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241.
Testing for ‘Bad Cholesterol’ Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story (wired.com)
242.
Passengers from hantavirus ship arrive in US; 3 people in biocontainment (arstechnica.com)
243.
This new Android handheld has a crazy design and sub-$90 price tag (androidauthority.com)
244.
Implementing advanced AI technologies in finance (technologyreview.com)
245.
An idiot’s guide to lead optimisation for proteins (news.ycombinator.com)
246.
An idiot's guide to lead optimisation for proteins (news.ycombinator.com)
247.
Gen Z reports early cognitive decline. Here’s what to know about the brain rot epidemic—and what to do about it (feeds.feedburner.com)
248.
Residents Furious After Their Town Board Rejected an OpenAI Data Center, But a Billionaire Developer Forced It Through Anyway (futurism.com)
249.
Fears grow that age verification coming to VPNs as a British research firm labels them a 'loophole' — one app developer saw downloads surge by 1,800% in just the first month after the UK's Online Safety Act took effect (tomshardware.com)
250.
Cybertruck Recalled to Keep Its Wheels From Flying Off While Driving (futurism.com)
251.
The game that makes me actually want to exercise (theverge.com)
252.
Tesla’s Latest Recall? Wheels May Fall Off Cybertrucks (wired.com)
253.
Apple TV has its best reviewed shows of the year airing right now (9to5mac.com)
254.
There’s a Long-Shot Proposal to Protect California Workers From AI (wired.com)
255.
There's a Long Shot Proposal to Protect California Workers From AI (wired.com)
256.
North Korean fake remote worker scam lands two Americans 18-month prison sentences for hosting laptops — US firms unknowingly shipped laptops to “employees” who secretly worked from overseas via remote desktop, generating $1.2 million for Pyongyang (tomshardware.com)
257.
Tesla is recalling its cheaper Cybertruck because the wheels might fall off (news.ycombinator.com)
258.
Tesla is recalling its cheaper Cybertruck because the wheels might fall off (theverge.com)
259.
‘Undruggable’ cancer proteins meet their match (feeds.nature.com)
260.
OpenAI’s WebRTC problem (news.ycombinator.com)
261.
Best Printers for Any Home-Office Need (2026): Brother, HP, and More (wired.com)
262.
College student hacks Taiwan high-speed rail line with software defined radios, stopping four trains — 19 years without crypto key rotation ends in predictable result as hacker sails through 7 layers of protection (tomshardware.com)
263.
Billionaire Declares That “Tax the Rich” Is Hate Speech That Offends Him Horribly (futurism.com)
264.
Student brought multiple Taiwan high-speed trains to a standstill with handheld radio spoofing attack (techspot.com)
265.
Author Correction: Proteasome-guided haem signalling axis contributes to T cell exhaustion (feeds.nature.com)
266.
Inkscape 1.4.4 Is Out (news.ycombinator.com)
267.
Proton Meet (news.ycombinator.com)
268.
The Pentagon wants lasers. Can anyone build them fast enough? (feeds.feedburner.com)
269.
Revealed: the mysterious ‘dark’ proteins that might play a big role in biology (feeds.nature.com)
270.
The lights are out but someone’s home: sensory processing in anaesthetized human brains (feeds.nature.com)
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