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July 22, 2024, was the hottest day on record, according to a NASA analysis of global daily temperature data. July 21 and 23 of this year also exceeded the previous daily record, set in July 2023. These record-breaking temperatures are part of a long-term warming trend driven by human activities, primarily the emission of greenhouse gases.
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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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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: The number of students admitted to Ph.D. programs this fall dropped 15 percent from the previous year, according to data from over 50 top research universities, raising fears that the nation's capacity to produce new science could be diminished. The decline is driven, in part, by a chaotic and unpredictable federal funding environment under the Trump administration, as federal... Read more ›
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It's not a melting connector-level concern, but proceed with caution if you're using an RTX 5090 GPU with a riser cable for your gaming PC setup. Read more ›
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За свой трудовой путь я несколько раз говорил бизнесу «нет». Каждый раз это было неприятно, потому что бизнес приходит к ИТ не за отказами, а за решениями. Но был один случай, когда именно отказ оказался самым выгодным решением для компании. И о нем я сейчас хочу рассказать.Жизненный кейсБлизился конец проекта, мы уже практически завершили внедрение нового биллинга. Бюджет был распределен, а команды готовились к запуску. Казалось, самое сложное позади. И... Read more ›
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The iQOO Z11 seems to finally be on its way to India, according to a new post on X by Nipun Marya, the brand's CEO in the country. The Z11 launched in China in March, and then made it to some other markets in May, but there are quite a few differences between the two versions. Now a tipster over on X says the Indian Z11 won't be the international... Read more ›
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Anthropic's paper and supplementary materials hint at consciousness, perhaps a bit hastily. Read more ›
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NoBroker Rewrites Playbook In Search Of Profits After a decade, the proptech unicorn is shifting from a pure listings engine… Read more ›
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Everyone bought the AI coding tools, but the productivity boom didn’t automatically follow. And Claudio González, CTO at Germany-headquartered software engineering and digital product consultancy intive claims the companies winning aren’t the ones with the best tools – they’re the ones who rebuilt the team around them. The tools arrived first. Across the industry, engineering ... Read more ›
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The NYT Strands hints and answers you need to make the most of your puzzling experience. Read more ›
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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 ›
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Here's the answer for "Wordle" #1844 on July 7 as well as a few hints, tips, and clues to help you solve it yourself. Read more ›
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Research from Thunes and Juniper Research finds cross-border payment delays are creating a "Digital Mobility Divide" that locks vulnerable workers out of global labour Read more ›
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You may not be aware that your air conditioning unit has a built-in rule that you need to follow to keep the system running well. Here's why. Read more ›
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Our favourite Amazon Prime Day power bank and USB-C charger deals include up to 43% off tested models from Iniu, Anker, Ugreen and more. Read more ›
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The White House appears to have removed the Department of Energy's consumer guidance on indoor temperatures during the hottest days. Read more ›
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The Harvard Study of Adult Development, which began in 1938 is widely acknowledged as longest in-depth study of physical and mental wellbeing ever run on a group of adults. The original participants fell into two groups: 268 Harvard College students and 456 young men from Boston. Over the decades that followed, the study grew to ... Read more Read more ›
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Following a teaser last month, vivo has now finally made the Y500 4G official in Pakistan and Nepal. The device comes with a 6.83-inch 1260x2800 AMOLED touchscreen with 120Hz refresh rate and 5,000-nit peak brightness. It's powered by the Unisoc T7300 SoC, paired with 8GB of RAM and 128/256GB of storage. On the rear there's a 50MP main camera and a 2MP decorative sensor, and on the front you get... Read more ›
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Understanding the modern needs of online security. Cloud-native security used to sound like a concern for highly technical teams working deep inside complex systems. That framing has changed. As companies build with containers, Kubernetes, APIs, serverless functions, and fast deployment cycles, security teams need a way to follow risk across all of it without piecing […] Read more ›
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Creatine is best known as a muscle-building supplement, but scientists are now investigating whether it could also help treat depression by boosting the brain's energy supply. A new review examined five randomized clinical trials involving 238 participants and found mixed results. Two studies, both involving women with major depressive disorder, reported that adding creatine to standard treatment improved symptoms, while three others found no meaningful benefit. Read more ›
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A common brain protein may be giving Alzheimer’s disease an unexpected way to spread, carrying toxic Tau proteins from damaged neurons into healthy ones. By blocking these harmful protein packages before they reach new cells, researchers believe it may one day be possible to slow the disease's relentless progression. Read more ›
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Researchers have uncovered an unexpected antiviral defense system in sea anemones that works very differently from the one humans use. The discovery suggests evolution developed multiple ways to combat viruses, challenging long-held ideas about how animal immune systems evolved. Read more ›
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Scientists have solved a long-standing mystery by discovering the missing genetic ingredient that helps melanoma cells become effectively immortal. The breakthrough could open the door to new treatments aimed at disrupting one of cancer's most important survival strategies. Read more ›
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Could something as simple as vitamin C help support a healthier aging brain? In a study of more than 2,000 older adults in Japan, researchers found that people with lower vitamin C levels in their blood also tended to have less gray matter and weaker connections in a key brain network involved in memory, attention, and other cognitive functions. Read more ›
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What if Sigmund Freud was onto something that modern neuroscience is only now beginning to explain? A new paper argues that today's leading theory of the brain—as a prediction machine constantly anticipating the world—closely mirrors ideas psychoanalysis has explored for more than a century. Read more ›
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A surprising discovery is overturning a long-held assumption about how the brain’s movement center works. Researchers found that two key cerebellar cell types—thought to be tightly linked—often don’t behave in predictable ways, even though one directly influences the other. The finding suggests scientists may have been relying on the wrong signals when studying disorders such as dystonia, ataxia, and tremor. Read more ›
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The rhythm of human laughter appears to have deep evolutionary roots shared with chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans. That ancient pattern may offer one of the clearest clues yet to how the vocal control needed for human speech gradually evolved. Read more ›
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A new quantum device can generate precisely controlled bursts of sound-like particles, or phonons, by forcing electrons through an ultra-thin crystal at extremely low temperatures. The surprising behavior pushes beyond the limits predicted by current theories, suggesting scientists need to rethink how energy moves through advanced materials. In the future, the breakthrough could lead to phonon lasers, faster communications, improved medical technologies, and powerful new sensing systems. Read more ›
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A decades-old puzzle about water has finally been unraveled. Researchers found that water trapped in tiny nanoscale spaces is not inherently more reactive. Instead, the intense pressures created inside these microscopic gaps explain most of the effect, while the surrounding material can further enhance water's chemistry if it interacts with the reaction products. Read more ›
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06.07.2026 23:54
Last update: 23:40 EDT.
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