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A massive 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck Myanmar in March 2025, but what makes this event extraordinary is what happened next. For the first time, a nearby CCTV camera captured the fault rupture in real time, giving scientists a rare, direct look at how the Earth moves during a major quake. Researchers discovered that the ground shifted 2.5 meters in just 1.3 seconds, confirming a rapid, pulse-like rupture and revealing that the fault path was slightly curved.
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An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more âș
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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 âș
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Iâm 37. I run multiple websites read by tens of millions of people, I wrote a book about Buddhism, I built something that didnât exist when I started, and I still catch myself, more often than Iâd like to admit, waiting. Waiting for clarity. Waiting for a better moment. Waiting for someone more qualified to ... Read more Read more âș
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A fossil ape discovered in northern Egypt is reshaping the story of human evolution. The species, Masripithecus, lived about 17 to 18 million years ago and may sit very close to the ancestor of all modern apes. This finding challenges the long-standing focus on East Africa. Instead, it points to northern Africa and nearby regions as a possible birthplace of apes. Read more âș
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ĐąĐ”ĐŒŃ ŃŃаŃŃĐž1. ĐĐœĐ°Đ»ĐŸĐł AD DS: Samba DC2. ĐĐșŃĐžĐČаŃĐžŃ, лОŃĐ”ĐœĐ·ĐžŃĐŸĐČĐ°ĐœĐžĐ” Đž заĐșĐŸĐœĐŸĐŽĐ°ŃДлŃŃŃĐČĐŸ3. ĐŃаĐČОлŃĐœŃĐč ĐżĐŸĐŽŃ ĐŸĐŽ Đž аĐČŃĐŸĐŒĐ°ŃОзаŃĐžŃ4. ХпОŃĐŸĐș лОŃĐ”ŃаŃŃŃŃ, ĐŒĐ”ŃĐŸĐŽŃ Đ”Ń ĐžĐ·ŃŃĐ”ĐœĐžŃ5. ĐĄĐžĐœŃ ŃĐŸĐœĐžĐ·Đ°ŃĐžŃ ĐČŃĐ”ĐŒĐ”ĐœĐž ĐČ ĐŽĐŸĐŒĐ”ĐœĐ”6. 50 ĐżŃĐžĐŒĐ”ŃĐŸĐČ Đ·Đ°ĐŽĐ°Ń, ŃĐ”ŃĐ°Đ”ĐŒŃŃ ĐżŃĐž ĐżĐŸĐŒĐŸŃĐž GPO ЧОŃаŃŃ ĐŽĐ°Đ»Đ”Đ” Read more âș
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The White House has an official app with press releases and livestreams â plus a way to text the president and tip off ICE. Read more âș
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For many people, tracking favors isn't about control or manipulation â it's a childhood survival strategy built in homes where reciprocity was the only reliable evidence that someone valued you. Read more âș
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The average public miner spent $79,995 to produce one bitcoin last quarter. Bitcoin is trading at $70,000. The math doesn't work, so the industry is pivoting to AI, taking on $70 billion in contracts, and liquidating bitcoin treasuries to finance the shift. Read more âș
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Android tablets don't the high profile and prestige of the iPad, but they still have plenty to offer, and on the used market even nice ones are often cheap. Read more âș
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Elon Musk asked Mark Zuckerberg if he would consider joining him in bidding for OpenAI's IP, according to newly released court documents. Read more âș
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People who apologize through actions rather than words almost always learned that pattern in a household where direct emotional speech was treated as weakness. Understanding the origin doesn't require blame â but it does require learning to say the words out loud. Read more âș
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The NYT Strands hints and answers you need to make the most of your puzzling experience. Read more âș
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Connections is a New York Times word game that's all about finding the "common threads between words." How to solve the puzzle. Read more âș
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Here's the answer for "Wordle" #1743 on March 28 as well as a few hints, tips, and clues to help you solve it yourself. Read more âș
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Traffic lights follow the same green-amber-red order during the day, but at night, some of them switch to flashing certain colors. Why does that happen? Read more âș
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Of all the PokĂ©mon games that are playable on Switch 2, these are the five best â at least in my opinion. Read more âș
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Thereâs a particular kind of silence in the living rooms of people who spent their whole lives being told that silence was a virtue. My grandmother never complained. Not once, in all the years I knew her, did she sit down and say: Iâm struggling. Iâm lonely. Iâm not doing well and I need someone ... Read more Read more âș
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Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 28, No. 551. Read more âș
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Looking to sign yourself or a senior family member up for phone service? Those 55 and older can save money with special phone plans. Read more âș
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âForever chemicalsâ may be affecting kids in ways that last a lifetime. A new study links early PFAS exposure to lower bone density during the teen years, especially in girls. Researchers also found that when exposure happens may play a key role. Reducing exposure during childhood could help protect long-term bone health. Read more âș
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Scientists have engineered probiotic bacteria to act as tumor-seeking drug factories. In mice, these bacteria infiltrated tumors and produced a cancer-fighting drug right where it was needed. This targeted approach could make treatments more effective and reduce side effects. More research is needed before it can be tested in people. Read more âș
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In an incredibly lucky cosmic accident, NASAâs Hubble Space Telescope captured a comet breaking apart in real timeâsomething astronomers have long tried and failed to observe. The comet, C/2025 K1 (ATLAS), wasnât even the original target, but when researchers pivoted to it, they unknowingly caught it mid-disintegration into multiple pieces. Read more âș
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Scientists have uncovered the oldest direct evidence yet that Earthâs tectonic plates were on the move 3.5 billion years ago. By analyzing magnetic fingerprints in ancient rocks, they reconstructed how parts of the planet slowly drifted and even rotated over time. This challenges long-standing ideas that early Earth may have had a rigid, unmoving surface. Instead, it suggests the planet was already dynamicâand possibly setting the stage for lifeâmuch earlier... Read more âș
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A newly discovered Triassic reptile from the UK looked more like a racing greyhound than a crocodile, built for speed on land. With long legs and a lightweight body, it hunted small animals in a dry, upland environment millions of years ago. Scientists identified it as a new species after spotting key differences in its fossils. Itâs also a tribute to an inspiring teacher who helped spark a future scientistâs... Read more âș
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A routine quantum optics technique just revealed an extraordinary secret: entangled light can carry incredibly complex topological structures. Researchers found these hidden patterns reach up to 48 dimensions, offering a vast new âalphabetâ for encoding quantum information. Unlike previous assumptions, this topology can emerge from a single property of lightâorbital angular momentum. Read more âș
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Scientists at Harvard have built a miniature device that can twist and tune light in real time. By rotating two stacked photonic crystals and adjusting their spacing with a tiny mechanical system, they can control how lightâs âhandednessâ behaves. This allows the chip to distinguish between left- and right-circular polarized light with remarkable precision. The advance could lead to smarter sensors, faster communications, and new quantum technologies. Read more âș
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Researchers have discovered that cancer spread isnât randomâit follows a kind of biological âprogram.â By studying colon tumor cells, they identified gene patterns that signal whether a cancer is likely to metastasize. Their AI model, MangroveGS, can predict this risk with about 80% accuracy and even works across multiple cancer types. This could transform how doctors decide who needs aggressive treatment and who doesnât. Read more âș
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A new pill, enlicitide, reduced LDL (âbadâ) cholesterol by about 60% in a large clinical trial, matching the power of injectable therapies. Because itâs taken orally, it could overcome one of the biggest barriers keeping patients from using current treatments. Researchers say many people still donât reach safe cholesterol levelsâeven on statinsâhighlighting the need for better options. Read more âș
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Antibiotics are accumulating in a major Brazilian river, especially during the dry season when pollution becomes more concentrated. Scientists even detected a banned drug inside fish sold for food, raising concerns about human exposure. A common aquatic plant showed promise in removing these chemicals from waterâbut it also altered how fish absorb them, creating unexpected risks. Read more âș
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27.03.2026 23:32
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