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Scientists have uncovered a surprising new hero in the fight against one of the world’s deadliest fungal infections: albumin, the most abundant protein in human blood. In a major international study, researchers found that people who develop mucormycosis — a fast-moving and often fatal “black fungus” infection — have strikingly low levels of albumin, and that this deficiency strongly predicts death.
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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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В 2026 году выбор инструмента для стилизации — это не вопрос вкуса, а вопрос архитектуры. Мы разберём, где Tailwind CSS v4 выигрывает у признанных лидеров: компонентных библиотек (MUI, Ant Design) и CSS-in-JS решений (Styled Components). Читать далее Read more ›
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Norwegianenergy storage scale-up Photoncycle has raised €15 million in Series A fundingto address a key renewable energy challenge in Europe: enabling households tostore surplus summer solar power for... Read more ›
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AI has made video creation faster, cheaper and more accessible than ever. But as traditional barriers of video creation fade,… Read more ›
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Photoncycle, an Oslo-based energy storage scaleup, has raised €15 million in Series A funding to enable households to store surplus summer solar power for winter heating and electricity. The round was led by NordicNinja and Voima Ventures, with participation from existing investors Lifeline Ventures, Eviny Ventures, Luminar Ventures, and Momentum. “Europe is beginning to solve ... Read more ›
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Beskrestnov warned that interceptor drones may "turn out to be useless" in the next phase, calling for new research into countering faster Shaheds. Read more ›
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OpenAI is developing an internal alternative to GitHub, Microsoft’s popular code repository that allows software engineers to store, share and collaborate on computer code, The Information reported on Tuesday. The move comes after OpenAI engineers experienced an increasing number of GitHub ... Read more ›
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Хочу поделиться проектом, который может оказаться полезным тем, кто всё ещё разрабатывает/поддерживает десктопные .NET Framework приложения на WinForms.В моей организации - как, наверное, и во многих других - среда разработки Microsoft Visual Studio оказалась под запретом, причём как её коммерческие версии, так и Community Edition. Всем было рекомендовано перейти на VS Code, которая хороша во всём, кроме полноценной поддержки WinForms-приложений. А именно - VS Code, в отличие от "обычной" Visual... Read more ›
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The largest cryptocurrency briefly reclaimed the top of its range on Tuesday before sellers pushed it back to $67,000, while South Korean stocks posted their worst two-day drop since 2008. Read more ›
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A couple from Texas are stuck in Dubai after the attack on Iran and retaliatory strikes. They said they can't get help from the US. Read more ›
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Handshake AI cut off access to the projects and told some workers they'd violated their contract. Read more ›
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The social network’s private messaging service is stepping out on its own, and the beta is already full, hinting that Elon Musk’s “everything app” might be evolving in a new direction. Read more ›
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New state-backed body seeks AI breakthroughs in science, healthcare and transport Read more ›
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Why European founders should move to the US: 'You have to experience it to understand it' Read more ›
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Photoncycle raises €15m to scale its ‘summer sun to winter power’ energy solution Read more ›
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The company added managed custody, virtual account collections, and fiat-to-stablecoin settlement capabilities, positioning itself as a single provider for enterprise digital asset payments across 60 markets. Read more ›
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Unlock the full potential of your Amazon streaming device. Here are four types of wireless accessories that will transform how you watch and play. Read more ›
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More than 40,000 years ago, Ice Age humans were carving repeated patterns of dots, lines, and crosses into tools and small ivory figurines. A new computational study of more than 3,000 of these Paleolithic signs reveals that they were not random decorations but structured sequences with measurable complexity. Surprisingly, their information density rivals that of proto-cuneiform, the earliest known writing system that emerged around 3,000 B.C.E. Read more ›
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Researchers have detected microplastics in nearly all prostate cancer tumors examined in a new study. Tumor tissue contained about 2.5 times more plastic than nearby healthy prostate tissue. Scientists say this is the first Western study to directly measure plastic particles in prostate tumors. More research is needed, but the findings suggest microplastic exposure could play a role in cancer development. Read more ›
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Horses have a vocal trick no one fully understood until now. Scientists have discovered that when a horse whinnies, it produces two completely different sounds at the same time. One is a deep tone created by vibrating the vocal folds, similar to how humans sing. The other is a high-pitched whistle generated inside the larynx, something never before confirmed in a large mammal. This rare ability, known as biphonation, likely... Read more ›
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A weeklong, high-intensity version of TMS may work nearly as well as the standard six-week treatment for depression. In a UCLA study, patients who received five sessions a day for five days experienced meaningful symptom relief comparable to those on the traditional schedule. Some who didn’t improve immediately showed strong gains weeks later. The findings hint at a faster, more accessible path to recovery. Read more ›
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A lost cache of 250-million-year-old fossils from Australia has rewritten part of the story of life after Earth’s worst mass extinction. Instead of a single marine amphibian species, researchers uncovered evidence of a surprisingly diverse community of early ocean predators. One of these creatures had relatives stretching from the Arctic to Madagascar, showing that some of the first sea-going tetrapods spread across the globe with remarkable speed. Read more ›
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Quantum computers need special materials called topological superconductors—but they’ve been notoriously difficult to create. Researchers have now shown they can trigger this exotic state by subtly adjusting the mix of tellurium and selenium in ultra-thin films. That tiny chemical tweak changes how electrons interact, effectively turning a quantum phase “dial” until the ideal state appears. The result is a more practical path toward building stable, next-generation quantum devices. Read more ›
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A gel-like sugar coating on immune cells has been found to play a starring role in psoriasis. Researchers discovered that immune cells shed this outer layer to help them exit the bloodstream and enter inflamed skin. This challenges the long-held idea that only blood vessel walls changed during this process. The finding could help guide new therapies aimed at controlling harmful inflammation. Read more ›
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Mars’ frozen ice caps may be time capsules for ancient life. Lab experiments show that key building blocks of proteins can survive tens of millions of years in pure ice, even under relentless cosmic radiation. Ice mixed with Martian-like soil, however, destroys organic material far more quickly. The findings point future missions toward drilling into clean, buried ice rather than studying rocks or dirt. Read more ›
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Earth’s magnetic shield is shifting in dramatic ways. New data from ESA’s Swarm satellites show that the South Atlantic Anomaly — a vast weak spot in Earth’s magnetic field — has grown by nearly half the size of continental Europe since 2014. Even more striking, a region southwest of Africa has begun weakening even faster in recent years, hinting at unusual activity deep within Earth’s molten outer core. Read more ›
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Scientists have zeroed in on a critical weak spot behind a rare but devastating brain autoimmune disorder often known as “Brain on Fire.” The disease strikes when the immune system attacks NMDA receptors—key molecules involved in memory and thinking—leading to psychiatric symptoms, seizures, and even death. Read more ›
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04.03.2026 01:00
Last update: 00:55 EDT.
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