4 place 0 fresh
Ravens have long been thought to follow wolves to find food, but new research shows they’re far more strategic. By tracking both animals in Yellowstone, scientists discovered that ravens memorize areas where wolf kills are likely and fly directly to those spots—sometimes from great distances. Rather than trailing wolves, they rely on learned patterns in the landscape. It’s a clever system that highlights just how intelligent these birds really are.
A newsletter a day!
You may get 10 most important news around midday in daily newsletter. Press the button and we will send you the most important news only, no spam attached.
LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!
An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more ›
0
A PG&E Corp. unit has bought a San Jose building in a move to bolster the utility's South Bay operations. Read more ›
0
iSeeCars tracks the sale prices and length of time on the lot for thousands of used cars on the market, and this was the fastest-selling car in February. Read more ›
0 newcommer
Whether you prefer a fully-automatic, manual or capsule coffee machine, there are plenty available at great prices for Afterpay Day. Read more ›
0 newcommer
A common oral bacterium tied to gum disease may help spark and fuel breast cancer, according to new research. Scientists discovered it can travel through the bloodstream to breast tissue, where it causes DNA damage and speeds tumor growth and spread. It also appears to make cancer cells more aggressive and resistant to therapy. The effect is even stronger in people with BRCA1 mutations, raising new questions about the role... Read more ›
0 newcommer
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: A lobbying trade body for smaller cloud providers is asking the European Commission to impose interim measures blocking Broadcom from terminating the VMware Cloud Service Provider program, calling the decision a death sentence for some tech suppliers and an illegal squeeze on customer choice. As The Reg revealed in January, Broadcom shuttered the scheme, a move sources claimed affects hundreds of... Read more ›
0 fresh
Компания одного человека в 2026 году больше не означает, что вы делаете всё сами. Теперь это значит, что вы руководите целым штатом ИИ-агентов и сосредоточены на стратегии. Вышедший на пике этого тренда фреймворк Paperclip делает эту модель массовой. Он забирает у соло-основателей хаос из десятков разрозненных скриптов и внедряет для нейросетей то, к чему привыкли люди: жесткую организационную структуру, трекер задач, систему бюджетирования и корпоративное управление.В начале 2026 года индустрия... Read more ›
0 fresh
Stopping popular weight-loss injections like Ozempic or Mounjaro might not trigger the dramatic rebound many fear. A large real-world study of nearly 8,000 patients found that most people who discontinue these drugs manage to keep the weight off—or even continue losing—by restarting treatment, switching medications, or adopting lifestyle changes. While earlier clinical trials suggested rapid weight regain, this new evidence paints a more hopeful picture. Read more ›
0 fresh
The Pitt season 2 episode 11 introduces a patient brought into the ER by ICE agents — and one star recalls how 'uncomfortable' the shoot quickly became. Read more ›
0 fresh
OpenAI is developing a “super app” for desktop that unifies ChatGPT, its browser and its Codex app, according to the Wall Street Journal and CNBC. A company spokesperson told the publications that OpenAI Chief of Applications Fidji Simo will lead the application revamp with assistance from OpenAI President Greg Brockman. Simo will also help the marketing team advertise the app when it comes out. OpenAI’s leadership is apparently hoping that... Read more ›
0 fresh
GenZ this, GenZ that. The internet today is awash with memes and commentary about Gen Z breaking conventional workplace norms.… Read more ›
0 fresh
Razorpay’s Agentic AI Era Razorpay is moving beyond payments. Last week, the fintech major unveiled its Agentic AI Studio to… Read more ›
0 fresh
Who said Lego was just for kids? If, like me, you love the popular building blocks, I've picked my favourites currently discounted by up to 33% on Amazon's Big Smile Sale. Read more ›
0 fresh
As Kayce Dutton slowly finds his footing in the US Marshals, when does Marshals: A Yellowstone Story episode 4 hit CBS and Paramount+? Read more ›
0 fresh
NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion secures commitments from BYD, Geely, Nissan, Isuzu, and Grab. Drive for Level 4 autonomous vehicle development. Signals APAC’s auto industry is consolidating around a single AI stack. When Jensen Huang declared at GTC 2026 that “the autonomous vehicle revolution is here,” he wasn’t speaking abstractly. Behind the headline sat a roster of ... Read more ›
0 fresh
Каждый пуш в main — и ты зажмуриваешься на 2 минуты: 502 или пронесло? Знакомо? Сотни разработчиков сталкиваются с этим при деплое Next.js на VPS. Решение — буквально замена одной команды и удаление одной строки. В статье: конкретный рецепт zero-downtime с PM2 cluster mode, две главные ловушки (restart vs reload и rm -rf .next), расчёт сэкономленных денег, и честное сравнение с Kubernetes. К рецепту без 502 Read more ›
0 fresh
The hit open source autonomous AI agent OpenClaw may have just gotten mogged by Anthropic. Today, Anthropic announced Claude Code Channels, a way to hook up its own powerful Claude Code AI agentic harness to a human user's Discord or Telegram messaging applications, letting them message Claude Code directly whenever they want while on the go and instruct it to write code for them. Official documentation is here.This isn't just... Read more ›
0 fresh
Snowflake made cuts to "align our teams with Snowflake's long-term strategy." Tech companies like Atlassian and Block also recently conducted layoffs. Read more ›
0 fresh
Razorpay’s CEO Harshil Mathur has AI agents walking him through his day’s calendar, reading out the most important stories of… Read more ›
0 fresh
Scientists have found a promising new way to manufacture one of industry’s toughest materials—tungsten carbide–cobalt—using advanced 3D printing. Normally, producing this ultra-hard material requires high-pressure processes that waste large amounts of expensive tungsten and cobalt. The new approach uses a hot-wire laser technique that softens the metals rather than fully melting them, allowing manufacturers to deposit the material only where it’s needed. Read more ›
0
Scientists at Arizona State University have uncovered surprising new ways bacteria move, even without their usual whip-like propellers called flagella. In one study, E. coli and salmonella were found to spread across moist surfaces by fermenting sugars and creating tiny fluid currents that carry them forward — a newly identified behavior researchers call “swashing.” In another study, a different group of bacteria was shown to control its movement using a... Read more ›
0
As AI systems began acing traditional tests, researchers realized those benchmarks were no longer tough enough. In response, nearly 1,000 experts created Humanity’s Last Exam, a massive 2,500-question challenge covering highly specialized topics across many fields. The exam was engineered so that any question solvable by current AI models was removed. Early results show even the most advanced systems still struggle — revealing a surprisingly large gap between AI performance... Read more ›
0
Gold and other heavy elements are born in some of the universe’s most violent events—but scientists still struggle to understand the nuclear steps that create them. Now, nuclear physicists have uncovered three key discoveries about how unstable atomic nuclei decay during the rapid neutron-capture process, the chain reaction responsible for forging elements like gold and platinum. Read more ›
0
In medieval Denmark, people could pay for more prestigious graves closer to the church — a sign of wealth and status. But when researchers examined hundreds of skeletons, they discovered something unexpected: even people with stigmatized diseases like leprosy were buried in these high-status spots. Instead of excluding the sick, many communities appear to have treated them much like everyone else. Read more ›
0
A severe case of COVID-19 or influenza could increase the risk of lung cancer later on, according to new research. Scientists discovered that serious viral infections can alter immune cells in the lungs, leaving behind chronic inflammation that may help tumors develop months or years later. The increased risk was seen mainly after severe infections that required hospitalization. Vaccination, however, appears to prevent the dangerous lung changes. Read more ›
0
Researchers studying over 8,400 colonoscopies discovered that having both adenomas and serrated polyps in the bowel can raise the risk of serious precancerous changes by up to five times. These two polyp types may represent separate cancer pathways that can occur at the same time. Nearly half of patients with serrated polyps also had adenomas, making this high-risk combination more common than expected. The results emphasize the importance of early... Read more ›
0
Scientists have uncovered evidence that our Sun may have traveled across the Milky Way as part of a massive migration of Sun-like stars billions of years ago. The journey may have carried the solar system away from the galaxy’s crowded center into a calmer region where life could eventually emerge. Read more ›
0
Scientists are exploring a surprisingly simple way to clean up diesel engines: adding tiny droplets of water to the fuel. During combustion, the water rapidly vaporizes, triggering micro-explosions that improve fuel mixing and lower combustion temperatures. Studies show this technique can slash nitrogen oxide and soot emissions by more than 60% while sometimes even improving engine efficiency. Because it works in existing engines without redesign, it could provide a quick... Read more ›
0
Tiny plastic particles may be quietly threatening brain health. New research suggests microplastics—now widely found in food, water, and even household dust—could trigger inflammation and damage in the brain through multiple biological pathways. Scientists estimate adults may consume about 250 grams of these particles each year, and some can accumulate in organs including the brain. Read more ›
0
Most popular sources
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
|
|
0% |
| View sources » | |
LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!
20.03.2026 00:03
Last update: 23:50 EDT.
News rating updated: 05:50.
What is Times42?
Times42 brings you the most popular news from tech news portals in real-time chart.
Read about us in FAQ section.