Science & Space

New insights into Venusian volcanism from Earth's largest eruption

Recent evidence and the 2022 Mauna Loa eruption on Earth provide scientists with crucial data to determine if Venus remains volcanically active.

Science & Space

Space Force Accelerates Development of Orbital Missile Interceptors for Golden Dome by 2028

US Space Force launches a program to develop space-based missile interceptors for Golden Dome, aiming for a 2028 demonstration. Challenges include cost and technology.

Science & Space

Russia’s Soyuz 5 Rocket Achieves Successful Maiden Flight

Russia's Soyuz 5 rocket successfully completed its first launch on April 30, marking a milestone in domestic spaceflight with improved performance and reduced environmental impact.

Open Source

Breaking the Forking Trap: Meta’s Journey to Continuous WebRTC Upgrades

Meta overcame the WebRTC forking trap by building a dual-stack architecture for A/B testing, enabling continuous upgrades across 50+ use cases while improving performance, size, and security.

Linux & DevOps

How Meta's Unified AI Agents Are Transforming Hyperscale Efficiency

Meta's AI-driven Capacity Efficiency Program automates performance fixes and regression detection, saving hundreds of megawatts and engineering hours at hyperscale.

Digital Marketing

Unlocking Community Knowledge: How Facebook Groups Search Got Smarter

Facebook revamped Groups Search with hybrid retrieval and automated evaluation to fix discovery, consumption, and validation issues.

Health & Medicine

New Life for an Old Drug: DFMO Brings Hope to Children with Bachmann-Bupp Syndrome

DFMO, a forgotten sleeping sickness drug, shows early promise against ultra-rare genetic disorder BABS by targeting the root genetic cause, but faces regulatory and supply hurdles.

Science & Space

How Freezing and Thawing May Have Jumpstarted Life on Early Earth

Freeze-thaw cycles helped lipid bubbles fuse, capture DNA, and mix molecules, offering a new explanation for life's origin on early Earth.

Science & Space

Five Images of the Same Star: How 'SN Winny' Could Crack the Cosmic Speedometer

A rare lensed supernova, SN Winny, appears five times due to gravitational lensing. Measuring time delays between images directly yields the universe's expansion rate, potentially resolving the Hubble constant tension.

Networking

Unearthing Ancient Trade: How Spanish Bronze Age Mines Solved a Scandinavian Metal Mystery

Recent excavations in southwestern Spain uncovered six Bronze Age mines, providing evidence that copper, silver, and lead from these sites supplied Scandinavia, solving a long-standing metal mystery.

Science & Space

Wave-Like Behavior of Antimatter Atoms Observed for the First Time

For the first time, scientists have observed wave-like interference in positronium, an exotic antimatter atom. This breakthrough confirms quantum wave-particle duality for antimatter and opens doors to testing gravity on antimatter.

Science & Space

Meet Vasuki Indicus: The Giant Prehistoric Snake That Rivals Titanoboa

A 47-million-year-old snake discovered in India, Vasuki indicus, may be one of the largest ever, reaching 15 meters long and rivaling Titanoboa.

Health & Medicine

Unveiling the Molecular Dance: How Killer T Cells Precision-Strike Cancer

Scientists captured the first 3D view of killer T cells forming a precise contact zone to destroy cancer cells, revealing molecular choreography that could transform immunotherapy.

Science & Space

Warm Waters Are Sneaking Toward Antarctica: What Scientists Just Discovered

Warm circumpolar deep water has expanded 30% in volume and moved 60 km closer to Antarctica over 20 years, threatening ice shelves and sea levels.

Science & Space

The Nose’s Hidden Atlas: New Research Reveals How Smell Receptors Are Mapped

Scientists discovered smell receptors in the nose are arranged in orderly, overlapping stripes—a hidden map mirrored in the brain, revealing a coordinated olfactory system from nose to neural circuits.

Science & Space

The Evening Stress-Gut Connection: Why Late-Night Bites Worsen Digestion

Chronic stress combined with late-night eating (after 9pm) increases constipation and diarrhea risk by disrupting digestion and reducing gut bacteria diversity, according to a large study.

Science & Space

The Hidden Origins of Australia's Twelve Apostles: A Q&A on Their Rise from the Sea

New research reveals the Twelve Apostles were pushed up from the ocean by tectonic forces, not just erosion. They preserve ancient climate clues from 14 million years ago.

Science & Space

Quantum Teleportation Breakthrough: Photon State Transferred Across 270 Meters Between Quantum Dots

Scientists teleported a photon's state between two quantum dots over 270 meters via open air, a first step toward practical quantum networks.

Reviews & Comparisons

Smart Water Bottles and Kidney Stones: Why Hydration Programs Fall Short

A study tested smart water bottles and financial incentives to boost hydration for kidney stone prevention, but saw no significant reduction in recurrence, highlighting the need for personalized strategies.

Science & Space

The Truth Behind Centaur: Does AI Really Think or Just Memorize?

Psychologists debate unified vs. modular mind. AI Centaur claimed to mimic human thinking across 160 tasks. New research shows it only memorized patterns, not understood them. Implications for AI evaluation and development.

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