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Researchers have found hundreds of metabolic enzymes attached to human DNA inside the cell nucleus. Different tissues and cancers show unique patterns of these enzymes, forming a “nuclear metabolic fingerprint.” Some of the enzymes gather around damaged DNA to assist with repair. The discovery reveals an unexpected link between metabolism and gene regulation that could influence how cancers grow and respond to treatment.
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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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Apple's first foldable smartphone has been widely rumored to arrive this fall alongside the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max, after many, many years of speculation about it. One bit that we are inevitably still speculating about is the device's name. We've been calling it iPhone Fold, but a new rumor out of China today claims it will actually be called iPhone Ultra. Not just that, but it... Read more ›
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Dr. Robby has threatened to leave for the millionth time, but will it happen — and when does The Pitt season 2 episode 10 arrive on HBO Max? Read more ›
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After decades of calling his son "too sensitive" for crying about work stress, a 64-year-old father realizes his children aren't weak—they're just brave enough to express emotions his generation was taught to bury. Read more ›
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J.D. Power released its latest U.S. Vehicle Dependability Study in February 2026, charting the reliability of a number of vehicles over a 3-year period. Read more ›
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Early investors of deeptech company SEDEMAC, which is set to list on the exchanges on Wednesday (March 11), have raked… Read more ›
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Статья посвящена концепции создания и эволюции кастомизированных ИИ-агентов, определяемых как «виртуальные аватары» (ВА) человека. ВА позиционируются как постоянно обучающиеся модели, «прикреплённые» к конкретным людям и способные выполнять умственную работу, принимать рутинные решения и действовать, исходя из индивидуальных предпочтений, интересов и установок своего владельца.Средства искусственного интеллекта (ИИ) как фундамента следующего технологического уклада развиваются с неудержимой силой и стремите Read more ›
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When NASA’s DART spacecraft deliberately crashed into the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos, it did more than change the asteroid’s local orbit — it slightly shifted the path of the entire asteroid pair around the Sun. The impact blasted debris into space, doubling the force of the spacecraft’s hit and nudging the system’s solar orbit by a tiny but measurable amount. It marks the first time humans have altered the trajectory of... Read more ›
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После первой статьи в комментариях несколько раз прозвучало примерно одно и то же: "Всё правильно, но это же про любую зрелую СУБД — что с этим делать?"Я думал над этим вопросом несколько недель. И в итоге решил не искать ответ в виде "возьмите правильный инструмент X" — а попробовать честно сформулировать: какими свойствами OLTP-БД должна обладать сама по себе, независимо от того, насколько хорош ваш оператор, консультант или runbook.Что такое... Read more ›
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Samsung says it's thinking about bringing "vibe coding" to future Galaxy phones, allowing users to describe apps or interface changes in plain language and have AI generate the code. TechRadar interviewed Won-Joon Choi, Samsung's head of mobile experience, to learn more about the plans. Here's an excerpt from their report: As noted by Won-Joon Choi, the usefulness of vibe coding on smartphones is that it opens up the "possibility of... Read more ›
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I loved this wireless speaker’s ace connectivity and sense of space and but have to ask: where’s the bass? Read more ›
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The White House is preparing an executive order that could remove Anthropic’s Claude AI from federal systems, escalating a dispute between the Trump administration and the AI firm over military use and safeguards Read more ›
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Figure is gradually prepping its humanoid robot to competently take on household chores. While the California-based company has ambitions to deploy its robot in industrial settings like factories and warehouses, it also plans to create a robot capable of functioning inside a home. A new video (top) released by Figure on Monday shows its humanoid ... Read more ›
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If you're eyeing a new vehicle purchase in 2026, due diligence is a must. Fortunately, Consumer Reports has a good idea of which cars really shine. Read more ›
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Global warming has picked up speed in the past decade, according to a new analysis from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). By removing short term natural influences such as El Niño, volcanic eruptions, and solar cycles from temperature records, researchers uncovered a clear acceleration in the planet’s long term warming trend beginning around 2015. Read more ›
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Перед вами третья и последняя часть моей статьи про конференцию алготрейдеров в Москве. Часть 1 была про инфраструктуру, а часть 2 про практическое применение ИИ. Третья часть будет о последствиях. Перед вами будут четыре доклада на одну тему:* неэффективности,* уязвимости,* масштабирование систем.А ещё в статье интересная торговая идея с дисбалансом внутри синтетического инструмента — целой корзины акций Мосбиржи. Всё плохо? Read more ›
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Over the weekend, Andrej Karpathy—the influential former Tesla AI lead and co-founder and former member of OpenAI who coined the term "vibe coding"— posted on X about his new open source project, autoresearch. It wasn't a finished model or a massive corporate product: it was by his own admission a simple, 630-line script made available on Github under a permissive, enterprise-friendly MIT License. But the ambition was massive: automating the... Read more ›
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Tiny, tooth-sized fossils have just reshaped the story of our deepest ancestry. Paleontologists have discovered the southernmost remains ever found of Purgatorius—the earliest-known relative of all primates, including humans—in Colorado’s Denver Basin. Previously thought to be confined to Montana and parts of Canada, this shrew-sized, tree-dwelling mammal now appears to have spread southward soon after the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs. Read more ›
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Earth’s vertebrate diversity may be far richer than anyone realized. A sweeping analysis of more than 300 studies suggests that for every known fish, bird, reptile, amphibian, or mammal species, there are about two nearly identical “cryptic” species hiding in plain sight—genetically distinct but visually almost impossible to tell apart. Thanks to advances in DNA sequencing, scientists are uncovering these long-separated lineages, some evolving independently for over a million years. Read more ›
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Fusion energy may be one of the most promising clean power sources of the future—but only if scientists can precisely measure the extreme, fast-moving plasmas that make it possible. A new U.S. Department of Energy–sponsored report urges major investment in advanced diagnostic tools—the high-tech “sensors” that track plasma temperature, density, and behavior inside fusion systems. Bringing together 70 experts from universities, national labs, and private industry, the workshop identified seven... Read more ›
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Researchers at the University of Basel and the ETH in Zurich have succeeded in changing the polarity of a special ferromagnet using a laser beam. In the future, this method could be used to create adaptable electronic circuits with light. Read more ›
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Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have spotted the most distant “jellyfish galaxy” ever seen — a cosmic oddity streaming long, tentacle-like trails of gas and newborn stars as it speeds through a dense galaxy cluster. The galaxy appears as it was 8.5 billion years ago, revealing that the early universe may have been far more violent than scientists expected. Read more ›
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A famously resilient bacterium may be tough enough to survive one of the most violent events imaginable on Mars. In laboratory experiments designed to mimic the crushing shock of a massive asteroid impact, researchers squeezed Deinococcus radiodurans between steel plates and blasted it with pressures reaching 3 GPa (30,000 times atmospheric pressure). Even under these extreme conditions, a significant portion of the microbes survived. Read more ›
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For decades, scientists have mapped attention, memory, language, and reasoning to separate brain networks — yet one big mystery remained: why does the mind feel like a single, unified system? Researchers at the University of Notre Dame now suggest that intelligence doesn’t live in one “smart” region of the brain at all. Instead, it emerges from how efficiently and flexibly the brain’s many networks communicate and coordinate with each other. Read more ›
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Scientists have identified a crucial molecular switch that decides whether pancreatic cancer cells resist chemotherapy or respond to it. The key player, a gene called GATA6, keeps tumours in a more structured and treatable form—but it gets shut down by an overactive KRAS-driven pathway. When researchers blocked that pathway, GATA6 levels rebounded and cancer cells became more sensitive to chemo. The discovery could help turn some of the toughest pancreatic... Read more ›
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When a bone break is too severe to heal on its own, surgeons often rely on grafts or rigid metal implants — but both come with serious drawbacks. Now, researchers at ETH Zurich have created a jelly-like hydrogel that mimics the body’s natural healing process, offering a potentially game-changing alternative. Made of 97% water, this soft material can be laser-printed into intricate bone-like structures at record-breaking speeds, down to details... Read more ›
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In Yellowstone’s wild chess match between wolves and cougars, it turns out the real power play is theft. After tracking nearly a decade of GPS data and thousands of kill sites, researchers found that wolves often muscle in on cougar kills—sometimes even killing the cats—but cougars never return the favor. Instead of fighting back, cougars adapt. As elk numbers dropped, they shifted toward hunting more deer, which they can eat... Read more ›
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09.03.2026 22:20
Last update: 22:10 EDT.
News rating updated: 04:10.
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