логике и зафиксировали правила расчётов.После этого уже собрали дашборды под управленческие задачи клиента. Визуализация строил Read more ›
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Looks like Samsung is preparing a broader rollout of Gemini-powered Scam Detection across its upcoming foldables. Read more ›
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The partnership will help the exchange meet Vietnam's $380 million capital requirement to enter a government pilot program aimed at licensing local platforms and curbing offshore trading. Read more ›
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Ola Electric On Recovery Path Ola Electric appears to be on its redemption arc. After months of sliding market share… Read more ›
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Meeting with US Treasury secretary comes as latest AI system has detected decades-old vulnerabilities Read more ›
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Два одинаковых товара, одинаковая цена, одинаковая позиция в выдаче. Но у одного сниппета – звёздочки рейтинга, цена, статус «В наличии», а у другого – голый title и серый текст. Кликают на первый. Всегда.Разница между ними – структурированные данные (machine-readable описание контента страницы по стандарту Schema.org). И если Вы разработчик, который отвечает за e-commerce проект, эта разница – Ваша прямая зона ответственности.Я Пётр Гришечкин, эксперт в области SEO. Последние 15 лет... Read more ›
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Mythos can rapidly spot software flaws and craft sophisticated exploits, raising fears of systemic risks in the banking system. Read more ›
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The New York Times' latest game, Pips, brings domino fun to your desktop. How to play Pips as well as hints in case you get stuck. Read more ›
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Here's the answer for "Wordle" #1756 on April 10 as well as a few hints, tips, and clues to help you solve it yourself. Read more ›
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Connections is a New York Times word game that's all about finding the "common threads between words." How to solve the puzzle. Read more ›
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Abound partners with NEAR AI to build an AI Financial Autopilot for NRIs, automating and managing cross-border finances. Read more ›
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The NYT Strands hints and answers you need to make the most of your puzzling experience. Read more ›
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Hints and answers to today's Hurdle all in one place. Read more ›
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Peter Hoeschele, an OpenAI executive who helped launch the firm’s Stargate data center initiative, has left the startup, according to a person with direct knowledge. Hoeschele was on the original OpenAI Stargate team, which intended to help OpenAI build and operate its own data centers. However, ... Read more ›
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TechRadar’s international team of experts were split on the thin and light iPhone Air, but we can all agree it’s the better buy when it’s cheaper than the 256GB iPhone 17. Read more ›
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From a futuristic idea to crafting narratives now, AI has come a long way in a very short span of… Read more ›
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A new study reveals that aging lungs may play a major role in why flu and COVID can become so dangerous for older adults. Researchers found that certain lung cells can trigger an exaggerated immune response, creating clusters of inflammatory cells that end up damaging lung tissue instead of protecting it. In experiments, activating this aging-related signal in young mice caused their lungs to behave like older ones, leading to... Read more ›
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A new study suggests that one of the most widely used health metrics, BMI, may be getting it wrong for a large portion of the population. By comparing BMI classifications with precise body fat measurements using advanced DXA scans, researchers found that more than one-third of adults were placed in incorrect weight categories. Many people labeled as overweight or obese did not actually have the corresponding body fat levels, while... Read more ›
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A new concept suggests SpaceX’s Starship could revolutionize a future mission to Uranus, one of the solar system’s most overlooked planets. By refueling in orbit and helping slow the spacecraft on arrival, it could cut travel time nearly in half. That’s a big deal for a mission that would otherwise take over a decade just to arrive. If it works, it could finally open the door to studying this strange,... Read more ›
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A puzzling wrinkled rock formation in Morocco has led scientists to rethink where ancient microbes could live. Instead of shallow, sunlit waters, these microbes may have thrived deep in the ocean, fueled by chemicals delivered by underwater landslides. The discovery suggests that dark, nutrient-rich environments hosted thriving ecosystems much earlier than expected. It also raises the possibility that many similar fossils have been overlooked or misinterpreted. Read more ›
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A newly identified gene mutation may help explain why schizophrenia patients struggle to update their understanding of reality. The mutation disrupts a brain circuit involved in flexible decision-making, causing mice to stick with outdated choices even when conditions change. Researchers pinpointed the issue to a key thalamus–prefrontal cortex pathway. By reactivating this circuit, they were able to restore normal behavior—raising hope for future therapies. Read more ›
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Thousands of years ago in a cave on Hispaniola, an unusual chain of events left behind a rare scientific treasure: bees nesting inside fossilized bones. After giant barn owls repeatedly brought prey like hutias into the cave, their remains accumulated in silt-rich chambers—creating a strange underground environment. Later, burrowing bees took advantage of the soft sediment and even reused tiny cavities in fossilized jaws and bones as ready-made nests, coating... Read more ›
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A new gene therapy is giving people born deaf the chance to hear, often within just weeks. In a small but groundbreaking study, researchers delivered a working copy of a key hearing gene directly into the inner ear using a single injection. All ten patients, ranging from young children to adults, experienced improved hearing, with some showing rapid gains in just one month. Read more ›
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A new clinical trial suggests that what people eat could finally offer real relief for Crohn’s disease, a condition that has long lacked clear dietary guidance. Researchers found that a “fasting-mimicking diet” — involving just five days a month of very low-calorie, plant-based meals — led to noticeable improvements in symptoms for most participants. Even more striking, the diet didn’t just make patients feel better; it also reduced key biological... Read more ›
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What started as routine fossil cleaning turned into a major scientific surprise when researchers uncovered a tiny claw in a 500-million-year-old specimen where no claw should exist. That detail revealed Megachelicerax cousteaui, the oldest known relative of spiders, pushing the origins of this group back by 20 million years. The fossil shows that key features of modern spiders and horseshoe crabs were already emerging during the Cambrian Explosion. Read more ›
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Saturn’s magnetic field isn’t the smooth, symmetrical shield scientists see around Earth. Instead, it’s noticeably skewed, and researchers now think they understand why. By analyzing years of data from the Cassini spacecraft, scientists found that a key region where solar particles enter Saturn’s atmosphere is consistently shifted to one side. This distortion appears to be driven by the planet’s rapid spin combined with a thick cloud of charged particles coming... Read more ›
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09.04.2026 23:28
Last update: 23:10 EDT.
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