Technology News | Page 42

The mystery of Mercury’s missing meteorites – and how we may have finally found some
Trump’s f-bomb: a psychologist explains why the president makes fast and furious statements
Bats get fat to survive hard times. But climate change is threatening their survival strategy
Australian-first data partnership to supercharge immune health research
Is your cat vocal or quiet? The explanation could be in their genes
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will help astronomers investigate dark matter, continuing the legacy of its pioneering namesake
3D-printed model of a 500-year-old prosthetic hand hints at life of a Renaissance amputee
eSafety boss wants YouTube included in the social media ban. But AI raises even more concerns for kids
Iran’s internet blackout left people in the dark. How does a country shut down the internet?
Sharks freeze when you turn them upside down – and there’s no good reason why
Leading global engagement to strengthen Australia’s life sciences sector
Archetyp was one of the dark web’s biggest drug markets. A global sting has shut it down
How do sleep trackers work, and are they worth it? A sleep scientist breaks it down
Here’s why the public needs to challenge the ‘good AI’ myth pushed by tech companies
How do atoms form? A physicist explains where the atoms that make up everything around come from
Astronomy has a major data problem – simulating realistic images of the sky can help train algorithms
Neuropathic pain has no immediate cause – research on a brain receptor may help stop this hard-to-treat condition
IFF Opens New State-of-the-art Office in Hyderabad, India
TIO welcomes ACCC’s call for action on external dispute resolution for digital platforms
Lenovo Ranks 8th in the Gartner® Supply Chain Top 25 for 2025
MIT researchers say using ChatGPT can rot your brain. The truth is a little more complicated
Vegetable And Onion Study Tour EOIs Open
Global warming is changing cloud patterns. That means more global warming
What is a ‘bunker buster’? An expert explains what the US dropped on Iran – and what might happen now
How mice ‘listen’ with their whiskers
A pink diamond just sold for over US$ 14 million – no wonder, when you look at the mysteries behind their chemistry
vivago 2.0: The All-in-One AI Tool That Makes Creativity Accessible to All
Kioxia Broadens 8th Generation BiCS FLASH(TM) SSD Portfolio with High-Performance Data Center NVMe(TM) SSDs to Maximize GPU Utilization in AI and HPC…
Technology to enforce teen social media ban is ‘effective’, trial says. But this is at odds with other evidence
Light-powered reactions could make the chemical manufacturing industry more energy-efficient
Could trees know when the summer solstice is?
Omdia: Inventory Adjustments to Trigger 10% Drop in Small and Medium Display Shipments in 2Q25
Alipay+ Launches World’s First Smart Glasses-Embedded Payment Solution
Juniper Networks Wins Four Awards at Interop Tokyo 2025
Migrating bogong moths use the stars and Earth’s magnetic field to find ancestral summer caves each year
Jaws at 50: how a single movie changed our perception of white sharks forever
Robot eyes are power hungry. What if we gave them tools inspired by the human brain?
Blinding lights: the hidden science behind gambling’s glow
50 years after ‘Jaws,’ researchers have retired the man-eater myth and revealed more about sharks’ amazing biology
LambdaTest Wins 2025 Digital Innovator Award from Intellyx
Total Economic Impact (TEI) Study Reveals 181% ROI and Payback in Less than 6 Months for Enterprises Using the SnapLogic Platform
Expansion of marriage rights to same-sex couples also expanded access to the psychological benefits that come with tying the knot
Smartphones are once again setting the agenda for justice as the Latino community documents ICE actions
Grok’s ‘white genocide’ responses show how generative AI can be weaponized
How pterosaurs learned to fly: scientists have been looking in the wrong place to solve this mystery
Can a foreign government hack WhatsApp? A cybersecurity expert explains how that might work
‘Guerrilla rewilding’ aims for DIY conservation – but it may do more harm than good
Sharks come in many different shapes and sizes. But they all follow a centuries-old mathematical rule