| Daily 
          Telegraph31/10/2025 04:10:26 PM
 
  Global Health Security 
  Letters to the Editor 
  Best private schools 
  The Chelsea Magazine Company 
  Hamish de Bretton-Gordon 
  Putin’s nuclear-powered crawler missile is a white elephant. The US holds the whip hand 
  Amazon to slash 14,000 jobs in cost-cutting drive 
  The internet is an unreliable mess that we have bet our lives on 
  Artificial intelligence is dangerous and it must be regulated 
  The best gaming laptops for 2025: I’ve put them all to the test and there’s a clear winner 
  Europe’s carmakers became hooked on Chinese chips. Now they can’t get them 
  Meta to axe hundreds of AI jobs after offering $100m signing bonuses 
  EU watchdog attacks Britain over iPhone ‘backdoor’ demand 
  Amazon failure exposes our dangerous digital dependencies 
  Legal battle delays Reeves’s bond market growth push 
  Hamish de Bretton-Gordon 
  Putin’s defences are no match for the Tomahawk missile: this has been proved in combat 
  World War Three is looming as ‘transparent ocean’ technology advances 
  The endless IOU powering Silicon Valley’s AI boom 
  Silicon Valley’s wokest billionaire gets on board the Trump train 
  Netherlands seizes Chinese-owned microchip maker to protect national security 
  Squeamish Labour can’t defend us against Chinese hackers 
  We were promised super-intelligence. We got a mountain of AI ‘slop’ 
  Fujitsu forced to pump £80m into UK arm as Horizon scandal hits orders 
  The Royal Navy will never have full carrier air wings without Vanquish jets 
  The best music streaming services rated and ranked for value for money 
  Britain’s fintech crown is slipping 
  Billionaire Revolut founder abandons Britain for UAE 
  Revolut vows to invest £3bn in UK as it hunts banking licence 
  Flying taxis are not pie in the sky, says boss eyeing take-off 
  Vice was the epitome of liberal hypocrisy – working there was like being in prison 
  Tech founder paralysed in bike accident set for windfall from £1bn sale 
  The City’s star fund-manager has lost his Midas touch 
  Apple and Microsoft’s valuation hit $4tn as stock market bubble fears grow 
  China ‘took UK secrets from Manchester chip factory’ 
  Record number of prostate cancer diagnoses after campaigns for men to come forward 
  This is why our democracy is failing – but there is a solution 
  Nvidia worth as much as German economy as value tops $5tn 
  Duty of Care campaign 
  Our Online Safety Act isn’t the problem, Labour is 
  Farage is siding with disgusting internet predators 
  Parents should have more control of children’s phones to keep them safe online, says Science Secretary 
  The best gaming laptops for 2025: I’ve put them all to the test and there’s a clear winner 
  Minecraft Experience London, review: You’re better off giving the kids an iPad for an hour 
  The billionaire free speech warrior who built Minecraft 
  Download the Telegraph App 
  Syndication and Commissioning 
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  The Chelsea Magazine Company 
 
 | Scientific 
        American 31/10/2025 04:10:11 PM
 
  AnimalsOctober 30, 2025Chimps Can Weigh Evidence and Update Their Beliefs Like Humans Do 
  Hurricane Melissa Was So Strong That It Shook the Earth Hundreds of Miles Away 
  Resuming U.S. Nuclear Tests Is Reckless and Dangerous, One Expert Says 
  ‘Dueling Dinosaurs’ Fossil Solves the Mystery of a ‘Mini T. rex’ 
  The Abortion Pill Is Safe. Scientists Fear an FDA Investigation Will Ignore Science 
  How an Error in Cult Classic Game Doom Sparked New Appreciation for Pi 
  Glowing Sperm Reveals How Female Mosquitos Control Sex 
  July 30, 2025Neurotic Cats, One-Eyed Aliens and Hypnosis for Liars Are among the Historical Gems Reported in Scientific American 
  Announcing the #SciAmInTheWild Photography Contest Short List 
  One Year after Scientific American’s First Issue, the Solar System Grew by a Planet 
  U.S. Science and Scientific American Have Weathered Attacks Before and Won 
  Mysterious Rocks Could Rewrite Evolution of Complex Life 
  The Slippery Slope of Ethical Collapse—And How Courage Can Reverse It 
  Which Anti-Inflammatory Supplements Actually Work? 
  The Sordid Mystery of a Somalian Meteorite Smuggled into China 
  Type 1 Diabetes Science Is Having a Moment 
  Diagnosing Type 1 Diabetes before Symptoms Strike 
  The Brain Science of Elusive ‘Aha! Moments’ 
  Building Intelligent Machines Helps Us Learn How Our Brain Works 
  Lifting the Veil on Near-Death Experiences 
  How the Brain ‘Constructs’ the Outside World 
  New Treatments Are Rewriting Our Understanding of Schizophrenia 
  The New Science of Controlling Lucid Dreams 
  MathematicsOctober 28, 2025This New Shape Breaks an ‘Unbreakable’ 3D Geometry Rule 
  MathematicsOctober 30, 2025How an Error in Cult Classic Game Doom Sparked New Appreciation for Pi 
  DefenseOctober 29, 2025Here’s How a Nuclear-Powered Cruise Missile Works 
  PaleontologyOctober 30, 2025‘Dueling Dinosaurs’ Fossil Solves the Mystery of a ‘Mini T. rex’ 
  Extraterrestrial LifeOctober 28, 2025UFOs Are Just One Explanation for Mysterious Patterns in Old Telescope Data 
  NeuroscienceOctober 29, 2025The Neuroscience behind the ‘Parenting Paradox’ of Happiness 
 BBC
 24/10/2025 05:50:15 AM
 
  Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins 
  Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon 
  Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier 
  Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate 
  UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s 
  Earth has more tree species than we thought 
  Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala 
  Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon 
  Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier 
  Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate 
  UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s 
  Earth has more tree species than we thought 
  Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala 
  Buried treasures threatened by climate change 
  Toxic 'forever chemicals' found in British otters 
  'Fragile win' at COP26 climate summit under threat 
  False banana offers hope for warming world 
  'Megaberg' dumped huge volume of fresh water 
  Musk's SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon 
  James Webb telescope reaches final position 
  Radar satellite's stunning map of UK and Ireland 
  Nasa fixes megarocket equipment glitch 
  Satellites key to understanding Pacific volcano 
  What is the quantum apocalypse? 
  US lab takes further step towards fusion goal 
  Should bad science be censored on social media? 
  How zoo vets are battling a deadly elephant virus 
  The illegal Brazilian gold you may be wearing 
  Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon 
  Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins 
  Power restored to all but 700 homes after storms 
  Insulate Britain activists jailed over M25 protest 
  Rats to be removed from Round Island in Scilly 
  EU moves to label nuclear and gas as sustainable 
  New Jurassic fossil find on 'Dinosaur Coast' beach 
  Walking and cycling face losing out in TfL cuts 
  Search for survivors after deadly Ecuador landslide 
  Climate group protests in Royal Courts of Justice 
  'I'm not afraid of a big pile of waste' 
  UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s 
 
 | New 
          Scientist 31/10/2025 04:10:11 PM
  PhysicsQuantum-inspired algorithm could help reveal hidden cosmic objectsNews 
  HealthUS public health system is flying blind after major cutsAnalysis 
  EnvironmentWhy Hurricane Melissa is one of the strongest Atlantic storms everNews 
  HealthMen may have to exercise more than women to get same heart benefitsNews 
  Student & graduate 
  Terms & conditions 
 | Nature
 31/10/2025 04:10:14 PM
 
  Explore articles by subject 
  ‘Teenage T. rex’ fossil is actually a different species The discovery of smaller predator Nanotyrannus could prompt a re-think of tyrannosaur evolution. news | 30 Oct 2025 
  Can IVF save the northern white rhino from extinction? — October’s best science images The month’s sharpest science shots, selected by Nature’s photo team. 
  This whale lives for centuries: its secret could help extend human lifespan A cold-activated protein that mends damaged DNA could play a part in keeping the bowhead whale in tip-top shape. 
  World’s smallest 3D bioprinter could help surgeons repair vocal cords Flexible device inspired by an elephant’s trunk can deliver healing hydrogels after surgery. 
  Single antivenom protects against 17 different snakebites news | 29 Oct 2025 
  7 basic science discoveries that changed the world news feature | 29 Oct 2025 
  From MRI to Ozempic: breakthroughs that show why fundamental research must be protected editorial | 29 Oct 2025 
  Open-source protein structure AI aims to match AlphaFold news | 28 Oct 2025 
  What now for the global plastics treaty? Maria Ivanova world view | 28 Oct 2025 
  How to spot fake scientists and stop them from publishing papers Journals are considering doing identity checks to expose fake authors — but there are downsides. 
  Bowhead whales can live for more than 200 years — this protein might be why NATURE PODCAST | 29 OCT 2025 
  This ‘impressive’ AI model predicted Hurricane Melissa’s perilous growth NEWS | 29 OCT 2025 
  Glowing sperm helps to reveal secrets of mosquito sex NEWS | 28 OCT 2025 
  This ‘minor’ bird flu strain has potential to spark human pandemic NEWS | 27 OCT 2025 
  We need a new Turing test to assess AI’s real-world knowledge Vinay K. Chaudhri world view 
  Trust and science: the essential elements missing from plastics treaty talks editorial 
  Trust and science: the essential elements missing from plastics treaty talks Editorial 
  From MRI to Ozempic: breakthroughs that show why fundamental research must be protected Editorial 
  7 basic science discoveries that changed the world News Feature 
  Ultrasound-driven artificial muscles can grasp, flex and swim News & Views 
  Building wet planets through high-pressure magma–hydrogen reactions Article 
  Continuous operation of a coherent 3,000-qubit system Article 
  T. rex debate settled: contested fossils are smaller rival species, not juveniles news and views 
  Wildfire smoke and its harmful effects will worsen with climate change research briefings 
  Molecular ‘glues’ and ‘bumpers’ on receptors can bias signalling inside the cell research briefings 
  Electronic paper could enable virtual reality with human-eye resolution research briefings 
  Cake to the rescue: how these PhD students are cooking up a sense of community One treat at a time, these graduate students are helping to raise funds for charitable organizations. 
  Cold plunge: how I gained hands-on experience in marine biology Matthew Kim learnt how to conduct research while studying in a small Canadian town for a semester. 
  Why we should limit the autonomy of AI-enabled weapons spotlight 
  ‘A real risk’: the rise of weapons that can act alone spotlight 
  Ancient graffiti and brain complexities: Books in brief book review 
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