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Icy moons circling the outer planets may be far more dynamic—and explosive—than they appear. New research suggests that when heat from tidal forces melts their ice shells from below, the sudden drop in pressure could cause hidden oceans to boil beneath the surface. On smaller moons like Enceladus, Mimas, and Miranda, this process may help explain strange features such as Enceladus’ tiger stripes and Miranda’s towering cliffs.
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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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In his first interview since abandoning the pursuit, Ted Sarandos said the decision to drop out had actually been made earlier, based on various bidding scenarios Netflix had worked out in advance. Read more ›
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The blockchain analytics firm said flows from Iran’s largest exchange spiked immediately after U.S.-Israeli strikes on Tehran, pointing to possible capital flight. Read more ›
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The British Computer Society (BCS) has appointed two new directors to join the leadership team of the Chartered Institute for IT. Harpreet Panesar is set to join the group as its director of membership and volunteer engagement, while Adam Thompson has been named as its new director of digital. Both of the new hires join ... Read more ›
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Building on the iPhone 16e from 2025, Apple's latest iPhone has a few noteworthy upgrades with the same $599 price. Read more ›
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Apple today announced the iPhone 17e, featuring the A19 chip, MagSafe connectivity, and more. The iPhone 17e contains the A19 chip from the iPhone 17. It also contains Apple's latest-generation C1X modem from the iPhone Air, delivery up to 2x faster cellular performance than the iPhone 16e. The front of the device now features Ceramic Shield 2, offering 3x better scratch resistance than the previous generation. The iPhone 17e starts... Read more ›
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Apple today introduced a new iPad Air, with key upgrades including the M4 chip, an increased 12GB of RAM, an N1 chip for Wi-Fi 7, and a C1X cellular modem. The new iPad Air can be pre-ordered on Apple.com and in the Apple Store app starting Wednesday, March 4, with availability set to begin Wednesday, March 11. In the U.S., pricing continues to start at $599 for the 11-inch model,... Read more ›
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Привет, Хабр! Мы — Настя, Эвелина и Михаил — бэкенд-разработчики Т-Банка, пишем код на Scala и горим желанием его популяризировать. Приветствуем любую обратную связь! (づ ◕‿◕ )づ Читать тридцать восьмой Read more ›
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Apple has just announced the addition of the iPhone 17e to its smartphone lineup. This model is kitted with the A19 chip that also powers the base iPhone 17 and it will support the Apple Intelligence suite of AI tools. As the rumors suggested, the iPhone 17e will indeed be priced at $599, same as last year’s iPhone 16e. That previous model was missing a few elements that are now... Read more ›
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Apple has announced the iPhone 17e, its new entry-level iPhone. Here's what's new and how it compares to its iPhone 16e predecessor. Read more ›
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Apple has taken the wraps off the iPhone 17E, its latest entry-level smartphone. The iPhone 17E starts at $599 for 256GB of storage, and is available in black, white, and pink. The company revealed the new device as part of a series of announcements that kicked off this week. The iPhone 17E is like a […] Read more ›
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Но не в самом приложении Max – речь пойдёт о продукте стороннего разработчика внутри мессенджера, который почему-то не хочет исправлять очевидную и крайне серьезную ошибку своего сервиса. Читать далее Read more ›
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A once-prominent New York City real estate developer has admitted in federal court that he cheated investors who trusted him… Continue reading Former New York real estate developer Joshua Schuster admits investor fraud and gambling losses scheme Read more ›
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In January, when Apple announced an agreement to use Google’s Gemini models in Apple products, it was an admission that the iPhone maker hasn’t been able to compete in AI on its own over the past couple years. But the deal also showed that Apple is again relying on an outside company to help it with another deficiency: in cloud computing. Now there’s a chance Apple could deepen its cloud... Read more ›
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Chinese AI developer MiniMax said Tuesday that its revenue more than doubled to $79 million last year, from about $30 million in 2024, driven by the growth of its Hailuo AI video generation app and other products. In its first earnings announcement since its initial public offering in January, ... Read more ›
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We're one episode into Marshals: A Yellowstone Story, and it's safe to say the new CBS and Paramount+ show isn't getting the expected reaction. Read more ›
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With enough electric range to handle daily driving and a gas engine for reassurance, Kia's Sportage makes a great case for plug-in hybrids. 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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A newly identified ichthyosaur from the UK’s Jurassic Coast is rewriting part of the prehistoric playbook. Nicknamed the “Sword Dragon of Dorset,” the three-meter-long marine reptile lived during a poorly understood window of evolution when major ichthyosaur groups were disappearing and new ones emerging. Its beautifully preserved skeleton — complete with a blade-like snout and possible last meal — helps pinpoint when this dramatic transition occurred. Read more ›
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02.03.2026 09:29
Last update: 09:21 EDT.
News rating updated: 16:20.
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