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Scientists have created a new kind of time crystal using sound waves to levitate tiny beads in mid-air. These particles interact in a one-sided, unbalanced way, breaking the usual rules of motion and creating a steady, repeating rhythm. The system is surprisingly simple yet reveals complex physics with big implications. It could help advance quantum computing and deepen our understanding of biological timing systems.
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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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Carjackers can absolutely ruin your day, but one man in Virginia endured a nightmare with thousands of dollars of damage to his dream car. Here's what happened. Read more ›
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Scientists have uncovered a surprising brain-based trigger for high blood pressure, tracing it to a small region in the brainstem that normally controls breathing. This area, which kicks in during forceful exhalations like coughing, laughing, or exercise, also appears to activate nerves that tighten blood vessels—raising blood pressure. When researchers switched off this region in experiments, blood pressure dropped back to normal, suggesting it plays a direct role in hypertension. Read more ›
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The Dell XPS 16 is positioned as a powerful, modern productivity laptop, built for professionals, creatives, and users who need excellent performance without being tied to a desk. With a refreshed design, new processors, and major improvements in display and battery technology, it attempts to solve the exact problem mobile workers face: finding a laptop ... Read more ›
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Yardcare can end your exhausting manual mowing right now. Introducing the N1600PRO, the smart wire-free lawnmower has a precise offer for homeowners looking to tap into smart upgrade. With RTK + Vision navigation along the intelligent app control, this robotic mower can deliver a perfectly trimmed outdoor space without spending hours. Read more ›
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В статье рассказывается про python библиотеку, с помощью которой можно обучить ИИ для прогноза волатильности, без знания машинного обучения вообще. Нужно лишь разбираться в python. Читать далее Read more ›
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Scientists in Australia have demonstrated a prototype quantum battery that could revolutionize energy storage. By harnessing quantum effects, it can absorb energy in a rapid “super absorption” event, enabling much faster charging than conventional batteries. Even more surprisingly, the system becomes more efficient as it scales up. The research opens the door to ultra-fast, next-generation energy technologies. Read more ›
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iQOO unveiled the iQOO 15R as the first ‘R’ model in its number lineup in India. It’s primarily aimed at young professionals looking for a smartphone that’s compact and easy to use with one hand, but also packs a powerful chipset under the hood and has a great battery life. Does the iQOO 15R deliver all that? We used it for a couple of weeks to find that. Design The... Read more ›
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Chinese robotics startup Unitree, one of the world’s largest humanoid makers, has filed for an initial public offering in Shanghai, looking to raise 4.2 billion yuan ($610 million). In the filing submitted on Friday, Hangzhou-based Unitree disclosed that its operating revenue last year more than ... Read more ›
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The search for Nancy Guthrie has entered its seventh week since she went missing on February 1. Read more ›
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A decades-old superconducting mystery just took a surprising turn. Strontium ruthenate, a material that conducts electricity with zero resistance at low temperatures, has long puzzled scientists with hints of an exotic, complex superconducting state. But by carefully twisting and distorting ultra-thin crystals, researchers found something unexpected: the material barely reacted at all. This challenges years of assumptions and suggests its behavior may be far simpler—or far stranger—than previously thought. Read more ›
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FIR Against CoinDCX Founders In a major development for India’s crypto ecosystem, the founders of one of the country’s largest… Read more ›
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You can take back your precious iPhone storage without a digital sacrifice. Here's how. Read more ›
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What most people call social skills may actually be a decades-long pattern of self-erasure — entering every room asking what it needs from you, and never once asking what you need from it. Read more ›
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Between the form factor and features, this is one of the best bone conduction headphone options for the pool. Read more ›
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You don't need to spend a fortune to build a pro-level tool kit. Here are five affordable Hercules alternatives to expensive Milwaukee gear. Read more ›
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When children daydream in class, the reflexive assumption is an attention problem. But clinicians and neuroscience research point to something more nuanced: a brain doing different work, not deficient work. Read more ›
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Walmart is "rolling out digital price tags to replace the old paper ones," reports CNBC, planning to implement them in all U.S. stores by the end of the year: Amanda Bailey, a team leader in electronics who works at a Walmart in West Chester, Ohio, estimates that the digital shelf labels — known as DSLs — have cut the time she used to spend on pricing duties by 75%, time... Read more ›
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Scientists at MIT have discovered that a little-known protein called intelectin-2 plays a powerful double role in defending the gut. The protein strengthens the mucus layer that lines the gastrointestinal tract while also trapping and disabling harmful bacteria that try to break through. By binding to sugars on both mucus molecules and bacterial surfaces, intelectin-2 forms a protective barrier and can even destroy microbes, including some that resist antibiotics. Read more ›
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Researchers have developed a tiny antibody that can find a common cancer protein and make tumors light up during PET scans. In tests with mice, tumors containing the protein EphA2 glowed clearly when the antibody was used. This could help doctors quickly identify patients who may benefit from new targeted cancer treatments. The method may also provide a faster and less invasive alternative to traditional testing. Read more ›
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Scientists have discovered that cells can sense far beyond the surfaces they touch. While individual cancer cells can probe about 10 microns ahead by tugging on surrounding collagen fibers, clusters of normal epithelial cells can combine forces to detect layers as far as 100 microns away. This long-range “depth sensing” helps cells decide where to migrate. Understanding how it works could reveal new targets to stop cancer from spreading. Read more ›
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Scientists have developed a powerful new computational method that could accelerate the search for next-generation materials capable of turning sunlight into useful chemical energy. The work focuses on polyheptazine imides, a promising class of carbon nitride materials that absorb visible light and can drive reactions such as hydrogen production, carbon dioxide conversion, and hydrogen peroxide synthesis. By analyzing how 53 different metal ions influence the structure and electronic behavior of... Read more ›
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Physicists at UC Santa Barbara have uncovered a new way to manipulate unusual magnetic states by exploiting “frustration” inside a crystal’s atomic structure. The team discovered a rare system where two different kinds of frustration—magnetic and electronic bond frustration—coexist and interact. By coupling these competing effects, researchers may be able to control exotic quantum states, potentially unlocking new ways to manipulate entangled spins for future quantum technologies. Read more ›
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The distinctive smell of ancient mummies is helping scientists decode the secrets of Egyptian mummification. By analyzing tiny traces of chemicals in the air around mummy samples, researchers identified dozens of compounds linked to oils, resins, beeswax, and bitumen used during embalming. The chemical clues reveal that mummification grew increasingly complex over thousands of years. Read more ›
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New research shows that sourdough fermentation does more than make bread rise—it transforms wheat fibers in unexpected ways. Scientists found that enzymes already present in wheat, activated by the sourdough’s acidic environment, break down key fibres called arabinoxylans. This process may influence the bread’s texture, digestibility, and flavor. Some microbes even create buttery or subtly sweet notes that give sourdough its distinctive taste. Read more ›
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A clinical trial found that listening to specially designed music with auditory beat stimulation can significantly reduce anxiety. Among several listening lengths tested, a 24-minute session delivered the biggest benefits, easing both mental and physical symptoms of anxiety. The results suggest there may be an ideal “dose” of therapeutic music that works quickly without requiring long listening sessions. Read more ›
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A new UCLA Health study suggests that long-term exposure to the pesticide chlorpyrifos may dramatically raise the risk of Parkinson’s disease. Researchers found that people living in areas with sustained exposure had more than 2.5 times the likelihood of developing the disorder. Lab experiments reinforced the finding: animals exposed to the chemical developed movement problems, lost dopamine-producing neurons, and showed the same toxic protein buildup seen in Parkinson’s patients. Read more ›
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A redesigned cancer immunotherapy is showing striking early results after decades of disappointment with similar drugs. Researchers engineered a more powerful CD40 agonist antibody and changed how it’s delivered—injecting it directly into tumors instead of into the bloodstream. In a small clinical trial of 12 patients with metastatic cancers, six saw their tumors shrink and two experienced complete remission. Read more ›
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23.03.2026 00:07
Last update: 23:45 EDT.
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