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People with higher levels of metals found in their blood and urine may be more likely to be diagnosed with -- and die from -- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, a new study suggests. Investigators also discovered that participants working in occupations with a higher likelihood of metal exposure had increased levels of metal mixtures in their blood and urine. Researchers say by avoiding high risk activities associated with metal exposures, individuals might lower their overall exposure and potentially m
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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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Over the past two weeks, I have built more apps and utilities for myself than I have downloaded software in months. Read more ›
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I've been on social media for years, and iOS 27's overhauled Shared Albums is the first thing to make me wonder why I bother. Read more ›
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Our writer swapped from Spotify to Apple Music and found a perk he loved, but it has a really annoying downside that is kind of ruining it for everyone. Read more ›
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With the pilot completed, the star is in the same boat as all the fans hoping that Ryan Coogler's reimagining of the '90s show will be picked up to series. Read more ›
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Reddit is deploying large language models against brands and marketers planting fake conversations that could later surface as trusted recommendations in ChatGPT and Gemini. Read more ›
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The Chevrolet Colorado is a solid mid-sized pickup, well-regarded by professional automotive experts. However, it's not the only game in town. Read more ›
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If your Prime Day purchases included a new desk, TV stand, bookshelf, or other furniture you still haven’t assembled, Hoto’s PixelDrive cordless screwdriver can help speed up the process. It’s currently on sale for $59.99 ($20 off) at Amazon, matching its best price to date. From tightening loose screws on furniture to repairing electronics, the […] Read more ›
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With watchOS 27 beta 3, Apple added support for Siri AI and the Siri app, so Apple Watch users can now use the features right from their wrist. Apple said Siri AI would be coming to the watch back when watchOS 27 was first introduced, but the feature wasn't live until now. The Dynamic App Grid that pops up when the Digital Crown is pressed displays the Siri app in... Read more ›
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Workers in the company’s consumer tech division are protesting massive bonuses the chip division is set to collect this year. Read more ›
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When you're shopping for refrigerators, you'll run into various models at different sizes measured in cubic feet. Here's how to find what you need. Read more ›
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У статьи есть 1 часть: Стягивай куда нужно: Activation Steering Tutorial Привет, друзья! В первой части мы разобрали базовую идею steering-а и реализовали её тремя способами: через сырые PyTorch hooks, через nnsight и через pyvene. Сработала ли наша база? Да — мы это видели. Нормально ли? Нет — и это мы тоже видели: вектор оказался инвертирован, эффект был умеренным, а на некоторых промптах не было никакого. Что с этим делать... Read more ›
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Thankfully, Samsung has confirmed a fix for Good Lock's screenshot animation glitch. Read more ›
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Some of the biggest backers of OpenAI and its rivals are pooling their money in an offshoot of Thrive Capital that buys controlling stakes in accounting and other services firms and aims to transform them with AI. Thrive Holdings, a one-year-old holding company started by OpenAI investor Thrive Capital, is raising around $2 billion from investors including Altimeter, D1 Capital Partners and SoftBank, according to a person familiar with the... Read more ›
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If you missed some of the earlier summer tool sales, Home Depot and Ryobi are offering BOGO products until August. Here's what's on offer until then. Read more ›
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A note on what follows: we are writers and editors reading the research, not clinicians or psychologists. These are patterns measured across thousands of people, and one of the studies below is a survey rather than an experiment. A pattern in a crowd is not a prescription for any one reader’s inner life. Gratitude journaling ... Read more Read more ›
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A new AI-powered framework could transform how astronomers measure the expansion of the Universe. By analyzing images of Type Ia supernovae and modeling their environments in unprecedented detail, researchers can estimate cosmic distances with near-spectroscopic accuracy. The technique is designed for the flood of data expected from the upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory and may greatly improve our understanding of dark energy. Read more ›
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Scientists are raising concerns that we may be overlooking evidence of extraterrestrial life even when it is present. Hidden biosignatures, limitations in detection technology, and assumptions about what life should look like can all create dangerous false negatives. The researchers say future missions should focus not only on finding life, but also on understanding how signs of life could be missed. Read more ›
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Scientists have finally confirmed the origin of the mysterious Silverpit Crater beneath the North Sea. New evidence shows that an asteroid about 160 meters wide struck the seabed roughly 43 to 46 million years ago. The impact triggered a tsunami more than 100 meters high and left behind a crater that geologists debated for years. 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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06.07.2026 17:01
Last update: 16:55 EDT.
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