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Telegraph
28/03/2025 02:50:18 PM
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Tesla admits glued-on panels are falling off Cybertrucks
The best MacBooks, tried and tested by an expert – which should you buy?
Trump ally vows to invest $5bn in Britain
Driverless cars slapped with parking tickets after breaking rules
If social media is making Britons sick, big tech should foot the bill
We must spend more on Defence, but we need bang for our buck. Here’s an idea
iPad mini 7 review: is Apple’s new small tablet a giant leap forward?
Trump has ‘bailed out’ crypto. The US taxpayer risks being the biggest loser
Call centres using AI to ‘whiten’ Indian accents
The Musk acolyte protecting Earth from city-killing asteroids
US Navy Top Guns have a new missile and it is shocking the Chinese
Trump tells Apple to scrap ‘hoax’ diversity targets
I’m slashing red tape to fix the NHS
Remember your first mobile phone? Prepare for a nostalgic rush
Britain is waging war on Apple – it is already backfiring
Apple removing iCloud encryption will only be the start. The Home Office must think again
Is AI making us less intelligent?
Tesla rival once valued at $30bn collapses amid electric car downturn
The smartphone setting draining your battery
Our feckless civil servants are wasting money on tech fads
The invisible companies making millions from your restaurant tips
Gavin Williamson distances himself from troubled fintech
Tencent offloads stake in British challenger bank
The aerospace start-up trying to crack the cause of Concorde’s demise
This investment trust has beaten global markets over the past decade – and it’s on sale
‘I have £40k – can I use it to cash in on Labour’s private school VAT raid?’
Reeves’s £700m tax break for US tech giants to avoid trade war
Trump ally vows to invest $5bn in Britain
The British investor who predicted the US stock slump – and the next crash he sees coming
Home help has its place but I like putting out my own bins, thank you
‘Fat shaming’ filter removed from TikTok over mental health concerns
Should we give human rights to worms? Don’t be absurd
Duty of Care campaign
Parents should have more control of children’s phones to keep them safe online, says Science Secretary
Bereaved parents will get access to children’s social media accounts in duty of care victory
Bereaved parents accuse Government of ‘watering down’ online safety laws
The best gaming chairs of 2025, tried and tested
Cate Blanchett’s $120 million dystopian disaster: everything that went wrong with Borderlands
Why the Rolling Stones – and Laura Kuenssberg – are rocking Roblox
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Scientific
American
28/03/2025 02:50:07 PM
Cross CurrentsMarch 21, 2025Walking Shouldn’t Be So Dangerous in the U.S.
Mouse-to-Mouse Resuscitation: Rodents Try to Revive Unconscious Buddies
Measles Cases Are Surging—These 6 Charts Reveal Why
Can Earth’s Rotation Generate Electricity? Physicists Divided over Controversial Idea
Stunning Antarctic Sea Creatures Discovered after Iceberg Breaks Away
Hegseth Orders Elimination of Climate Defense Planning, but Still Wants Extreme Weather Preparation
Math Reveals the Formula for a Hollywood Blockbuster
The Science behind Tariffs and How They Work
Dark Matter Might Lurk in Its Own Shadow World
The Nation’s Chief Engineers Turn to Nature to Improve Flood Protection
New Treatments Are Rewriting Our Understanding of Schizophrenia
The Horned and Armored Dinosaurs Were the Gladiators of the Mesozoic
After Hiding My Undiagnosed Neurological Condition for Decades, I Finally Found Answers
NASA’s Beloved Voyager Probes Find Puzzles beyond the Solar System
Inside the AI Competition That Decoded an Ancient Herculaneum Scroll
Building Intelligent Machines Helps Us Learn How Our Brain Works
God Chatbots Offer Spiritual Insights on Demand. What Could Go Wrong?
Artificial Intelligence Could Finally Let Us Talk with Animals
Will Machines Ever Become Conscious?
Scientists Are Putting ChatGPT Brains Inside Robot Bodies. What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Climate ChangeMarch 21, 2025Hegseth Orders Elimination of Climate Defense Planning, but Still Wants Extreme Weather Preparation
Public HealthMarch 19, 2025RFK, Jr. Wants to Let Bird Flu Spread on Poultry Farms. Why Experts Are Concerned
BehaviorMarch 20, 2025Mouse-to-Mouse Resuscitation: Rodents Try to Revive Unconscious Buddies
NutritionMarch 14, 2025Scientist’s Study Led FDA to Ban Red No. 3 Food Dye. Yet He Says It Is Safe
NeuroscienceMarch 18, 2025After Hiding My Undiagnosed Neurological Condition for Decades, I Finally Found Answers
CosmologyMarch 19, 2025Shocking Dark Energy Findings Challenge the Standard Model of the Universe
BBC
08/02/2025 02:50:21 AM
15:24 6 FebruaryHow do cold weather health alerts work?, published at 15:24 6 FebruaryHow do cold weather health alerts work?
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New
Scientist
28/03/2025 02:50:07 PM
SocietyScientists push back against US attacks on science at physics summitNewsSubscriber-only
HealthTattoos are being linked to some cancers. Are they really a risk?AnalysisSubscriber-only
SpaceDark energy isn't what we thought – and that may transform the cosmosNewsFree
HealthPopular TikTok videos about ADHD are full of misinformationNewsFree
Student & graduate
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Nature
28/03/2025 02:50:10 PM
Babies do make memories — so why can’t we recall our earliest years? MRI scans show that the brains of infants and toddlers can encode memories, even if we don’t remember them as adults.
Measles is surging in the US: how bad could it get? news explainer | 19 Mar 2025
‘Boggles the mind’: US defence department slashes research on emerging threats news | 21 Mar 2025
Is dark energy getting weaker? Fresh data bolster shock finding news | 19 Mar 2025
Immune cells ‘bandage’ wounds with bacteria-trapping goo news | 19 Mar 2025
Governments must stop hoarding climate data Santiago Beguería world view | 18 Mar 2025
World’s tiniest LED display has pixels smaller than a virus See images of another tiny display with pixels the size of a human hair.
Why humans have puzzle-shaped cells The specialized cells that let lymph leak (and why that's a good thing)
Mini-satellite paves the way for quantum messaging anywhere on Earth NEWS | 19 MAR 2025
AI could soon tackle projects that take humans weeks NEWS | 19 MAR 2025
Can Earth’s rotation generate power? Physicists divided over controversial claim NEWS | 19 MAR 2025
Light pollution threatens fleet of world-class telescopes in Atacama Desert NEWS | 19 MAR 2025
Vaccines save lives. Leaders must champion them Attacks on vaccines and the cancellation of research into what causes vaccine hesitancy puts people in harm’s way.
Space debris is falling from the skies. We need to tackle this growing danger comment
Don’t wait out four hard years: speak truth to power Arthur Caplan world view
Cleaning up space: how satellites and telescopes can live together Editorial
Vaccines save lives. Leaders must champion them Editorial
The biggest machine in science: inside the fight to build the next giant particle collider News Feature
Fish gills and human ears share the same genetic blueprint News & Views
Disorder-assisted real–momentum topological photonic crystal Article
Optimizing generative AI by backpropagating language model feedback Article
New antifungal breaks the mould A bacterium makes a molecule that kills drug-resistant fungi in an unusual way — by targeting various phospholipid molecules in membranes.
Ancient peat reveals that sea level surged rapidly twice at the end of the last ice age news and views
What is the best type of tree to use for forest restoration? news and views
An experiment in mass education using satellite TV news and views
Fossilized dinosaur cells that defied the ravages of time — 20 years since a key discovery news and views
How researchers can work fairly with Indigenous and local knowledge Scientists around the world are recognizing that their research method isn’t the only way. career feature
Our experience of teaching neuroscience in a maximum-security prison Making our way through security each week is a slog, but teaching incarcerated people has been an incredible career experience.
How a PhD travel fellowship enriched an international cell-biology meeting The recipients, all from African countries, were not the only beneficiaries, says Rafiou Agoro.
How ‘animal methods bias’ is affecting research careers career feature
I spent two years organizing an international conference. How do I get compensated for my work? career feature
Disconnections An antisocial network. futures
Rock hunters, tree huggers and taxi drivers: Books in brief Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.
Medical records from the Center for the Study of Temporal Disorders, Pediatric Department The doctor will see you now (and then).
The untamed river and the Moog: Books in brief book review
A radical manifesto for truth book review
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