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Month: November 2025

Smithsonian Magazine

“Smithsonian Magazine-the Weekender:  Ethiopian volcano erupts for the firs time in nearly 12,000 years of scientific records.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 30 November 2025, 2046 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

Sunday, November 30, 2025 View in Browser
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Smithsonian Magazine: Weekender Newsletter
The Real History Behind 'Hamnet' and the Tragically Short Life of William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway's Only Son image
Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes in director Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet, a Focus Features release. (Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 Focus Features LLC)

The Real History Behind ‘Hamnet’ and the Tragically Short Life of William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway’s Only Son

A film adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 novel, starring Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley as the Bard and his wife, imagines the lives of the Shakespeare family in fantastical and heartbreaking fashion
Kayla Randall
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FEATURED ARTICLES
Ethiopian Volcano Erupts for the First Time in Nearly 12,000 Years of Scientific Records image

Ethiopian Volcano Erupts for the First Time in Nearly 12,000 Years of Scientific Records

In Her 70s, Grandma Moses Began Painting Lovely Scenes of Rural Life. Then She Became an Icon image

In Her 70s, Grandma Moses Began Painting Lovely Scenes of Rural Life. Then She Became an Icon

Stunningly Well-Preserved Neanderthal Skull Suggests the Species' Large Noses Weren't Adapted for the Cold image

Stunningly Well-Preserved Neanderthal Skull Suggests the Species’ Large Noses Weren’t Adapted for the Cold

Listen to a Lion’s Second Type of Roar, Which Was Just Discovered by Scientists image

Listen to a Lion’s Second Type of Roar, Which Was Just Discovered by Scientists

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Three Brothers Found a 1939 Copy of 'Superman No. 1' in Their Mother's Attic. It Just Became the Most Expensive Comic Book Ever Sold image

Three Brothers Found a 1939 Copy of ‘Superman No. 1’ in Their Mother’s Attic. It Just Became the Most Expensive Comic Book Ever Sold

These Ancient Log Boats Unearthed in England Were Each Carved From a Single Tree Trunk 3,000 Years Ago image

These Ancient Log Boats Unearthed in England Were Each Carved From a Single Tree Trunk 3,000 Years Ago

German Archaeologists Discovered the Iconic Bust of Nefertiti in an Ancient Egyptian Sculptor’s Studio. Find Out Why Their Discovery Is Now One of Archaeology’s Most Controversial image

FROM THE ARCHIVE

German Archaeologists Discovered the Iconic Bust of Nefertiti in an Ancient Egyptian Sculptor’s Studio. Find Out Why Their Discovery Is Now One of Archaeology’s Most Controversial

The Ten Best History Books of 2025 image

The Ten Best History Books of 2025

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Just as the Italian Art of Glassblowing Was on the Verge of Shattering, a Talented Craftsman in Murano Emerged to Revive It image

Just as the Italian Art of Glassblowing Was on the Verge of Shattering, a Talented Craftsman in Murano Emerged to Revive It

A Famed Street Photographer Chronicled What Christmas Looks Like Across America Over the Course of Decades image

A Famed Street Photographer Chronicled What Christmas Looks Like Across America Over the Course of Decades

Archaeologists Find Evidence of a Bronze Age City in Kazakhstan image

Archaeologists Find Evidence of a Bronze Age City in Kazakhstan

See the 'Mona Lisa of Illuminated Manuscripts,' a 600-Year-Old Bible Covered in Intricate Illustrations image

See the ‘Mona Lisa of Illuminated Manuscripts,’ a 600-Year-Old Bible Covered in Intricate Illustrations

This Toddler Was the First Person to Receive a Test Treatment for a Rare Genetic Disorder. Nine Months Later, His Progress Is Inspiring Hope image

This Toddler Was the First Person to Receive a Test Treatment for a Rare Genetic Disorder. Nine Months Later, His Progress Is Inspiring Hope

One of the World’s Oldest Calculators Was Up for Auction. Then, Scientists Rallied and Temporarily Blocked Its Sale image

One of the World’s Oldest Calculators Was Up for Auction. Then, Scientists Rallied and Temporarily Blocked Its Sale

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on November 30, 2025Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy NewsTags Ethiopian volcano, Smithsonian Magazine-The WeekenderLeave a comment on Smithsonian Magazine

Live Science Newsletter

“Pectoral with coins:  ‘One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from mid-sixth century.'”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 30 November 2025, 1336 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Live Science Newsletter.”

https://newsletter.smartbrief.com/servlet/encodeServlet?issueid=575D3D87-57C1-4033-A1FE-D0617AF1FBAE&sid=B61BC6F9-DEC9-4AD1-8BD3-FF27A86CCC5D

URL–https://www.livescience.com.

Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

Created for kh6jrm@gmail.com | Web Version
November 30, 2025
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Sunday science
From amazing animals to the wonders of space, here’s this week’s selection of hidden gems you might have missed.
Astonishing artifacts

Pectoral with coins: 'One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from the mid-sixth century'
Pectoral with coins: ‘One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from the mid-sixth century’
This sixth-century pectoral comprises 14 Byzantine gold coins and a gold disc gathered over two centuries.
Read More
Space photo of the week

Live Science
Giant ‘diamond ring’ sparkles 4,500 light-years away in the Cygnus constellation
NASA’s SOFIA observatory captured a rare image of a glowing gas ring in Cygnus X — a vast star-forming region 4,500 light-years away.
Read More
Diagnostic dilemma

Live Science
A man’s muscles looked strangely deformed. Doctors found they were leaking calcium into his blood.
A man showed up to the hospital with vomiting, weakness, failing kidneys and sky-high calcium. The culprit was a muscle-enhancing oil he injected into his chest and arms years ago.
Read More
Earth from space

Live Science
Twin tornadoes tear perfectly parallel tracks through Mississippi during deadly ‘superstorm’
A satellite photo from March shows a pair of parallel tornado tracks in Mississippi, leftover from a deadly storm system that spawned over 100 twisters in more than a dozen U.S. states.
Read More
In science history this week

Live Science
Iconic ‘Lucy’ fossil discovered, transforming our understanding of human evolution — Nov. 24, 1974
On an expedition in the Awash Valley in Ethiopia, two anthropologists uncovered the bones of a 3.2 million-year-old human ancestor. The iconic “Lucy” fossil would reveal much about our species’ tangled family tree.
Read more

Astronomy graduate student Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovers a signal of 'little green men,' but her adviser gets the Nobel Prize — Nov. 28, 1967
Astronomy graduate student Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovers a signal of ‘little green men,’ but her adviser gets the Nobel Prize — Nov. 28, 1967
Astronomer Jocelyn Bell Burnell detected a strange signal from outer space that would lead to the discovery of the radio pulsar. The signal, once described as coming from “little green men,” would earn her adviser the Nobel Prize in physics in 1974.
Read more
Feed your curiosity: Sign up to our other newsletters for the latest discoveries, mind-bending mysteries and expert insight from Live Science.
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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on November 30, 2025Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy NewsTags Live Science NewsletterLeave a comment on Live Science Newsletter

Ars Technica-All Content

“Achieving lasting remission from HIV.  HP plans to save millions by laying off thousands, ramping up AI use.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 29 November 2025, 2053 UTC.

Content and Source provided by email subscription from https://feedly.com.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

Ars Technica – All content

472K followers63 articles per week
#tech
107

Most popular

Achieving lasting remission for HIV

by Andrea Teagle, Knowable Magazine / 7h
Around the world, some 40 million people are living with HIV. And though progress in treatment means the infection isn’t the death sentence it once was, researchers have never been able to bring about a cure. Instead, HIV-positive people must take a cocktail of antiretroviral drugs for the rest of their lives. But in 2025, researchers reported a breakthrough that suggests that a “functional” cure

HP plans to save millions by laying off thousands, ramping up AI use

100+by Scharon Harding / 3d
HP Inc. said that it will lay off 4,000 to 6,000 employees in favor of AI deployments, claiming it will help save $1 billion in annualized gross run rate by the end of its fiscal 2028. HP expects to complete the layoffs by the end of that fiscal year. The reductions will largely hit product development, internal operations, and customer support, HP CEO Enrique Lores said during an earnings call o

Before a Soyuz launch Thursday someone forgot to secure a 20-ton service platform

Baikonur launch pad damaged

•

100+by Eric Berger / 1d
A Soyuz rocket launched on Thursday carrying Roscosmos cosmonauts Sergei Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikayev, as well as NASA astronaut Christopher Williams, for an eight-month mission to the International Space Station. The trio of astronauts arrived at the orbiting laboratory without incident. However, on the ground, there was a serious problem during the launch with the ground systems that suppor

Yesterday

Here are the best Black Friday deals we can find

by Lee Hutchinson / 1d
Earlier in 2025 we celebrated Prime Day—the yearly veneration of the greatest Transformer of all, Optimus Prime (in fact, Optimus Prime is so revered that we often celebrate Prime Day twice!). But in the fall, as the evenings lengthen and the air turns chill, we pause to remember a much more somber occasion: Black Friday, the day Optimus Prime was cruelly cut down by the treacherous hand of his a

Reintroduced carnivores’ impacts on ecosystems are still coming into focus

53by Jake Bolster, Inside Climate News / 1d
When the US Fish and Wildlife Service reintroduced 14 gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park in 1995, the animals were, in some ways, stepping into a new world. After humans hunted wolves to near-extinction across the Western US in the early 20th century, the carnivore’s absence likely altered ecosystems and food webs across the Rocky Mountains. Once wolves were reintroduced to the landscape, s

We put the new pocket-size vinyl format to the test—with mixed results

32by Chris Foresman / 1d
We recently looked at Tiny vinyl , a new miniature vinyl single format developed through a collaboration between a toy industry veteran and the world’s largest vinyl record manufacturer. The 4-inch singles are pressed in a process nearly identical to standard 12-inch LPs or 7-inch singles, except everything is smaller. They have a standard-size spindle hole and play at 33⅓ RPM, and they hold up t

Nov 27, 2025

Blast from the past: 15 movie gems of 1985

57by Jennifer Ouellette / 2d
Peruse a list of films released in 1985 and you’ll notice a surprisingly high number of movies that have become classics in the ensuing 40 years. Sure, there were blockbusters like Back to the Future, The Goonies, Pale Rider, The Breakfast Club and Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome , but there were also critical arthouse favorites like Kiss of the Spider Woman and Akira Kurosawa’s masterpiece, Ran . Si

Four-inch worm hatches in woman’s forehead, wriggles to her eyelid

by Beth Mole / 2d
If you need some motivation to keep from eating too much this Thanksgiving, here it is: Doctors in Romania pulled an 11 cm (4.3 inch) living, writhing round worm from a woman’s left eyelid. According to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine , the worm likely hatched from a hard lump in her right temple, which the woman recalled first spotting a month beforehand. She also noticed that th

Nov 26, 2025

ULA aimed to launch up to 10 Vulcan rockets this year—it will fly just once

40by Stephen Clark / 2d
Around this time last year, officials at United Launch Alliance projected 2025 would be their busiest year ever. Tory Bruno, ULA’s chief executive, told reporters the company would launch as many as 20 missions this year, with roughly an even split between the legacy Atlas V launcher and its replacement — the Vulcan rocket. Now, it’s likely that ULA will close out 2025 with six flights —five with

Solar’s growth in US almost enough to offset rising energy use

42by John Timmer / 3d
Worries about the US grid’s ability to handle the surge in demand due to data center growth have made headlines repeatedly over the course of 2025. And, early in the year, demand for electricity had surged by nearly 5 percent compared to the year prior, suggesting the grid might truly be facing a data center apocalypse. And that rise in demand had a very unfortunate effect: Coal use rose for the

RFK Jr.’s new CDC deputy director prefers “natural immunity” over vaccines

Louisiana official appointed CDC deputy

•

34by Beth Mole / 3d
Under ardent anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has named Louisiana Surgeon General Ralph Abraham as its new principal deputy director—a choice that was immediately called “dangerous” and “irresponsible,” yet not as bad as it could have been, by experts. Physician Jeremy Faust revealed the appointment in his newsletter Inside Medici

OpenAI says dead teen violated TOS when he used ChatGPT to plan suicide

OpenAI defends ChatGPT in suicide case

•

92by Ashley Belanger / 3d
Facing five lawsuits alleging wrongful deaths, OpenAI lobbed its first defense Tuesday, denying in a court filing that ChatGPT caused a teen’s suicide and instead arguing the teen violated terms that prohibit discussing suicide or self-harm with the chatbot. The earliest look at OpenAI’s strategy to overcome the string of lawsuits came in a case where parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine accused Ope

Russia’s Soyuz 5 will soon come alive. But will anyone want to fly on it?

by Eric Berger / 3d
After nearly a decade of development, Russia’s newest launch vehicle is close to its debut flight. The medium-lift Soyuz 5 rocket is expected to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome before the end of the year. The Russian space corporation, Roscosmos, has released images of final processing of the Soyuz 5 rocket at the Progress Rocket and Space Center in Samara, Russia, earlier this month before t

Vision Pro M5 review: It’s time for Apple to make some tough choices

by Samuel Axon / 3d
With the recent releases of visionOS 26 and newly refreshed Vision Pro hardware, it’s an ideal time to check in on Apple’s Vision Pro headset—a device I was simultaneously amazed and disappointed by when it launched in early 2024. I still like the Vision Pro, but I can tell it’s hanging on by a thread. Content is light, developer support is tepid, and while Apple has taken action to improve both,

Crypto hoarders dump tokens as shares tumble

Crypto market rebounds after dip

•

by Nikou Asgari in London and Jill R Shah in New York / 3d
Crypto-hoarding companies are ditching their holdings in a bid to prop up their sinking share prices, as the craze for “digital asset treasury” businesses unravels in the face of a $1 trillion cryptocurrency rout. Shares in Michael Saylor-led Strategy, the world’s biggest corporate bitcoin holder, have tumbled 50 percent over the past three months, dragging down scores of copycat companies. About

Tech firm’s new CTO gets indicted; company then claims he was never CTO

by Jon Brodkin / 3d
When four people were arrested and charged with a conspiracy to illegally export Nvidia chips to China, there was an interesting side note. One of the arrestees, Alabama resident Brian Raymond, was the chief technology officer of an AI company called Corvex. Or was he? Corvex certainly seemed to think that Raymond was its CTO in the days before his indictment. Corvex named Raymond as its CTO in a

Many genes associated with dog behavior influence human personalities, too

by John Timmer / 3d
Many dog breeds are noted for their personalities and behavioral traits, from the distinctive vocalizations of huskies to the herding of border collies. People have worked to identify the genes associated with many of these behaviors, taking advantage of the fact that dogs can interbreed. But that creates its own experimental challenges, as it can be difficult to separate some behaviors from phys

Nov 25, 2025

There may not be a safe off-ramp for some taking GLP-1 drugs, study suggests

Weight regain after stopping Mounjaro

•

by Beth Mole / 3d
The popularity of GLP-1 weight-loss medications continues to soar—and their uptake is helping to push down obesity rates on a national scale—but a safe, evidence-based way off the drugs isn’t yet in clear view. An analysis published this week in JAMA Internal Medicine found that most participants in a clinical trial who were assigned to stop taking tirzepatide (Zepbound from Eli Lilly) not only r

Plex’s crackdown on free remote streaming access starts this week

66by Scharon Harding / 3d
Plex is starting to enforce its new rules, which prevent users from remotely accessing a personal media server without a subscription fee. Previously, people outside of a server owner’s network could access the owner’s media library through Plex for free. Under the new rules announced in March , a server owner needs to have a Plex Pass subscription, which starts at $7 per month, to grant users re

GPU prices are coming to earth just as RAM costs shoot into the stratosphere

DDR5 RAM pricier than PS5

•

40by Andrew Cunningham / 3d
It’s not a bad time to upgrade your gaming PC. Graphics card prices in the 2020s have undulated continuously as the industry has dealt with pandemic and AI-related shortages, but it’s actually possible to get respectable mainstream- to high-end GPUs like AMD’s Radeon RX 9060 XT and 9070 series or Nvidia’s RTX 5060 , 5070 , and 5080 series for at or slightly under their suggested retail prices rig

China launches an emergency lifeboat to bring three astronauts back to Earth

China launches Shenzhou-22 spacecraft

•

52by Stephen Clark / 4d
An unpiloted Chinese spacecraft launched late Monday and linked up with the country’s Tiangong space station a few hours later, providing a lifeboat for three astronauts stuck in orbit without a safe ride home. A Long March 2F rocket fired its engines and lifted off with the Shenzhou 22 spacecraft, carrying cargo instead of a crew, at 11:11 pm EST Monday (04:11 UTC Tuesday). The spacecraft docked

Landlords’ go-to tool to set rent prices to be gutted under RealPage settlement

RealPage settles DOJ antitrust case

•

50by Ashley Belanger / 4d
RealPage has agreed to settle an antitrust lawsuit raised by the Department of Justice, alleging that landlords used its tools to coordinate efforts to artificially raise rental prices across the US. In a press release , the DOJ promised the proposed settlement “would help restore free market competition in rental markets for millions of American renters.” For years since the pandemic started, re

Valve’s Steam Machine looks like a console, but don’t expect it to be priced like one

Steam Machine priced like PC

•

by Kyle Orland / 4d
After Valve announced its upcoming Steam Machine living room box earlier this month, some analysts suggested to Ars that Valve could and should aggressively subsidize that hardware with “loss leader” pricing that leads to more revenue from improved Steam software sales. In a new interview with YouTube channel Skill Up , though, Valve’s Pierre-Loup Griffais ruled out that kind of console-style pri

Formation of oceans within icy moons could cause the waters to boil

34by John Timmer / 4d
Our exploration of the outer Solar System has revealed a host of icy moons, many with surface features that suggest a complex geology. In some cases, these features—most notably the geysers of Enceladus—hint at the presence of oceans beneath the icy surfaces. These oceans have been ascribed to gravitational interactions that cause flexing and friction within the moon, creating enough heat to melt

Mushroom foragers collect 160 species for food, medicine, art, and science

by Amy Wrobleski, The Conversation / 4d
Like many mushroom harvesters, I got interested in foraging for fungi during the COVID-19 pandemic. I had been preparing for a summer of field work studying foraged desert plants in a remote part of Australia when the pandemic hit, and my travel plans were abruptly frozen. It was March, right before morel mushrooms emerge in central Pennsylvania. I wasn’t doing a lot other than going on long hike

Nov 24, 2025

Anthropic introduces cheaper, more powerful, more efficient Opus 4.5 model

Anthropic launches Claude Opus 4.5

•

by Samuel Axon / 4d
Anthropic today released Opus 4.5 , its flagship frontier model, and it brings improvements in coding performance, as well as some user experience improvements that make it more generally competitive with OpenAI’s latest frontier models. Perhaps the most prominent change for most users is that in the consumer app experiences (web, mobile, and desktop), Claude will be less prone to abruptly hard-s

Rivals object to SpaceX’s Starship plans in Florida—who’s interfering with whom?

SpaceX plans Starship launch 2026

•

by Stephen Clark / 4d
The commander of the military unit responsible for running the Cape Canaveral spaceport in Florida expects SpaceX to begin launching Starship rockets there next year. Launch companies with facilities near SpaceX’s Starship pads are not pleased. SpaceX’s two chief rivals, Blue Origin and United Launch Alliance, complained last year that SpaceX’s proposal of launching as many as 120 Starships per y

DOGE “cut muscle, not fat”; 26K experts rehired after brutal cuts

DOGE disbanded eight months early

•

1Kby Ashley Belanger / 4d
After Donald Trump curiously started referring to the Department of Government Efficiency exclusively in the past tense, an official finally confirmed Sunday that DOGE “doesn’t exist.” Talking to Reuters , Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Director Scott Kupor confirmed that DOGE—a government agency notoriously created by Elon Musk to rapidly and dramatically slash government agencies—was term

Arduino’s new terms of service worries hobbyists ahead of Qualcomm acquisition

Qualcomm restricts Arduino’s open ethos

•

69by Scharon Harding / 4d
Some members of the maker community are distraught about Arduino’s new terms of service (ToS), saying that the added rules put the company’s open source DNA at risk. Arduino updated its ToS and privacy policy this month, which is about a month after Qualcomm announced that it’s acquiring the open source hardware and software company. Among the most controversial changes is this addition: User sha

Why synthetic emerald-green pigments degrade over time

by Jennifer Ouellette / 5d
The emergence of synthetic pigments in the 19th century had an immense impact on the art world, particularly the availability of emerald-green pigments, prized for their intense brilliance by such masters as Paul Cézanne, Edvard Munch, Vincent van Gogh, and Claude Monet. The downside was that these pigments often degraded over time, resulting in cracks and uneven surfaces and the formation of dar

It’s official: Boeing’s next flight of Starliner will be allowed to carry cargo only

NASA Boeing cut Starliner missions

•

100+by Eric Berger / 5d
The US space agency ended months of speculation about the next flight of Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft, confirming Monday that the vehicle will carry only cargo to the International Space Station. NASA and Boeing are now targeting no earlier than April 2026 to fly the uncrewed Starliner-1 mission, the space agency said. Launching by next April will require completion of rigorous test, certificati

F1 in Las Vegas: This sport is a 200 mph soap opera

McLaren drivers disqualified in Vegas

•

by Jonathan M. Gitlin / 5d
AT&T provided flights from Washington, DC, to Las Vegas and accommodation so Ars could attend the Las Vegas Grand Prix. Ars does not accept paid editorial content. LAS VEGAS—Formula 1 held the third annual Las Vegas Grand Prix this past weekend in the Nevada city. The race is an outlier in so many ways, and a divisive one at that. Some love the bright lights that make it appear to be set in Mega-

UK government will buy tech to boost AI sector in $130M growth push

UK government invests billions in AI

•

by Chris Smyth and Melissa Heikkilä / 5d
The UK government will promise to buy emerging chip technology from British companies in a 100 million pound ($130 million) bid to boost growth by supporting the artificial intelligence sector. Liz Kendall, the science secretary, said the government would offer guaranteed payments to British startups producing AI hardware that can help sectors such as life sciences and financial services. Under a

Rocket Lab chief opens up about Neutron delays, New Glenn’s success, and NASA science

40by Eric Berger / 5d
The company that pioneered small launch has had a big year. Rocket Lab broke its annual launch record with the Electron booster—17 successful missions this year, and counting—and is close to bringing its much larger Neutron rocket to the launch pad. The company also expanded its in-space business, including playing a key role in supporting the landing of Firefly’s Blue Ghost mission on the Moon a

“Go generate a bridge and jump off it”: How video pros are navigating AI

40by Kai Williams / 5d
In 2016, the legendary Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki was shown a bizarre AI-generated video of a misshapen human body crawling across a floor. Miyazaki declared himself “utterly disgusted” by the technology demo, which he considered an “insult to life itself.”

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on November 29, 2025Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags Achieving lasting remission from HIV, Ars Technica-All ContentLeave a comment on Ars Technica-All Content

Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Neptune is the furthest planet from the Sun, but it still experiences auroras.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 29 November 2025, 1643 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Discover Magazine-The Sciences.”

URL–https://www.discovermagazine.com/category/science/the-sciences

Please check URL or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

The Sciences

Neptune, which is the furthest planet from the sun

The Sciences

Neptune Is the Furthest Planet From the Sun, But It Still Experiences Auroras
Pterosaur expanding its wings on a rock

The Sciences

Think Pterosaurs and Plesiosaurs Are Dinosaurs? Here’s Why These and Other Species Are Not
Saturn's moon Mimas, which could sustain a liquid ocean beneath an icy shell

The Sciences

Icy Moons Orbiting Saturn and Uranus May Hide Boiling Liquid Oceans
Volcanic activity on Mars

The Sciences

Volcanic Activity on Mars Could Help in the Search for Life on Other Planets
The rare green gemstone, variscite.

The Sciences

Prehistoric Humans Traded This Rare Green Gem and AI Has Identified Its Surprising Origins 
Aerial view of a section of the West Gold Hill Dinosaur Tracksite, Colorado.

The Sciences

Footprints From Around 150 Million Years Ago Reveal the Strange Stomp of a Looping Sauropod
Uxmal, an ancient Maya city

The Sciences

The Disastrous Maya Collapse Knocked Down an Entire Network of Cities in Mesoamerica
A lagerpetid, a close relative of pterosaurs in a late Triassic landscape.

The Sciences

A 233-Million-Year-Old Fossil Reveals How Pterosaurs Learned to Fly
Easter Island Head Quarry Site

The Sciences

Separate Families Carved the 1,000 Easter Island Moai Statues — Some in Friendly Competition 
array of hominin bones

The Sciences

The Burtele Foot and Other Fossils Reveal How Two Hominin Species Thrived Side by Side
Gamma ray image of the Milky Way halo with horizontal gray bar in the central region corresponds to the Galactic plane area

The Sciences

A Glow Hidden in the Milky Way’s Core May Reveal Dark Matter After a Century of Searching
dunk the fish

The Sciences

A Prehistoric Sea Monster Wielded Bone Blades to Terrorize the Ocean 360 Million Years Ago
12345
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ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“Algorithms can pull us apart.  This tool shows how they can bring us back.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 28 November 2025, 2056 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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Algorithms Can Pull Us Apart. This Tool Shows They Can Bring Us Back

Nov 28

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The moment of death for the bacteria. A scanning electron microscopy image of the MOF structure puncturing the bacteria. The image was taken in Myfab's cleanroom at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, within the study Mechano-Bactericidal Surfaces Achieved by Epitaxial Growth of Metal-Organic Frameworks. Parts of the photo have been colored.

Spiked Nobel Prize Materials Stabs Bacteria Before They Can Stick


 

 

Person shooting an Instagram image in the woods

Most People Are Not Addicted To Instagram, But The Label Still Hurts


 

 

A flat area of the Atacama Desert between Antofagasta and Taltal

Droughts That Would Not End Slowly Unraveled The Indus Civilization


 

 

AI image on monkey wearing headphones and a metronome in the background.

Monkeys That Catch The Beat Rewrite The Story Of Rhythm


 

 

When mammals are infected with influenza viruses, they frequently raise their body temperature as an immune response. The resulting fever can protect against severe disease, but this defense is overcome by avian influenza viruses that have evolved to replicate at the higher body temperature of birds.

Bird Flu Pushes Past The Body’s Last Line Of Heat Defense


 

man walking with smartwatch

Dirty Air Steals Some Of Exercise’s Power


 

 

crushed plastic bottles

Scientists Develop Plastics That Know When To Disappear


 

 

Happy dog getting back of ears scratched

CBD Calm May Help Turn Reactive Dogs Into Gentler Companions


 

Professor Heiko Balzter, Dr Nezha Acil (right) and University of Leicester colleagues at a zoobotanical garden at the Museu Emilio Goeldi in Belém, with trees and animals from the Amazon.

Africa’s Forests Are Flipping From Carbon Shield To Carbon Source


 

Rethinking Urban Communities: Transforming Vacant Spaces Into Vibrant Places


 

 

Tea Is Mostly A Health Hero, But Not All Cups Are Created Equal

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Science | The Guardian

“FDA poised to kill proposal that would require asbestos testing for cosmetics.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

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FDA poised to kill proposal that would require asbestos testing for cosmetics

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62by Steven Morris / 21h
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What is prostate cancer and how is it diagnosed in the UK?

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Nasa releases close-up pictures of comet flying by from another star system

NASA reveals interstellar comet images

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The interstellar visitor, known as 3I/Atlas, will be seen just in this instance, never to come back again Nasa released close-up pictures on Wednesday of the interstellar comet that’s making a quick one-and-done tour of the solar system. Discovered over the summer , the comet known as 3I/Atlas is only the third confirmed object to visit our corner of the cosmos from another star. It zipped harmle

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Christie’s withdraws rare ‘first calculator’ from auction after French court halts export

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Ultra-processed food linked to harm in every major human organ, study finds

Ultra-processed foods linked to prediabetes

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‘Better and cheaper’: the case for prostate cancer screening among black men

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These parrots came to Los Angeles as pets – then went wild. Now scientists are unlocking their mysteries

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Once escapees from the pet trade, Los Angeles’s feral parrots have become a vibrant part of city life, and could even aid conservation in their native homelands A morning mist hung over the palm trees as birds chattered and cars roared by on the streets of Pasadena. It was a scene that evoked a tropical island rather than a bustling city in north-east Los Angeles county. “It feels parrot-y,” says

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on November 28, 2025Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags Science | The GuardianLeave a comment on Science | The Guardian

Science X Newsletter

“Humanoid robots reliably manipulate different objects with 87% success using new framwork.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 28 November 2025, 0429 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Science X Newsletter.”

URL–https://sciencex.com/news/

Please check URL or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

Here is your customized Science X Newsletter for November 27, 2025:

Spotlight Stories Headlines

Physicist delineates limits on the precision of quantum thermal machines

Humanoid robots reliably manipulate different objects with 87% success using new framework

Specific brain activity patterns predict greater control over drinking behavior, study finds

Entanglement-enhanced optical lattice clock achieves unprecedented precision

New insight into why LLMs are not great at cracking passwords

Secret behind Temple of Venus’s resilient construction uncovered

Astronomers capture an exceptional gamma-ray flare from a blazar

Dating a North American rock art tradition that lasted 175 generations

Unprecedented levels of forever chemicals found in dolphins and whales

Meteorite samples are time capsules from the early solar system

Watching metal crystals grow inside liquid metal: Imaging technique could boost hydrogen production

Thousands of genomes reveal the wild wolf genes in most dogs’ DNA

Targeted ultrasound can shape the brain’s reward-seeking mechanisms

RNA in action: Filming ribozyme self-assembly

Drones: An ally in the sky to help save elephants

Earth news

Unprecedented levels of forever chemicals found in dolphins and whales

Marine mammals, including deep-diving whales and dolphins, exhibit high levels of PFAS contamination regardless of habitat, indicating that even remote or deep-sea environments do not protect against these persistent pollutants. PFAS accumulation poses risks to immune, endocrine, and reproductive health, raising concerns for marine biodiversity and ecosystem health.

Major droughts linked to ancient Indus Valley Civilization’s collapse

Prolonged droughts, each exceeding 85 years and affecting up to 91% of the Indus Valley Civilization region, coincided with decreased rainfall and a 0.5°C temperature rise. These environmental changes led to shifts in settlement patterns toward river areas and contributed to the civilization’s gradual decline rather than a sudden collapse.

Satellites spot surprising tsunami patterns: Massive Kamchatka quake challenges old models

High-resolution data from the SWOT satellite revealed that the 2025 Kamchatka tsunami exhibited complex, dispersive wave patterns, challenging the traditional view that large tsunamis are non-dispersive. Analysis combining satellite and DART buoy data indicated the earthquake rupture extended 400 km, longer than previous estimates, highlighting the need to refine tsunami models and integrate diverse data sources.

Plastic pollution is worsened by warming climate and must be stemmed, researchers warn

Climate change accelerates plastic breakdown into microplastics, increasing their mobility, persistence, and ecological harm. Rising plastic production and climate effects intensify these impacts, threatening nutrient cycles, soil health, and species, especially apex predators. Urgent systemic action is needed to limit microplastic pollution and transition to a circular plastics economy.

Researchers develop novel bathymetric framework for high-accuracy shallow-water mapping

A novel bathymetric mapping framework integrates ICESat-2 LiDAR, optical, and SAR data to achieve high-accuracy, wide-coverage shallow-water depth mapping, including in turbid regions. The PAWLP method enables robust wave-based depth estimation, while multi-source data fusion and temporal sample-transfer strategies enhance spatial consistency and reliability for coastal applications.

‘Weather Commons’ as collaborative weather management

A new framework called “Weather Commons” is proposed as a democratic, community-centered approach to weather management, contrasting with top-down, technocratic methods. This concept promotes collective stewardship of weather-related resources, aiming to balance technological interventions with societal engagement and critical reflection on humanity’s evolving relationship with weather.

‘Truly severe’ floods overwhelm Southeast Asia

Severe flooding across Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia has resulted in dozens of deaths, widespread displacement, and significant infrastructure damage. Heavy monsoon rains, intensified by climate change and exacerbated by factors such as urbanization and deforestation, have overwhelmed local authorities and left many areas inaccessible, with ongoing risks as further rainfall is expected.


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Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily

“How the formerly ubiquitous pumpkin became a Thanksgiving treat.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 27 November 2025, 2105 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily.”

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Thursday, November 27, 2025 View in Browser
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Give Thanks for These 15 Photos Celebrating Thanksgiving image
This turkey, with his impressive wattle and snood, has nothing to fear during the Thanksgiving holiday. He gives thanks every November that he lives the secure life of a beloved pet. (Russ Allison Loar, California, 2016)

Give Thanks for These 15 Photos Celebrating Thanksgiving

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This Inca Building—the Only Surviving Structure of Its Kind—Might Have Been Designed to Amplify Sound and Music

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PHOTO OF THE DAY
I took this photo in Bardhaman District of West Bengal where the Gajan Festival is celebrated with great zeal and enthusiasm. Face painting holds immense cultural and religious significance during the Gajan Festival, a vibrant Hindu folk celebration observed in West Bengal. This festival, marked by fervent devotion and colorful rituals, involves devotees painting their faces to resemble Hindu deities and mythological characters. Through this artistic expression, participants immerse themselves in the spiritual essence of the festival and
 pay homage to the divine.

Face Painting

© Rumela De

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The 1950s Material Making a Massive Comeback To Transform Modern Computing

November 27, 2025

Researchers are investigating hole mobility in compressively strained germanium on silicon to improve the performance…

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A Chilling Experiment Near Absolute Zero Finds Hints of Dark Matter

November 27, 2025

Physicists using near-absolute-zero detectors have reached unprecedented sensitivity in the hunt for light dark matter.…

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Scientists Just Unlocked Quantum Connections That Reach Across Continents

November 27, 2025

Creating the same crystal through an alternative method could dramatically extend the reach of quantum…

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55-Million-Year-Old Backyard Fossil Find Shocks Paleontologists

November 26, 2025

The discovery of Australia’s oldest known crocodile eggshells is giving UNSW scientists new insight into…

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The Color That Shouldn’t Exist: Scientists Find Unexpected Blue on Ancient Artifact

November 26, 2025

In a groundbreaking discovery that sheds new light on the prehistoric origins of art and…

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“Unlike Anything Else” – Archaeologists Unearth Massive Bronze Age City After 3500 Years

November 26, 2025

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Stunning New Evidence Shows Easter Island’s Moai Came From Dozens of Secret Workshops

November 26, 2025

A sweeping 3D analysis of Rapa Nui’s main moai quarry shows that the island’s iconic…

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Physicists Rewrite Thermodynamics for the Quantum Age

November 26, 2025

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Astronomers Discover a Star That Breaks the Rules Orbiting a Silent Black Hole

November 26, 2025

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Beyond Einstein: Could Our Universe Have Seven Hidden Dimensions?

November 26, 2025

The geometry of space, the setting in which physical laws operate, may hold clues to…

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How the Brain Chooses What to Remember and What to Forget

November 26, 2025

Long-term memory emerges from a sequence of molecular programs that sort, stabilize, and reinforce important…

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Natural Plant Compound Supercharges Chemotherapy Against Leukemia

November 26, 2025

A promising natural compound may offer new hope for treating one of the most aggressive…

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Scientists Identify First-Ever Single Gene That Can Directly Cause Mental Illness

November 26, 2025

A rare genetic finding shows that GRIN2A mutations can directly trigger psychiatric illness. Early treatment…

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Scientists Discover Simple Trick To Make Kale Tastier and Healthier

November 26, 2025

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Fighters’ Brains Show a Surprising Cleanup Surge Before Dangerous Collapse

November 26, 2025

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Scientists Discover a Surprisingly Simple New Way Microbes Travel Without Flagella

November 25, 2025

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Scientists Discover Unusual New Snake Species on Remote Island

November 25, 2025

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A 100-Year-Old Problem Solved? Scientists Discover How To Freeze Organs Without Cracking Them

November 25, 2025

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The best outdoor TV antennas

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There’s a ton of free streaming TV content literally floating around in the air. All you need to pull it down into your home theater is a solid outdoor TV antenna. We’ve chosen the Antennas Direct 8-Element Bowtie TV Antenna as the best overall for its massive range, durability, and easy installation. But, there are tons of solid options on the market. We’ve pick the best outdoor TV antennas here

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Streaming can be difficult in rural areas, but there’s likely still lots of free over-the-air HD content you can access with a solid antenna. When dealing with long distances and tricky terrain, you’ll want a robust antenna to pull in those sweet signals. We have chosen the Antennas Direct 8-Element Bowtie as our best overall option for its exceptional range, excellent build quality, and easy of

Save Up to 70% – Roborock Black Friday Deals

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Score rare deals on All-Clad stainless steel and non-stick cookware during Amazon’s Black Friday sale

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Grab a Dreo space heaters or humidifiers for as low as $34 during Amazon’s Black Friday sale

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Neanderthals have received a necessary historical revision over the last few decades. Although many previous depictions presented our long-lost relative as a dimwitted evolutionary misfire, paleoarchaeological evidence now shows they were creative , artistic , and technologically proficient hominins . However, this more accurate picture isn’t entirely pretty. Judging from ancient evidence recover

How scientists analyze ancient DNA from old bones

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These editor-approved Flashforge 3D printers start at just $229 during Amazon’s Black Friday Week sale

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Live now: Save up to $1,500 on Bluetti solar generators and portable power stations during Amazon’s Black Friday Week sale

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Medieval Arabic texts help researchers track down explosive star deaths

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How to shovel snow without landing in the emergency room

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You know, for life’s most essential resource, water knows a hundred ways to kill you if you’re not careful. When it’s not trying to drown you in its pools and coastlines during the summer, it shape-shifts to snow in the winter, piling up emergency room visits for those forced to shovel it. During the most recent period researched, 11,500 Americans a year went to the hospital with a snow shovel–re

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New wearable device lets you touch fabric online, read braille, and more

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14 moving images from the 2025 Nature Photographer of the Year awards

Åsmund Keilen wins Nature Photographer award

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“A tender and poetic moment unfolds as a butterfly flutters gracefully beside a gorilla’s face, its golden hues mirroring the warmth in the animal’s eyes.” That’s how Nature Photographer of the Year Chairman Tin Man Lee artfully described the Animal Portrait category winner (seen above). “The contrast between the fragile insect and the powerful primate evokes a delicate balance between strength a

Nov 21, 2025

Amazon’s Black Friday deals on Ego Power+ battery-powered yard tools include huge discounts on snow blowers and leaf blowers

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Shoveling snow is the worst. It’s not fun, and it can actually be really dangerous if not done correctly. That’s why we strongly recommend a battery-powered snow blower. Right now, Amazon has an entire collection of Ego Power+ battery-powered yard tools on deep discount during its Black Friday Week sale. You can save on mowers, trimmers, chainsaws, and extra batteries. Ego makes some of the best

4 billion equations calculated for F1 team during race weekend

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Formula One is unquestionably fast. The motorsport’s multi-million-dollar cars achieve speeds over 210 miles per hour on tracks that bend and twist wildly. Even the pit crews operate at warp speed; a complete tire change at all four corners must be accomplished in two seconds. For the Oracle Red Bull team, the data transmitted from champion driver Max Verstappen’s car to their operations center i

Parakeets teach a lesson in friendship

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Making new friends (especially as an adult) can be challenging. It’s also tough for some of our feathered friends. When new birds are introduced to a group, monk parakeets will “test the waters” to avoid getting injured by defensive strangers. The parakeets will gradually approach the new bird, taking some time to get familiar before ramping up to more risky or vulnerable interactions that are ne

Hiker stumbles on massive medieval reindeer traps in Norway

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In the fall of 2024, a hiker named Helge Titland was trekking through Aurlandsfjellet , a mountainous region and plateau in Norway and got a little more than just some time with nature. Titland found some strange wooden stakes peaking out of melting snow. He wisely reported it to local archaeologists , but snow returned before the team could investigate. One year later, a team from Vestland Count

Amazon just dropped 30% off deals on tons of The North Face hoodies, jackets, and more during its Black Friday sale

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I like The North Face outdoor gear because I can beat on it and it lasts. I’ve put their jackets through every kind of torture in the woods and they have mostly come out unscathed. Right now, Amazon’s early Black Friday sale has tons of The North Face’s most popular jackets, hoodies, accessories, and more are 30 percent off across the board. Grab your preferred size and color before they sell out

Amazon is blowing out EF EcoFlow portable power stations for up to 50% off during its Black Friday Week sale

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As extreme weather events become more common and interest in off-grid solutions rises, a reliable portable power station is transitioning from a luxury item to a household essential. EF ECOFLOW, known for its durable LiFePO4 battery platforms, has put several of its most popular models on sale. A portable power station or solar generator is an investment, which is why we love to see deals on them

ISS astronauts photograph two comets soaring over Earth’s auroras

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Break out the calculators: November 23 is Fibonacci Sequence Day

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Who doesn’t love a good math holiday? Most people know about Pi Day (3/14), but there are even rarer days on the calendar like Pythagorean Triple Square Day (9/16/25). However, it’s time to bust out the calculators in celebration yet again: November 23 marks the annual Fibonacci Sequence Day. The poetry of mathematics manifests everywhere in nature, but few numerical patterns are more common than

A day with Newfoundlands, the original ship’s dog

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It’s a dark and stormy night and you’ve suddenly found yourself swept off of your wooden vessel into the wild Atlantic Ocean. It’s 1893, so your woolen clothes are pulling you down to Davy Jones’ locker. What kind of dog would want to rescue you? Chances are, you’re not hoping for a bulldog or pug. You’d probably want a big, warm, and powerful canine. A dog like a Newfoundland. Fast forward to 20

Nov 20, 2025

Bird Buddy’s best smart feeders are only $229 during Amazon’s Black Friday sale, and some models are even less

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The Bird Buddy smart feeder has turned a lot of Popular Science readers into accidental birders over the years. This editor-approved source of avian infotainment was PopSci’s most-clicked Black Friday deal in 2023, then sold out again during Prime Day in 2024. And that’s a trend we expect to continue, thanks to it being at its lowest price of the year during Amazon’s Black Friday 2025 sale. So, i

Indigenous women engineered energy-efficient baby carriers

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Indigenous women were technological trailblazers. But while lived experiences and communal histories have long supported this, they routinely fail to receive the credit they deserve . A group of researchers are using clinical experiments to showcase these inventions and finally give credit where it’s due. According to National History Museum of Utah ’s curator of ethnography Alexandra Greenwald ,

Amazon just dropped its massive Black Friday deals on Anker chargers, power bricks, and portable power stations

Popular Science / 6d
It doesn’t matter what kind of smartphone or other gadget you have if it doesn’t have power. Anker makes some of the best charging bricks, portable chargers, and USB hubs we’ve ever used and they’re all on sale during Amazon’s early Black Friday deals. If you’re still using a ratty old cable with electrical tape on it, and a charging brick from three generations ago, it’s time to upgrade. Editor’

The best induction cookware for 2026

38Popular Science / 6d
Looking for the best induction cookware for beautiful, even cooking? While many people use gas-powered appliances or convection cooking that heats up whatever is directly atop the burner, others pick induction cooktops —cooking surfaces with a copper coil that creates a magnetic field to heat the pan and food. However, these appliances need the proper cookware to achieve optimal results. Don’t wo

The best electric cooktops for 2026

Popular Science / 6d
Electric cooktops offer a modern solution to an ancient practice. Chefs vouch for induction stoves , while many homeowners are going some sort of electric, and not just those without natural gas hookups. It’s because of their sleek and polished appearance, ease of cleaning, steady heat, energy efficiency, and overall pleasant cooking experience. However, electric cooktops aren’t one size fits all

Cats love to massacre bugs, and scientists have the videos to prove it

Popular Science / 6d
Nearly one in three U.S. households harbor a cold-hearted killer. These stealthy murderers l urk in the shadows , silently stalking their targets. Some even have a well-known proclivity for torture. These sadists aren’t even human—they’re house cats . And while the popular pets are best known for downing birds and cornering mice , they are also adept at hunting all manner of bugs. Host a cat in y

Amazon is blowing out Greenworks battery-powered yard and power tools during its Black Friday sale

Popular Science / 6d
Earlier this year, Amazon ran some great deals on battery-powered yard tools. Now, for Black Friday, the deals have gotten even sweeter, especially when it comes to these Greenworks yard and power tools. Greenworks makes some of the best electric implements in the game and just about all of them are deeply discounted right now. That includes mowers, blowers, trimmers, and even more traditional po

Geomagnetic superstorm shrunk Earth’s protective plasmasphere

Superstorm Gannon shrinks Earth’s plasmasphere

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Popular Science / 6d
Last year, the most violent geomagnetic storm to strike Earth in over two decades did more than disrupt GPS systems and internet connections. According to a study published today in the journal Earth, Planets and Space , superstorm Gannon also squeezed the planet’s protective layer of ionized particles to one-fifth its normal size. What was superstorm Gannon? Geomagnetic storms aren’t rare occurr

Moss survived 283 days in space, shocking biologists

Moss spores survive nine months in space

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Popular Science / 6d
While it may appear humble, Earth’s moss is built darn tough. It thrives in extreme environments –from the bitter cold, low-oxygen air of the Himalayas, down to the parched sands of Death Valley. Some species even make their home among the lava fields of active volcanoes . It can now add space to its list of homes. In March 2022, a team from Hokkaido University in Japan sent several moss reproduc

This ECOVACS robovac helps clean while I’m too busy writing Black Friday deals, and it’s $500 off

Popular Science / 6d
Back in September, we went to the IFA consumer electronics expo in Berlin . Among the big-booth exhibitors, ECOVACS (and partner company TINECO ) was a highlight for any smart home big on dust and short on time. The technology brands deliver intelligent, automated cleaning that hits the sweet spot for performance and features. And it gets delivered for less if you act fast, because a bunch of ECO

Are induction stoves better? These chefs think so.

Popular Science / 6d
Ask someone in the United States about “electric cooking” and they’ll probably describe one of those awful coil stoves, the ones that take forever to heat up and then burn your dinner to a crisp the moment you take your eyes off it. This unfortunate association is perhaps one reason why induction cooking hasn’t quite taken off in the U.S. the way it has elsewhere in the world—in Europe, for examp

Amazon just dropped the Apple Watch Ultra 2 to its lowest price ever during Black Friday week

Popular Science / 6d
If you have thinking about grabbing an Apple Watch Ultra, now is absolutely the time to grab it. Amazon’s current $599 Black Friday Week price is the cheapest I have ever seen the Ultra 2 go for. This flagship smartwatch offers all the advanced features and super-burly built quality for $200 less than its typical price. These Apple deals typically don’t last that long, so grab one if you don’t wa

The 121 best Amazon Black Friday tech and gadget deals (updated)

Popular Science / 6d
The turkey hasn’t even hit the table yet, but Amazon’s Black Friday Week sale is already in full swing. There are literally thousands of products on sale right now, which can make it seem impossible to sift

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on November 26, 2025Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags Popular Science, The Best Outdoor TV AntennasLeave a comment on Popular Science

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I am the retired news director of Pacific Radio Group stations on the Island of Hawaii. I am a retired Lt. Col., USAF Reserve. I am a FCC-licensed Amateur Radio Operator, holding the Amateur Extra Class License. I am a substitute teacher for the state of Hawaii Department of Education.

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