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S69
Aerobic and strength training exercise combined can be an elixir for better brain health in your 80s and 90s, new study finds    

People in the oldest stage of life who regularly engage in aerobic activities and strength training exercises perform better on cognitive tests than those who are either sedentary or participate only in aerobic exercise. That is the key finding of our new study, published in the journal GeroScience.We assessed 184 cognitively healthy people ranging in age from 85 to 99. Each participant reported their exercise habits and underwent a comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tests that were designed to evaluate various dimensions of cognitive function.

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S1
A cut too far: The people who can't give up paper    

For 400 years British hydrographers have made paper charts of the world's seas and oceans. Each one captures the detail of coastlines, bays, straits, or channels. A document like this brims with information, noting the sea's depth at various locations, the position of rocks, or places where vessels can't drop anchor.For more technology news and insights, sign up to our Tech Decoded newsletter. The twice-weekly email decodes the biggest developments in global technology, with analysis from BBC correspondents around the world. Sign up for free here.

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S2
The goats fighting fires in Los Angeles    

It's a typical Los Angeles scene: the Pacific Ocean sparkling under a crystal-clear, bright blue sky, with miles of golden sandy beaches stretching as far as the eye can see. There's also a herd of goats precariously perched on a clifftop, enjoying the multimillion-dollar view.These aren't just any goats, though – they're California's new secret weapon in the fight against wildfires, and they're being put out to graze across the state.

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S3
The little-known blockchain firm behind Southeast Asia's digital payment systems    

In 2016, Makoto Takemiya, co-founder of Japanese blockchain startup Soramitsu, received a Telegram message from someone claiming to be from Cambodia’s central bank. He thought it was a scam. “It said something like, ‘Hey, I’m from [the] National Bank of Cambodia. We want to discuss a pilot. Can somebody contact me?’” Takemiya told Rest of World.It had been mere months since Takemiya and Okada founded Soramitsu, and they only had a few projects under their belt. The company had been funded from Okada’s savings, and was making just enough money for the two to “eat some food and pay some basic expenses,” said Takemiya.

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S4
Heavily persecuted, highly influential: China's online feminist revolution    

Lying in bed one night in 2021, Zhang Zirui was swiping through Weibo when she came across a post that gave her pause. The post, by feminist influencer Lin Maomao, argued that women don’t owe their family any obedience. In others, she called on women to be selfish, mean, and not care about their partner, their parents, or anyone but themselves.The message hit home. At the time, Zhang felt trapped — in her family, her relationship, and her hometown in Ningxia, an underdeveloped and conservative inland province. Her parents looked down on her. They had forbidden her to study physics, her dream university major, because “it is not for girls.” Instead, she was studying to become a preschool teacher. Her boyfriend, with whom she had once wanted to start a family, mistreated her and made her believe it was all her fault.

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S5
How Mathematical Objects Are like People and Other Mysteries of Intersection Theory    

Hannah Larson is obsessed with understanding what happens when two or more mathematical objects intersect. Larson, a mathematician at the University of California, Berkeley, and a research fellow at the Clay Mathematics Institute, recently won a 2024 Maryam Mirzakhani New Frontiers Prize. It’s named after the first female mathematician to win the Fields Medal, often described as the Nobel Prize of math. The New Frontiers Prize is given to exceptional female mathematicians who have recently earned their Ph.Ds.Intersection theory, one of Larson’s specialties, is a branch of a field called algebraic geometry. Intersection theory can be used to probe relatively simple questions about, say, how two lines intersect, but it’s also a powerful way to understand what happens in more challenging situations involving objects in greater numbers or ones that are more complicated to study.

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S6
Two Thirds of American Kids Can't Read Fluently    

In October 2022, Mississippi reported some exhilarating news. After the state started using phonics to teach reading in 2013, its fourth-grade reading scores jumped from 49th to 29th in the nation, according to the Urban Institute’s National Assessment of Educational Progress. Unreported was the fact that in the 29th position, the state’s 4th graders were now on par with the rest of the nation in that roughly 65 percent of them had only what NAEP called basic skills. Mississippi had gone from the bottom of the pile to being just as bad as everywhere else. Some educators claim that these figures are misleading because the Basic Level (the level below proficiency) isn't bad at all. Even were that to be the case, the below Basic Level figures still yield the disturbing information that approximately four out of ten fourth-grade students lack the ability to read.Biennial testing through NAEP consistently shows that two thirds of U.S. children are unable to read with proficiency. An astounding 40 percent are essentially nonreaders. Most are taught through phonics—a system of instruction based on sounding out letters that is mandated in at least 32 states and the District of Columbia. The phonics method of converting each letter to a particular sound is totally unsuited to the English language. As but one example, e, the most common letter in print, has 11 different pronunciations (end, eat, vein, eye, etc.), including its role as the much-taught “silent e” (tape, cute, fine, etc.). This failure has been endemic from the early days of the country when Benjamin Franklin fought against phonics. The steady expansion of this mode of instruction will not fix the situation.

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S7
Does the First Amendment Confer a 'Right to Compute'? The Future of AI May Depend on It    

Since late 2022, visitors to New York’s Museum of Modern Art have been mesmerized by Refik Anadol’s 24-foot by 24-foot artificial intelligence–generated artwork Unsupervised. It is a stunning work to contemplate, and all the more so given the realization that artists have just begun to scratch the surface on ways to use AI in their work.Unsupervised also backdrops some of the complexities raised by calls to regulate AI through government-imposed limits. Simply put, under what circumstances is there a First Amendment right to compute? We will soon need an answer.

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S8
Our Fragile Earth: How Close Are We to Climate Catastrophe?    

Lessons from past eras when Earth was a hothouse or a snowball tell us whether we are doomed by climate change or still have time to prevent that fateNo one can predict the future. But sometimes we can get a solid idea of what’s coming by looking at the past. In his new book, Our Fragile Moment: How Lessons from Earth’s Past Can Help Us Survive the Climate Crisis, renowned climate scientist Michael Mann describes the world climate change is creating based on what we know from specific times in Earth’s four-billion-year history when the planet was extremely hot or extremely cold.

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S9
The Loss of Dark Skies Is So Painful, Astronomers Coined a New Term for It    

Astronomers have a new term to describe the pain associated with the loss of access to dark skies: noctalgiaHumanity is slowly losing access to the night sky, and astronomers have invented a new term to describe the pain associated with this loss: “noctalgia,” meaning “sky grief.”

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S10
Limiting Global Warming to 1.5 Degrees C 'Remains Possible,' Energy Experts Say    

Governments must “separate climate from geopolitics” and work together to triple renewables and deeply cut planet-warming emissions, says International Energy Agency executive director Fatih BirolCLIMATEWIRE | Capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius is still possible, but requires steep cuts in the energy sector's greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new report from the International Energy Agency.

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S11
Your Body Odor Could Be Used to Track Your Movements or Health    

Human scent signatures could one day be collected at places like crime scenes and COVID testing sites The following essay is reprinted with permission from The Conversation, an online publication covering the latest research.

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S12
Flesh-Eating Bacteria Infections Are on the Rise in the U.S. Here's How to Stay Safe    

Here’s why the CDC is so concerned about deadly flesh-eating bacteria and ways to avoid being infectedFlesh-eating bacteria sounds like the premise of a bad horror movie, but it’s a growing – and potentially fatal – threat to people.

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S13
Why Long-term Home Mortgages Have Costly Trade-offs    

U.S. homeowners typically choose 30-year mortgages, but riskier households in the U.K. choose shorter-term contracts, according to a study by Wharton’s Lu Liu. The findings have implications for mortgage market design, Liu says.Buying a home in the U.S. often involves weighing the trade-offs between a 15-year and 30-year mortgage. With the interest rate staying constant, the first option has higher monthly payments, but the loan is repaid sooner than it is with the second option that offers lower monthly payments.

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S14
This Company's Sustainable Partnerships Helped Prevent Amazon Rainforest Deforestation    

A new study of Brazilian beauty company Natura shows how businesses can work with local stakeholders to preserve the environment and create change.In 1969, a Brazilian beauty company named Natura embarked on a journey that would eventually lead it to become the world’s largest B-Corporation by 2021, with a net revenue of $7.2 billion. Beyond its financial prowess, Natura’s story is one of environmental commitment and stakeholder alignment, with key lessons for private companies that want to conserve the planet.

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S15
Michelle R. Weise: 4 tips to future-proof your career    

Chances are you will have many jobs over the course of your career, but how do you prepare for the ones that don't even exist yet? Education and workforce strategist Michelle R. Weise offers practical advice to help you identify the skills and talents to ace your next career change -- and all the ones to come.

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S16
Jennifer Doudna: CRISPR's next advance is bigger than you think    

You've probably heard of CRISPR, the revolutionary technology that allows us to edit the DNA in living organisms. Biochemist and 2023 Audacious Project grantee Jennifer Doudna earned the Nobel Prize for her groundbreaking work in this field -- and now she's here to tell us about its next world-changing advancement. She explains how her team at the Innovative Genomics Institute is pioneering a brand new field of science -- precision microbiome editing -- that uses CRISPR in an effort to solve seemingly insurmountable problems like asthma, Alzheimer's and climate change. (This ambitious idea is part of the Audacious Project, TED's initiative to inspire and fund global change.)

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S17
7 Rapid At-Home Covid-19 Tests--and Where to Find Them    

The pandemic isn't over. Although it's no longer considered a national and public health emergency, we're currently seeing a surge in cases and the spread of two new variants—EG.5 (Eris) and BA.2.86 ("Pirola"). Regardless of how small your social circle is, it's still possible to contract and spread Covid 19. To help prevent this, it's important to get tested regularly (along with getting vaccinated and wearing an N95 face mask). Free testing sites are no longer as accessible across the US (the CDC ICATT program will continue to provide free tests for those without health insurance), but you can opt for rapid at-home Covid tests instead—providing you with results in 15 minutes or so.With hundreds of options, it's tough to know which one to buy (if they're in stock). We've rounded up options—based on FDA authorization and availability—to help make the search easier. Members of our team have used some, but not all, of these tests. 

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S18
Which Streaming Services Are Actually Worth Your Money?    

If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDIt has never been easier to access countless hours of the latest, greatest TV shows and best movies from the comfort of your couch. The explosion of streaming services offering video-on-demand has given us ample choice, but what sets them apart? Join us as we break down the key points to consider and delve into the best streaming services for you.

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S19
The Best Nintendo Switch Accessories    

If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDThe Nintendo Switch has incredible staying power for a console that’s now six years old and has only had a moderate update to its screen and kickstand in all that time. Unlike the homebound PS5 and Xbox Series X, the Switch is portable, personal, and packed with exclusives and indie titles alike. Because you can play the Switch at home or on the road, you might need batteries, protective cases, and other accessories you’re not used to buying for a console.

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S20
All the Top New Features in macOS Sonoma    

There’s a new version of macOS in town. It’s called macOS Sonoma, and it’s now available for download. The latest OS brings a variety of new capabilities to your desktop, including interactive widgets, new video conferencing tools, enhancements to Safari, and more. Here, we break down the top features, whether your machine is supported, and how to download the new software. Updated September 2023: We added details on the launch of macOS Sonoma and added instructions on how to install the new operating system.

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S21
Extremely Online Republicans Are Provoking a US Government Shutdown    

washington’s biggest problem these days isn’t partisanship. It’s that far-right lawmakers are living in their own reality.Extremist Republicans have broken off from the rest of their party to create an alternate universe in which they’re in charge, empowered by Donald Trump’s followers. This disconnect is fueling an internal GOP fight in the US House of Representatives that has the federal government careening toward a shutdown at midnight on Sunday, October 1. As he claws and scrapes in an attempt to negotiate federal spending legislation, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy seems to be realizing that his rank-and-file Republicans now occupy a different universe than everyone else.

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S22
The 7 Best Conspiracies About Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce    

First thing’s first: Misinformation and disinformation are bad. False tweets that go viral, government conspiracy theories, lies about vaccines—these are all huge problems online, and they’re poised to get worse thanks to generative AI. There are a few exceptions, though. The best of these came to light over the weekend when Taylor Swift showed up at a Kansas City Chiefs game. Sports internet and Swiftie internet promptly collided—and collapsed into chaos.Some background: Swift is, for all intents and purposes, at the height of her career. Her Eras Tour, from which she’s currently taking a break, has been a juggernaut of ticket sales and a boon to local economies. (Her Los Angeles stint reportedly raised the city’s GDP by $320 million.) On the Kansas City stop of this tour, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce attempted to give Swift a friendship bracelet with his phone number on it, but never got the chance. Then, on Sunday, September 24, Swift was spotted in Kelce’s box at Arrowhead Stadium next to his mom, Donna, apparently screaming “Let’s fucking go!” when he caught a touchdown pass from quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

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S23
The 22 Best Movies on Hulu This Week    

In 2017, Hulu made television history by becoming the first streaming network to win the Outstanding Drama Series Emmy, thanks to the phenomenon that is The Handmaid’s Tale. While that painfully prescient adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s 1985 dystopian novel remains one of the best TV shows to watch on Hulu, it also set a bar for quality entertainment that the network has continued to match—and sometimes exceed—with original series like The Bear, The Great, and Only Murders in the Building. While Netflix has largely cornered the streaming market on original movies, and even managed to convince A-listers like Guillermo del Toro, Alfonso Cuarón, and Martin Scorsese to come aboard, Hulu is starting to find its footing in features too. Below are some of our top picks for the best movies (original and otherwise) streaming on Hulu right now. 

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S24
Amazon's All-Powerful 'Buy Box' Is at the Heart of Its New Antitrust Troubles    

Anyone who has shopped on Amazon will have seen the Buy Box with its peppy yellow and orange Add to Cart and Buy Now buttons. The US Federal Trade Commission has seen it too, and made it central to an antitrust case filed against Amazon today.The long-anticipated government complaint, joined by 17 state attorneys general, alleges that the ecommerce giant illegally monopolizes online shopping, lowering quality and hiking prices for consumers. "Amazon is now exploiting its monopoly power to enrich itself while raising prices and degrading service for the tens of millions of American families who shop on its platform and the hundreds of thousands of businesses that rely on Amazon to reach them," FTC chair Lina Khan said in a statement released today.

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S25
Astronomer Johannes Kepler solved life's hardest problem: marriage    

One of the greatest scientists of all-time, Johannes Kepler, is most famed for being the first to correctly describe the motion of the planets around the Sun. Prior to Kepler, the geocentric model of our Solar System held sway, as its predictions were superior to the heliocentric ones of Copernicus. But Kepler came along and, after initially constructing his own heliocentric model with circular orbits for the planets, abandoned it in favor of a model that better fit the data: one with elliptical orbits instead of circular ones. More than 400 years later, his three laws of planetary motion are still taught and studied all across the world.However, Kepler also used his mathematical prowess to solve a very different terrestrial problem that many of us still face in our lives here on Earth: when is the optimal time to marry someone, assuming you want to maximize the happiness in your life? The answer, perhaps surprisingly, is to follow what’s known as the 37% rule: reject the first 37% of all possible choices, and then pick the very next one to come along whose potential exceeds the best of the 37% who came before. Although some will wind up passing over their optimal choice and others will choose a partner before ever meeting their best possible match, the 37% rule is the mathematically superlative strategy. Here’s the science behind why.

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S26
How the "challenger brand" mindset can change the world    

When a business really succeeds in something — pulling ahead of the competition, launching a bold new product, transforming their operations, integrating a major new acquisition — it is because they have applied the core strengths of the business to a new question with a spirit of ambition. This is at the heart of making anything extraordinary happen: You need the desire to go further, to raise the bar, to aim high. Sam Walton is often quoted as saying, “High expectations are the key to everything.”Many names in the pantheon of great corporate success stories are built on that. In the early days of Microsoft, Bill Gates articulated the ambition to put a computer on every desk and in every home. Tesla set out to prove that electric vehicles could be quicker, better, and more fun to drive than gasoline cars — and disrupted the traditional vehicle industry in the process. They started small and made it big. Adam Morgan, author of Eating the Big Fish, captured the essence of a successful challenger brand: 

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S27
Herostratus: the man who destroyed an ancient wonder of the world    

Around 1000 BC, Athenian colonists sailed across the Aegean Sea and settled on the shores of what would eventually become known as the city of Ephesus in modern-day Turkey. Among the culture and customs the colonists introduced to the region was their worship of Artemis — a goddess of hunting, wild animals, chastity, and childbirth — in whose honor they constructed a great temple.The temple, which according to the historian Herodotus took over a century build, quickly became known as a wonder of the ancient world, joining the ranks of other man-made marvels like the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Colossus of Rhodes, and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia. One of the first Greek temples to be made entirely of stone, the Artemisium, as it was also called, was a staggering 429 feet (131 m) long and 259 feet (79 m) wide. Archaeological evidence suggests it was built on a raised plateau, making it resistant to both floods and earthquakes. Accounts preserved by the Roman philosopher Pliny the Elder counted 127 columns, each 65 feet (20 m) high, made in the Ionic order of classical architecture, and — as evidenced by one specimen sent to the British Museum during the 19th century — decorated with scenes of Greek mythology.

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S28
Germany to legalize cannabis -- but not here, there, or just about anywhere    

In 2024, Germany could become the first major European country to legalize the recreational use of cannabis. But just because it will be allowed in theory, doesn’t mean you will be able to light up a joint in practice.The bill now being prepared for a vote in the Bundestag proposes continued prohibition of cannabis use in so-called Jugendschutzgebiete (“youth protection zones”). These zones often overlap significantly, especially in urban areas. As this map shows, it would be virtually impossible to publicly smoke a joint in central Berlin legally.

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S29
A magnetic therapy for depression gains precision    

In the mid-1970s, a British researcher named Anthony Barker wanted to measure the speed at which electrical signals travel down the long, slender nerves that can carry signals from the brain to muscles like those in the hand, triggering movement. To find out, he needed a way to stimulate nerves in people.Researchers had already used electrodes placed on the skin to generate a magnetic field that penetrated human tissue — this produced an electric current that activated the peripheral nerves in the limbs. But the technique was painful, burning the skin. Barker, at the University of Sheffield in England, and his colleagues started to work on a better method.

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S30
GPUs from all major suppliers are vulnerable to new pixel-stealing attack    

GPUs from all six of the major suppliers are vulnerable to a newly discovered attack that allows malicious websites to read the usernames, passwords, and other sensitive visual data displayed by other websites, researchers have demonstrated in a paper published Tuesday.

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S31
Amazon wants to charge a subscription fee for Alexa eventually    

Amazon thinks that in the near future, its Alexa voice assistant will offer enough value that customers will be willing to pay a subscription fee to use it.

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S32
EVgo knows that DC fast charging is still rough, so it's fixing more stations    

EVgo, one of the nation's largest DC fast charging providers, seems to be coming around to the idea that while having more chargers would be nice, having reliably functioning chargers is more important at the moment. So it's doing something that would be odd for most other companies and announcing its progress in fixing and upgrading its network.

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S33
In depression treatment trials, placebo effect is growing stronger    

Placebos have occupied an increasingly awkward spot in the medical landscape over the last few decades. Even as placebo-controlled trials have become accepted as the gold standard for evidence, we've grown to appreciate just how powerful the placebo effect can be. Confusing matters further, a new study has expanded on a previous finding: The placebo effect for antidepressant treatments appears to be growing stronger over time.

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S34
FCC details plan to restore the net neutrality rules repealed by Ajit Pai    

Federal Communications Commission Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel today announced plans to restore net neutrality rules similar to those that were adopted during the Obama era and then repealed by the FCC when Donald Trump was president.

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S35
This week's dead Google products: Google Podcasts, basic Gmail, and more!    

Google is killing off so many products lately we need to do a roundup or we won't get anything else done today. First on the docket is the inevitable death of Google Podcasts. We've been side-eying Google Podcasts ever since Google's new podcast platform, YouTube Podcasts, launched in April. YouTube has been slowly consuming all of Google's media properties, and podcasts completes the trinity along with videos (both amateur and scripted Hollywood content) and music.

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S36
Anti-viral drug backfires: COVID drug linked to viral mutations that spread    

With every new infection, the pandemic coronavirus gets new chances to mutate and adapt, creating opportunities for the virus to evolve new variants that are better at dodging our immune systems and making us sicker.

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S37
Archaeologists: Roman soldiers used this built-in fridge to keep their wine cool    

Roman soldiers occupying what is now northern Bulgaria along the Danube River had to deal with all manner of uprisings against the empire, but at least they could keep their wine reasonably cool. Archaeologists have discovered a 2,000-year-old built-in ceramic structure they believe was used to store wine and perishable foods.

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S38
Scientists just opened the lid to NASA's asteroid sample canister    

Dante Lauretta has waited nearly 20 years to get his hands on pristine specimens from an asteroid, which he says is a key to unlocking answers to mysteries about the origin of life on Earth. On Tuesday, he got his first look at dust grains returned by NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission.

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S39
Google quietly corrects previously submitted disclosure for critical webp 0-day    

Google has quietly resubmitted a disclosure of a critical code-execution vulnerability affecting thousands of individual apps and software frameworks after its previous submission left readers with the mistaken impression that the threat affected only the Chrome browser.

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S40
How We Got 'Democracy Dies in Darkness'    

I should not have been surprised, but I still marveled at just how little it took to get under the skin of President Donald Trump and his allies. By February 2019, I had been the executive editor of The Washington Post for six years. That month, the newspaper aired a one-minute Super Bowl ad, with a voice-over by Tom Hanks, championing the role of a free press, commemorating journalists killed and captured, and concluding with the Post’s logo and the message “Democracy dies in darkness.” The ad highlighted the strong and often courageous work done by journalists at the Post and elsewhere—including by Fox News’s Bret Baier—because we were striving to signal that this wasn’t just about us and wasn’t a political statement.“There’s someone to gather the facts,” Hanks said in the ad. “To bring you the story. No matter the cost. Because knowing empowers us. Knowing helps us decide. Knowing keeps us free.”

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S41
The Coming Attack on an Essential Element of Women's Freedom    

No-fault divorce has improved the lives of millions. Now some extreme Republicans want to abandon it.For the past half century, many women in America have enjoyed an unprecedented degree of freedom and legal protection, not because of Roe v. Wade or antidiscrimination laws but because of something much less celebrated: “no fault” divorce. Beginning in the early 1970s, no-fault divorce enabled millions of people, most of them women, to file for divorce over “irreconcilable differences” or the equivalent without having to prove misconduct by a spouse—such as adultery, domestic violence, bigamy, cruelty, abandonment, or impotence.

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S42
The Supreme Court Needs to Make a Call on Trump's Eligibility    

The question of the former president’s possible disqualification needs to be resolved sooner or later. Sooner is better than later.There’s an old saying that sometimes it is more important for the law to be certain than to be right. Certainty allows people to plan their actions knowing what the rules are going to be.

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S43
Where the New Identity Politics Went Wrong    

Don’t let right-wing culture warriors obscure the fact that some ideas behind this progressive ideology have genuine problems.In universities and newspapers, nonprofit organizations and even corporations, a new set of ideas about race, gender, and sexual orientation has gained huge influence. Attitudes to these ideas—which are commonly called “woke,” though I prefer a more neutral term, the “identity synthesis”—have split into two camps: those who blame them for all of America’s ills and those who defend them, largely uncritically.

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S44
The Painful Afterlife of a Cruel Policy    

Across memoir and fiction, Fae Myenne Ng has explored the true cost of the Chinese Exclusion era.In an age of democratized self-expression, you need not be Serena Williams or Prince Harry to write a memoir—or for people to want to read about your life. Not all of these first-person works are good, but more of them means that some will be good, even fascinating. Take an ever-swelling corner of the memoir market: those written about the Asian American experience. Identity, in these books, is a constant theme, but refreshingly, it plays out in all sorts of different registers—say, racial politics (Cathy Park Hong’s Minor Feelings) or grief (Michelle Zauner’s Crying in H Mart) or friendship (Hua Hsu’s Pulitzer Prize–winning Stay True). The most compelling of these create space for bigger questions—about the historical legacy of marginalization, or the nature of belonging—through the details of a particular set of lives.

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S45
So Much for 'Learn to Code'    

This article was featured in One Story to Read Today, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a single must-read from The Atlantic, Monday through Friday. Sign up for it here.The quickest way to second-guess a decision to major in English is this: have an extended family full of Salvadoran immigrants and pragmatic midwesterners. The ability to recite Chaucer in the original Middle English was unlikely to land me a job that would pay off my student loans and help me save for retirement, they suggested when I was a college freshman still figuring out my future. I stuck with English, but when my B.A. eventually spat me out into the thick of the Great Recession, I worried that they’d been right.

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S46
The Horror Stories of Black Hair    

The Hulu series The Other Black Girl dramatizes the pains of managing Afro-textured hair—and other people’s perceptions of it.In the 1989 surrealist satire Chameleon Street, two Black men bicker after one says that he prefers women with light skin and “good hair.” After being criticized for the comment, the man makes a self-deprecating joke: “I’m a victim, brotha. I’m a victim of 400 years of conditioning. The Man has programmed my conditioning. Even my conditioning has been conditioned.” Nearly a decade later, the rap duo Black Star would sample the dialogue at the beginning of their song “Brown Skin Lady,” which is framed as a rebuke of this pervasive bias against dark skin and kinkier hair, and an ode to an idealized vision of a head-wrap-donning natural woman whose “skin’s the inspiration for cocoa butter.”

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S47
A New Coca-Cola Flavor at the End of the World    

Y3000, the latest Coke flavor, was purportedly made with the assistance of AI. What does it taste like?Coca-Cola often experiments with new flavors, and they’re usually flavors you can imagine, having tasted them before: vanilla, cherry, lemon. But the latest is called Y3000, a reference to the far-off year 3000, and one that Coca-Cola says was concocted with the help of, in some way, artificial intelligence. It smells like circus-peanut candies and tastes mostly like Coke.

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S48
The Origins of the Socialist Slur    

Reconstruction-era opponents of racial equality popularized the charge that protecting civil rights would amount to the end of capitalism.For years after World War II, the “liberal consensus”—the New Deal idea that the federal government had a role to play in regulating business, providing a basic social safety net, and promoting infrastructure—was a true consensus. It was so widely popular that in 1950, the critic Lionel Trilling wrote of the United States that “liberalism is not only the dominant but even the sole intellectual tradition.”

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S49
American Democracy Requires a Conservative Party    

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.Every nation needs parties of the left and the right, but America’s conservative party has collapsed—and its absence will undermine the recovery of American democracy even when Donald Trump is gone.

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S50
Facing a tedious to-do list? This trick could make it easier | Psyche Ideas    

is a staff writer at Psyche. Her science journalism has appeared in Vice, The New York Times and Wired, among others. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.It’s late afternoon, and your inbox is overflowing with emails. Imagine that many of them require a reply from you that involves intense concentration: they might be about complex logistics, or summarising sensitive work details to managers. And yet there’s another set you need to answer that is about a work party, an enjoyable event you’re looking forward to. This email task – mainly about choosing a restaurant – is lighter, fun even.

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S51
See Washington National Cathedral's New Racial Justice-Themed Stained-Glass Windows    

Designed by artist Kerry James Marshall, the panels replace windows depicting Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall JacksonFor more than 60 years, stained-glass windows honoring Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson hung at Washington National Cathedral. But after a gunman shot and killed nine Black worshippers at a church in South Carolina in 2015, the cathedral decided to take them down.

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S52
Artificial Wombs for Premature Babies Might Soon Begin Human Trials    

An FDA panel discussed the new technology—tested only on animals so far—along with its risks and potential to improve survival of preterm infantsA Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee met last week to discuss human trials of artificial wombs, which could one day be used to keep extremely premature, or preterm, infants alive.

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S53
The World's Oldest Post Office Gets New Owners    

The world’s oldest working post office has been operating continuously in southern Scotland since 1712. But when its owners decided they were ready to retire in 2019, some onlookers worried the facility would close and lose its title.Barry and Mary Ford have now taken over the 311-year-old site in Sanquhar, a small village situated about 50 miles south of Glasgow in Scotland’s Dumfries and Galloway region. They will be the 17th operators in the facility’s history.

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S54
Earth's Next Supercontinent Could Wipe Out Mammals in 250 Million Years    

Termed "Pangea Ultima," the predicted future landmass might be extremely hot, plagued by volcanoes and largely inhospitable, per a new modeling studyIn 250 million years, the vast majority of Earth could become inhospitable to mammals as the planet's landmasses merge together to form the next supercontinent. At least, that's the dire outlook of a new study published Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

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S55
Stunning 16th-Century Turkish Bath Reopens in Istanbul    

The revitalized space will feature a museum and contemporary art in addition to traditional bathingFollowing a 13-year restoration, a 16th-century Turkish bath is reopening in Istanbul’s Zeyrek district this month.

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S56
Antarctic Winter Sea Ice Hits a Record Low 'by a Wide Margin'    

On September 10, the ice reached its lowest annual maximum in the books amid a record-smashing year that’s ringing “alarm bells” for polar iceAt the end of each Antarctic winter, which occurs in September, the frigid continent’s sea ice has spread to its greatest extent of the year. This month, the ice reached its annual maximum on September 10—and it set a grim record.

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S57
To Defend the Genome, These Cells Destroy Their Own DNA | Quanta Magazine    

Marie Delattre was studying the sexual reproduction practices of microscopic worms when she noticed something unexpected. Under the microscope, an embryo of the nematode Mesorhabditis belari was dividing as it should, progressing from one cell to two to four. But inside a few cells she saw an inexplicable spray of DNA fragments floating around where they didn't belong."There was DNA everywhere, inside the nuclei and outside the nuclei — big chunks of DNA," she said. "I thought it was a dead embryo."

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S58
How to Fight a Price War    

Price wars—retaliatory cuts in prices to win customers—can devastate managers, companies, even entire industries. Yet they’re increasingly common in electronic and traditional commerce. Witness the great price battle of 1999 in the long-distance phone industry: after the dust cleared, AT&T, MCI, and Sprint all saw their stock prices dip by as much as 5%. To survive a price war unscathed, you need weapons other than price cuts. Emphasize your product’s quality, for example, or superior service. This article outlines both non-price and price tactics that let you walk away with the spoils of war.

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S59
Halt Impostor Syndrome Before It Happens    

Our special report on innovation systems will help leaders guide teams that rely on virtual collaboration, explores the potential of new developments, and provides insights on how to manage customer-led innovation.Our special report on innovation systems will help leaders guide teams that rely on virtual collaboration, explores the potential of new developments, and provides insights on how to manage customer-led innovation.Isabela is an associate at a global management consulting firm, where she started working shortly after earning an MBA from a top business school. Her strong analytical and quantitative skills, coupled with her interpersonal and communication skills, have garnered Isabela high performance ratings. But despite a stellar performance record and clients’ and senior managers’ characterization of her as “at manager level,” Isabela did not apply for the manager position that recently became available.

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S60
Influencing can be a high-earning career. Why don't we take it seriously?    

Most days, Chloe Homan's work schedule is jam-packed. The 32-year-old from Wisconsin, US, usually starts her week with planning and touching base with her team, while Tuesdays are back-to-back with meetings. Wednesday and Thursday are reserved for focused work. With Friday spent wrapping up loose ends before the weekend, Homan says she can sometimes rack up 80 to 90 hours of work each week. Yet in spite of her long hours and intense work schedule, plenty of people still don't see her line of work as a "real job". Homan is a professional influencer, who has been on the receiving end of plenty of eye-rolling about her career. 

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S61
Why massive shoes are the trend of the year    

From cowboy boots and kitten heels to Mary Janes and court shoes, 2023 has heralded the return of many established shoes to the runway. But it has also seen the rise of a new, more surprising one: the cartoonishly oversized shoe. Pre-empted by the likes of Bottega Veneta’s BV "puddle boot" (a chunky-soled rubber rain boot with a bulbous toe that debuted in 2020), and Kerwin Frost's super-stuffed Adidas Superstars (a 2021 collaboration that saw the classic Superstar sneaker padded out to appear clownishly large), the maximalist look was galvanised in February of this year when the US label and art collective MSCHF released its attention-grabbing "big red boot".Seeming to have leapt straight from the pages of the 1990s Japanese manga series Astro Boy, the giant, pillarbox-red boots, rendered in TPU and EVA foam, are simultaneously nostalgic, futuristic, and utterly absurd; as MSCHF declared in its press release, "If you kick someone in these boots, they go boing!" Yet, despite their silliness and inadvertent suction issues – see the viral TikTok video in which one wearer gets stuck in their BRBs – the unisex boots were soon being sported by everyone from Doja Cat and Lil Nas X to Iggy Azalea and Janelle Monáe.

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S62
Time travel to the Tardis: 10 facts you need to know about Doctor Who before watching    

The Doctor is a Time Lord from the "shining world of the seven systems", the planet Gallifrey in the constellation of Kasterborous, 250 million light years away from where you are (probably) reading this. The Doctor has been travelling across space and time in a time-travelling spaceship called the Tardis, protecting people, things and planets from malevolent aliens and monsters, armed with only a Sonic Screwdriver.As the Fourth Doctor (played by Tom Baker) said in an episode from 1983, "I never carry weapons. If people see you mean them no harm, they never hurt you – nine times out of 10" (the 10th time perhaps being the operative number). The Doctor does, however, carry a Sonic Screwdriver, a small, pen-like device that buzzes and glows when it is switched on. It can be used variously for fixing and breaking things, opening doors, and general scanning and investigation. It's not entirely clear how it works. Try not to think about it too much.

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S63
Kindness has persisted in a competitive world - cultural evolution can explain why    

Recently, I was walking with some fellow parents after nursery drop-off when we came across a five-pound note lying on the pavement. We stood around it for a moment, a bit awkwardly, until someone suggested putting it on a nearby bench. Then one of the parents remarked that we’d probably have behaved differently — that is, we would have just taken the money — had we been alone.Yet, despite a common theme of dismissing the ethical teachings of many organised religions worldwide, one of the points of Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of repentance, is to help us learn to behave better regardless of who is watching. There’s an evolutionary beauty to the teachings of religions, which are the products of thousands of years of cultural change and refinement.

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S64
The story of Ohio's ancient Native complex and its long journey for recognition as a World Heritage site    

Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks in Ohio was added to UNESCO’s list of World Heritage sites on Sept. 19, 2023. The eight mound complexes that received this designation are spread across central and southern Ohio and were built between the beginning of the common era and the 12th century.The mounds are marvels of Indigenous science and astronomy, which helped Native Americans organize everything from cycles of planting and hunting to their ritual calendar.

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S65
How to create a college internship where students actually learn - and don't want to quit    

When Angelica landed a prestigious internship with a major corporation just outside of Houston, she was ecstatic about the opportunity to launch her career in finance. But even with a decent paycheck and scholarships to cover her rent, Angelica considered leaving the internship within weeks. What went wrong?

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S66
'Design of Coffee' course teaches engineering through brewing the perfect cup of coffee    

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching. In 2012, my colleague professor Tonya Kuhl and I were drinking coffee and brainstorming how to improve our senior-level laboratory course in chemical engineering. Tonya looked at her coffee and suggested, “How about we have the students reverse-engineer a Mr. Coffee drip brewer to see how it works?”

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S67
Why does a plane look and feel like it's moving more slowly than it actually is?    

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to [email protected] does a plane look and feel like it’s moving more slowly than it actually is? – Finn F., age 8, Concord, Massachusetts

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S68
Flesh-eating bacteria infections are on the rise in the US - a microbiologist explains how to protect yourself    

Flesh-eating bacteria sounds like the premise of a bad horror movie, but it’s a growing – and potentially fatal – threat to people.In September 2023, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a health advisory alerting doctors and public health officials of an increase in flesh-eating bacteria cases that can cause serious wound infections.

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S70
The Supreme Court's originalists have taken over - here's how they interpret the Constitution    

Today a majority of U.S. Supreme Court justices are either self-described originalists or strongly lean toward originalism. Yet less than 50 years ago, originalism was considered a fringe movement, hardly taken seriously by most legal scholars. Originalism is the theory that judges are bound to interpret the Constitution as it would have been interpreted in the historical era when it was written. Understood this way, originalism is the idea that judges must follow the law as written and not merely ignore it or reinterpret it to their liking.

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