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The AI Ghost in the Nuclear War Machine

Daniel Boguslaw

The U.S. Space Force has already handed out billions in contracts for prototype interceptor missiles, but the escalatory potential for the system is not found in explosive hardware, but the detection ...[Continue Reading]

The New Republic

2 days ago

Recent News (General)

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This $789 Portable Monitor Still Works Outdoors With Its Backlight Off

JC Torres

Portable monitors have become a practical extension of the laptop workflow, letting you carry a second screen to coffee shops, airports, and co-working spaces. The catch is that almost every portable ...[Continue Reading]

Yanko Design

1 day ago

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Sun Pharma to acquire Innovcare Lifesciences for $28.7m

Salong Debbarma

Sun Pharmaceutical Industries has agreed to purchase India-based Innovcare Lifesciences in a deal valued at approximately Rs2.71bn ($28.7m). According to a regulatory filing, Sun Pharma will buy the ...[Continue Reading]

Pharmaceutical Technology

1 day ago


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COSMIC's new design might just give Apple a run for its money

Dipan Saha

Liquid Glass changed things, for better or worse. While Im personally not a fan of Apples implementation, there is definitely something to be had here, which makes it a bit appealing when implemented ...[Continue Reading]

MakeUseOf

1 day ago


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Ebola outbreak latest, World Cup heat risks and dad brains

Rachel Feltman, Andrea Thompson, Tanya Lewis, Sushmita Pathak, Alex Sugiura

Rachel Feltman: Happy Monday, listeners, Happy Pride and Happy Knicks in Five! For Scientific Americans Science Quickly, Im Rachel Feltman. Youre listening to our weekly science news roundup. Let ...[Continue Reading]

Scientific American

1 day ago


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In 1946, a captured Nazi V-2 rocket launched from White Sands carried a 35mm motion picture camera to an altitude of 105 kilometres, and the grainy black-and-white frames it brought back became the first photographs of Earth taken from space years befor

Space Daily Editorial Team

On October 24, 1946, a 35mm DeVry motion picture camera bolted into the nose of a captured German V-2 rocket clicked through a single frame every second-and-a-half as the missile arced 105 kilometres ...[Continue Reading]

Space Daily

1 day ago