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Researchers created an AI-driven liquid biopsy that scans patterns in fragments of DNA circulating in the blood. The system detected early liver fibrosis and cirrhosis—conditions that often go unnoticed until serious damage occurs. By analyzing genome-wide DNA fragmentation patterns rather than specific mutations, the approach captures hidden signals about a person’s overall health. Early detection could help doctors treat liver disease sooner and potentially prevent 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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A new report from Anthropic highlights professions most exposed to AI automation, even as researchers say the technology has not yet caused major job losses. Read more ›
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Dr. Jordan Metzl, a longevity and sports medicine doctor, runs home after work and strength trains in the park. Read more ›
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Judy Katz had a successful PR career at places like Madison Square Garden before she started her own PR firm. Now she ghostwrites in her 80s. Read more ›
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Nintendo Switch 2 owners will soon be able to get their hands on award-winning indie game, Kena: Bridge of Spirits. The game, which initially made its debut in 2021 on PlayStation and PC before arriving on Xbox in 2024, is slated for a Nintendo debut this spring. Read more Read more ›
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Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison is looking to battle Netflix by bringing on short-form video and hiring key executives away from Amazon. Read more ›
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Как только я узнал, что книга Making Embedded Systems 2nd Edition (русская версия: «Создание встраиваемых систем. Паттерны проектирования отличных программ. 2-е издание») доступна для предзаказа, я не раздумывая отправился на Amazon и раскошелился за неё.Некоторое время я занимался самообучением в различных областях, связанных с электроникой и разработкой встраиваемых систем, но в совершенно произвольном и никак не организованном ритме.Рассчитывал, что эта книга даст мне хороший каркас, на базе которого мож Read more ›
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Scottish tech founders have raised £257m in investment since joining Techscaler, an initiative launched in partnership with the Scottish government to grow the nation’s startup ecosystem. According to findings from the Scottish government, its founders have raised £139m more than the previous year, with the Techscaler programme considered a key factor. First launched in 2022, ... Read more ›
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After decades of climbing toward every promised milestone, the view from the top reveals an unexpected truth: the emptiness that comes with having everything you wanted is the most isolating kind, because nobody teaches you what to do when you finally arrive. Read more ›
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Anthropic and Dario Amodei clash with the Department of Defense over AI use, highlighting a looming power struggle between democracies and AI CEOs. Read more ›
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Fig Security, co-founded by Google Cloud alum Gal Shafir, raises $38M to tackle 'silent' cybersecurity failures with detection tools. Read more ›
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In an exclusive interview with WIRED, Block’s cofounder and CEO says he axed 40 percent of his workforce so that he can rebuild the company “as an intelligence.” Read more ›
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BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: An international team of scientists has done something chemistry has never seen before. IBM, working alongside researchers from the University of Manchester, Oxford University, ETH Zurich, EPFL, and the University of Regensburg, has created and characterized a molecule whose electrons travel through its structure in a corkscrew-like pattern, fundamentally altering its chemical behavior. The findings were published today in Science. The molecule, known as... Read more ›
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You can now create a Wix website directly from ChatGPT with nothing more than a few prompts. Read more ›
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Avid travelers told Business Insider why they book doctors' appointments abroad — and how much money they save compared to the US. Read more ›
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Xbox has shared a brief but key update about its next generation console. Read more Read more ›
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For decades, scientists believed a fertilized egg’s DNA began as a shapeless mass, only organizing itself once the embryo switched on its genes. But new research reveals that the genome is already carefully arranged in three dimensions long before that critical activation step, known as Zygotic Genome Activation. Using a powerful new method called Pico-C, researchers captured this hidden DNA architecture in unprecedented detail, showing that a complex scaffold is... Read more ›
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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... Read more ›
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Scientists at MIT have found compelling chemical evidence that Earth’s earliest animals were likely ancient sea sponges. Hidden inside rocks over 541 million years old are rare molecular “fingerprints” that match compounds made by modern demosponges. After testing rocks, living sponges, and lab-made molecules, researchers confirmed the signals came from life — not geology. The discovery suggests sponges were thriving in the oceans well before most other animal groups appeared. Read more ›
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Scientists have unveiled a breakthrough way to turn natural gas—long burned as fuel—into valuable chemical building blocks for medicines and other high-demand products. By designing a clever iron-based catalyst powered by LED light, researchers managed to activate stubborn molecules like methane and transform them into complex compounds, even creating the hormone therapy drug dimestrol directly from methane for the first time. Read more ›
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Researchers at Nagoya University have created a more efficient iron-based photocatalyst that could reduce the need for rare and expensive metals in advanced chemistry. Unlike earlier designs, the new catalyst uses far fewer costly chiral ligands while still precisely controlling the three dimensional structure of molecules. Read more ›
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Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, may have been born in a colossal cosmic crash. New research suggests Titan formed when two older moons slammed together hundreds of millions of years ago—an event so violent it reshaped Saturn’s entire moon system and may have indirectly sparked the formation of its iconic rings. Clues come from Titan’s unusual orbit, its surprisingly smooth surface, and the strange behavior of the tumbling moon Hyperion. Read more ›
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Astronomers have spotted what may be one of the universe’s earliest barred spiral galaxies — a striking cosmic structure forming just 2 billion years after the Big Bang. The galaxy, COSMOS-74706, dates back about 11.5 billion years and contains a stellar bar, a bright, linear band of stars and gas stretching across its center, similar to the one in our own Milky Way. Read more ›
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Researchers found that cutting two amino acids common in animal protein—methionine and cysteine—made mice burn significantly more energy. The boost in heat production was nearly as powerful as constant exposure to cold temperatures. The mice didn’t eat less or exercise more; they simply generated more heat in their beige fat. The discovery hints that diet alone might activate the body’s calorie-burning machinery. Read more ›
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Scientists at UC Berkeley have discovered a microbe that bends one of biology’s most sacred rules. Instead of treating a specific three-letter DNA code as a clear “stop” signal, this methane-producing archaeon sometimes reads it as a green light—adding an unusual amino acid and continuing to build the protein. The result is a kind of genetic coin flip: two different proteins can emerge from the same code, influenced partly by... Read more ›
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Scientists racing to tackle plastic pollution have created a surprising new contender: a biodegradable packaging film made partly from milk protein. Researchers at Flinders University blended calcium caseinate with starch and natural nanoclay to form a thin, durable material designed to mimic everyday plastic. In soil tests, the film fully broke down in about 13 weeks, pointing to a realistic alternative for single-use food packaging. Read more ›
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06.03.2026 05:23
Last update: 05:11 EDT.
News rating updated: 12:12.
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