Academic fraud may be the symptom of a more systemic problem
(news.ycombinator.com)
151.
152.
AI Slop Is Making the Internet Fake-Happy
(wired.com)
153.
Early-onset cancer fuels calls for wider screening — but at what cost?
(feeds.nature.com)
154.
Brainwide blood volume reflects opposing neural populations
(feeds.nature.com)
155.
What China’s Great Green Wall can teach the world
(feeds.nature.com)
156.
Dozens of AI disease-prediction models were trained on dubious data
(feeds.nature.com)
157.
In-N-Out’s Owner Says the Chain Will Never Offer Online Ordering. Here’s Why.
(feeds.feedburner.com)
158.
What It’s Like to Live With an Experimental Brain Implant
(spectrum.ieee.org)
159.
Why Do ChatGPT Users Keep Committing Mass Shootings?
(futurism.com)
161.
What Orbán’s fall from power means for research around the world
(feeds.nature.com)
162.
The air is full of DNA — here’s what scientists are using it for
(feeds.nature.com)
163.
164.
165.
166.
167.
168.
Squishy Photonic Switches Promise Fast Low-Power Logic
(spectrum.ieee.org)
169.
Squishy Photonic Switches Promise Fast Low Power Logic
(spectrum.ieee.org)
170.
“Giant superatoms” could finally solve quantum computing’s biggest problem
(sciencedaily.com)
171.
Human scientists trounce the best AI agents on complex tasks
(feeds.nature.com)
172.
How Good is Windows on Arm With Snapdragon X?
(slashdot.org)
173.
174.
175.
176.
177.
178.
Workplaces are pushing out working mothers—and paying the cost
(feeds.feedburner.com)
179.
180.
Your article about AI doesn’t need AI art
(theverge.com)