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Parrots may be doing more than just repeating words—they may actually use names. By analyzing hundreds of recordings from pet parrots, researchers found evidence that many birds use specific names to identify particular people, animals, and even individual companions. Some parrots appeared to refer to someone who wasn’t present, while others used names in creative ways, such as saying their own name to grab attention.
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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 study suggests swapping some, but not all, of your meat for plant proteins can help improve longevity. Read more ›
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My daughter barely remembers the years we spent living in China and Cambodia, even though they still shape how I see family and home. Read more ›
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There is something deeply disorienting about grieving while postpartum because motherhood continues regardless of heartbreak. Read more ›
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All the ways to watch India vs Pakistan at the 2026 Women's T20 World Cup from anywhere in the world, including free options. Read more ›
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I don't need constant reminders to turn off my phone at night or take it easy on busy days. Read more ›
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Suunto swaps bone for air conduction, giving these open-ear earbuds a perfect fit for the great outdoors. Read more ›
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Computex 2026 was packed with AI PCs, monster monitors, gaming handhelds, and wild desktop ideas, but a few products clearly rose above the noise. Read more ›
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Я около десяти лет занимаюсь русской локализацией Mozilla и сейчас являюсь лидером русской локализации. За это время я много раз видел Firefox с пользовательской стороны, со стороны сообщества, со стороны перевода интерфейса и документации. Но в корпоративной среде браузер выглядит иначе. Там это не просто приложение для просмотра сайтов, а часть рабочего места, через которую проходят почта, внутренние системы, облачные службы, порталы, административные панели и множество других критичных процессов.Когда ре Read more ›
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Zohran Mamdani wants to build more housing on city-owned land. It's smart, an economist said, but won't solve the supply crisis. Read more ›
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The headline iOS 27 features get all the attention, but these seven small changes are the ones quietly making my iPhone better every single day. Read more ›
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GMB Union data reveals 48% of workers fear AI job displacement, despite a 90% rise in agent usage as companies integrate AI tools. Read more ›
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Commentary: Sure, you'll be able to run iOS 27 on an iPhone 11, but does that actually matter? Read more ›
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These delivery boxes now feature a modern twist to permanently prevent package theft. Read more ›
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McLaren is using Iron Mountain's Insight DXP platform to digitise and catalogue over 60 years of legacy media. Read more ›
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AT&T launched a $3 daily unlimited iPad data pass, allowing eligible users nationwide to connect without contract subscriptions. Read more ›
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A trio of major studies found that finerenone may protect the kidneys and heart in far more people than previously thought. The drug significantly slowed kidney disease progression and reduced the risks of kidney failure, heart failure, cardiovascular death, and overall mortality. Researchers saw benefits not only in patients with diabetes but also in those with non-diabetic kidney disease, a group with limited treatment options. Read more ›
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A major long-term study of more than 54,000 adults found that where nitrate comes from may matter far more than how much you consume. People who got more nitrate from vegetables—roughly the amount in a cup of baby spinach a day—had a lower risk of developing dementia, while higher nitrate and nitrite intake from red meat, processed meat, and even drinking water was linked to a greater risk. Read more ›
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South Australia’s koala population has grown so large that it may be heading toward a self-made disaster, with forests struggling to support the animals. Researchers say targeted fertility control could prevent widespread starvation and habitat collapse before it’s too late. Read more ›
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Researchers have solved a decades-old mystery by showing that a cache of 43 helmets found off the Spanish coast is medieval, not Roman. The remarkable discovery exposes a thriving weapons trade network that connected Mediterranean powers during a time of piracy, warfare, and growing demand for military equipment. Read more ›
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Ancient grooves on human teeth, once hailed as evidence of tooth-picking, may simply be the result of natural wear, according to a new study of wild primates. The research also revealed that a common modern dental defect appears to be uniquely human, hinting that today's lifestyles may be reshaping our teeth in unexpected ways. Read more ›
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Scientists used nanoscale gold metamaterials to supercharge heat transfer across tiny gaps, achieving up to four times more energy flow than similar conventional systems. The breakthrough could lead to better chip cooling, more efficient energy technologies, and a new era of precision heat engineering. Read more ›
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What if our biggest idea about reality is built on a hidden misunderstanding? A new philosophical look at space-time challenges the popular view that the past, present, and future all exist together in a timeless "block universe." The argument suggests that physicists may be blurring the difference between things that exist and things that merely occur, creating deep confusion about what space-time actually is. Read more ›
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Scientists have uncovered a key brain signal that helps us break old habits and adapt when circumstances suddenly change. By watching mice navigate a virtual maze, researchers found that disappointment—when an expected reward failed to appear—triggered a surge of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, making the animals more likely to try a new strategy. When acetylcholine was blocked, the mice became less flexible and were more likely to stick with outdated choices. Read more ›
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Researchers have identified a new Alzheimer’s target and created an experimental compound that blocks a damaging process inside brain cells. In mice, the treatment slowed nerve cell loss, reduced Alzheimer’s-related changes, and even appeared to promote healthier aging. Read more ›
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NASA says a long-running air leak aboard the ISS recently worsened, leading engineers to investigate new suspected crack locations and consider a riskier repair strategy. Astronauts were temporarily moved into a safe haven as a precaution before the repair was postponed for further analysis. Read more ›
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14.06.2026 06:58
Last update: 06:50 EDT.
News rating updated: 13:53.
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