CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer!
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S3 S5 S6 S7Taupo: The super volcano under New Zealand's largest lake   Located in the centre of New Zealand's North Island, the town of Taupo sits sublimely in the shadow of the snow-capped peaks of Tongariro National Park. Fittingly, this 40,000-person lakeside town has recently become one of New Zealand's most popular tourist destinations, as hikers, trout fishers, water sports enthusiasts and adrenaline junkies have started descending upon it.The namesake of this tidy town is the Singapore-sized lake that kisses its western border. Stretching 623sq km wide and 160m deep with several magma chambers submerged at its base, Lake Taupo isn't only New Zealand's largest lake; it's also an incredibly active geothermal hotspot. Every summer, tourists flock to bathe in its bubbling hot springs and sail through its emerald-green waters. Yet, the lake is the crater of a giant super volcano, and within its depths lies the unsettling history of this picturesque marvel.
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S8Message sticks: Australia's ancient unwritten language   The continent of Australia is home to more than 250 spoken Indigenous languages and 800 dialects. Yet, one of its linguistic cornerstones wasn't spoken, but carved.Known as message sticks, these flat, rounded and oblong pieces of wood were etched with ornate images on both sides that conveyed important messages and held the stories of the continent's Aboriginal people – considered the world's oldest continuous living culture. Message sticks are believed to be thousands of years old and were typically carried by messengers over long distances to reinforce oral histories or deliver news between Aboriginal nations or language groups.
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S9Did Australia's boomerangs pave the way for flight?   The aircraft is one of the most significant developments of modern society, enabling people, goods and ideas to fly around the world far more efficiently than ever before. The first successful piloted flight took off in 1903 in North Carolina, but a 10,000-year-old hunting tool likely developed by Aboriginal Australians may have held the key to its lift-off. As early aviators discovered, the secret to flight is balancing the flow of air. Therefore, an aircraft's wings, tail or propeller blades are often shaped in a specially designed, curved manner called an aerofoil that lifts the plane up and allows it to drag or turn to the side as it moves through the air.
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S10Why British chocolate tastes the way it does   Imagine a taste test with identical-looking squares of milk chocolate, each from a different country. If you tasted them like a sweets-sommelier, swishing your mouth out with water before each to cleanse your palate, would you be able to tell which was British?Online forums are littered with people insisting that there is a unique flavor to chocolate made in the UK. There are plenty of click-bait news stories as well. People love to weigh in – and blanket condemnations of certain other nations' chocolates are hurled with glee.
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S11Adapting Crops for Extreme Weather   Do wild varieties of overlooked grains, fruits and vegetables hold the key to developing more resilient agriculture?A scientist examines seeds at The Future Seeds gene bank in Palmira, Colombia on March 18, 2022.
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S12Why Does Fruitcake Last So Long?   The humble fruitcake has stood the test of time—both culturally and scientifically. One of the earliest references to the dessert dates to the Ancient Romans, who used it like an energy bar and filled it with pomegranate seeds, raisins, honey and wine. Soldiers in World War I also fancied a version of the baked treat: wrapped in wax paper, this small fruitcake provided some morsel of nutrients when many other foods would spoil during long stretches in barren battle trenches.Nowadays fruitcakes are a holiday delicacy still prized for their long-lasting freshness. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, these seemingly indestructible pastries typically stay fresh for six months in the pantry and up to a year when refrigerated. But anecdotally we know that they can last for decades; some of the oldest have been preserved for more than a century. In 2017 a then 106-year-old fruitcake left behind by members of a 1910 Antarctic expedition was unearthed from one of the continent’s first buildings. And in 2019 the Detroit News reported that a Michigan family treasured a then 141-year-old fruitcake as an heirloom. And you could theoretically still eat these century-old cakes without harm—if you can get past the nauseating, rancid smell.
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S13EV Batteries Are Dangerous to Repair. Here's Why Mechanics Are Doing So Anyway   Fixing car and e-bike batteries saves money and resources, but challenges are holding back the industryAbout three times a day, Rich Benoit gets a call to his auto shop, The Electrified Garage, from the owner of an older Tesla Model S whose car battery has begun to fail. The battery, which used to provide several hundred miles of range, might suddenly only last 50 miles on a single charge. These cars are often out of warranty, and the cost of replacing the battery can exceed $15,000.
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S14 S15Poem: 'Baby Crocodile'   Tender bones, tiny soul: it could escapein death in an instant. Itself death-dealer—mouth of teeth, tyrannosaurin miniature, an apparently exact copyof its dozen nestmates—it repeats, too, time.Yet over its life lurks the great oversoul:the mother. She hulks. Seems to sleep. Slitty eyes,creaking limbs, so freightedwith scales and bulk as to appear unmovable,she tolerates our whispering observation
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S16The Race to Put Brain Implants in People Is Heating Up   In September, Elon Musk’s brain-implant company Neuralink announced the much-anticipated news that it would start recruiting volunteers for a clinical trial to test its device. Known as a brain-computer interface, or BCI, it collects electrical activity from neurons and interprets those signals into commands to control an external device. While Musk has said he ultimately wants to merge humans with artificial intelligence, Neuralink’s initial aim is to enable paralyzed people to control a cursor or keyboard with just their thoughts.Rival efforts to connect people’s brains to computers are also moving forward. This year, Neuralink competitor Synchron demonstrated the long-term safety of its implant in patients. Other startups tested novel devices in human subjects, while new ventures came on the scene.
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S17The Hollywood Strikes Stopped AI From Taking Your Job. But for How Long?   Revolt against the machines began at Swingers. And at Bob’s Big Boy, where for weeks Drew Carey picked up the tab. Members of the Writers Guild of America, or WGA, met at both Los Angeles-area diners frequently during their 148-day strike, which hinged on protecting Hollywood’s scribes from being overrun by the march of artificial intelligence.Members of the WGA were just a small part of the resistance. There were others. The Screen Actors Guild—American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, or SAG-AFTRA, soon joined them on the picket lines, together forming a formidable uprising against the perceived threat of AI.
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S18Supercomputer Frontier sets new record with 9.95 quintillion calculations per second   Give people a barrier, and at some point they are bound to smash through. Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier in 1947. Yuri Gagarin burst into orbit for the first manned spaceflight in 1961. The Human Genome Project finished cracking the genetic code in 2003. And we can add one more barrier to humanity’s trophy case: the exascale barrier.The exascale barrier represents the challenge of achieving exascale-level computing, which has long been considered the benchmark for high performance. To reach that level, however, a computer needs to perform a quintillion calculations per second. You can think of a quintillion as a million trillion, a billion billion, or a million million millions. Whichever you choose, it’s an incomprehensibly large number of calculations.
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S19Unusual boxes and 7,000-year-old trove found locked in ice   Northern Canada is known for its blustery weather, dramatic landscape, and plentiful ice. But with an unprecedented thaw in Canada’s Mount Edziza Provincial Park the past few years, objects began emerging from the ice.Some of the manmade possessions are 7,000 years old, and they belonged to the Tahltan First Nations. Mount Edziza, a volcano located in northwestern British Columbia, has remained a significant hunting ground for the Tahltan nation for thousands of years. With this discovery, archaeologists are now able to gain more insight into what life was like for people here since around 5,000 B.C.
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S20Earth's magnetic field supports biblical stories of destruction of ancient cities   A vast city of 10,000 once stood within the grounds of Tel Zafit National Park. Now it is an archaeological dig, nothing but burned mud bricks, a crumbling break in the city’s defenses, and weapons cobbled together at the last minute from animal bones. What happened here? What force brought this great city to its end? According to the Bible, Gath was one of the main Philistine cities and the home of Goliath the Giant. Its destruction is glossed over, described in less than one verse of the Bible, in the book of 2 Kings.
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S21Film Technica: Our favorite movies of 2023   It's been an odd couple of years for film as the industry struggles to regain its footing in the wake of a devastating global pandemic, but there are reasons to be optimistic about its future, both from a box office and variety standpoint. This was the year that the blockbuster superhero franchises that have dominated for more than a decade finally showed signs of faltering; the Marvel and DC Universe releases this year were mostly fine, but only one (Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse) made our 2023 year-end list. There were just so many of them, one after the other, adding up to serious superhero fatigue.
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S22The 20 most-read stories of 2023   Every so often, you live through a year that you know you're going to remember. Sometimes it's because of a personal milestone. Other times it's because of noteworthy events that affected all of us in one way or another. And in some years, it's because we were all surprised by unanticipated and rapid technological advances.
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S23People can tell what you want to know when you shake wrapped Christmas gifts   Christmas Day is a time for opening presents and finally ending the suspense of what one is receiving this year, but chances are some of us may have already guessed what's under the wrapping—perhaps by strategically shaking the boxes for clues about its contents. According to a November paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, if someone happened to see you shaking a wrapped gift, they would be able to tell from those motions what you were trying to learn by doing so.
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S24The Return of the Pagans   Take a close look at Donald Trump—the lavishness of his homes, the buildings emblazoned with his name and adorned with gold accoutrements, his insistent ego, even the degree of obeisance he evokes among his followers—and, despite the fervent support he receives from many evangelical Christians, it’s hard to avoid concluding that there’s something a little pagan about the man. Or consider Elon Musk. With his drive to conquer space to expand the human empire, his flirtation with anti-Semitic tropes, his 10 children with three different women, Musk embodies the wealth worship and ideological imperialism of ego that are more than a little pagan too.Most ancient pagan belief systems were built around ritual and magic, coercive practices intended to achieve a beneficial result. They centered the self. The revolutionary contribution of monotheism was its insistence that the principal concern of God is, instead, how people treat one another.
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S25The Nine Breakthroughs of the Year   This is Work in Progress, a newsletter about work, technology, and how to solve some of America’s biggest problems. Sign up here.The theme of my second-annual Breakthroughs of the Year is the long road of progress. My top breakthrough is Casgevy, a gene-editing treatment for sickle-cell anemia. In the 1980s and early 1990s, scientists in Spain and Japan found strange, repeating patterns in the DNA of certain bacteria. Researchers eventually linked these sequences to an immune defense system that they named “clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeats”—or CRISPR. In the following decades, scientists found clever ways to build on CRISPR to edit genes in plants, animals, and even humans. CRISPR is this year’s top breakthrough not only because of heroic work done in the past 12 months, but also because of a long thread of heroes whose work spans decades.
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S26Dear Therapist: How Do I Talk to My Boyfriend About His Ex?   I’m in a new long-distance relationship with a man I was with in our early 20s (we are now 38 and 40). I plan to move out of state to be with him in a few months. Things have gotten very intense very quickly—something we have both been aware of and are okay with.However, he has an ex whom he broke up with about a year and a half ago. Their breakup was tumultuous. When she came up in conversation about a month ago, I asked, “If things had gone differently that night, do you think you’d still be together?” He answered with a pretty confident-sounding “Yes.” Just “yes.” He also described her as having been a “mother figure” to his 10-year-old son, and described her children as being “like siblings” to his son. They were together for three years, although during this time they did break up and get back together. She also cheated on him, but he was adamant about making things work after that.
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S27The New 'The Color Purple' Finds Its Own Rhythm   The movie musical is a tear-jerking and exultant epic that also works as a companion piece to the 1985 original.Steven Spielberg’s 1985 adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize–winning novel, The Color Purple, was a serious-minded prestige drama. The film simplified the story but faithfully rendered the book’s emotional weight through Spielberg’s vibrant direction, Quincy Jones’s sweeping score, and a strong ensemble cast. The movie became a classic that, despite notoriously failing to win any of the 11 Oscars it was nominated for, made more than five times its budget at the box office, inspired a Tony-winning Broadway musical, and made stars of Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey.
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S28The Only Thing More Dangerous Than Authoritarianism   The forces of Christian nationalism are now ascendant both inside the Church and inside the Republican Party. This Christmas season, I have been reflecting on the words of my favorite author, C. S. Lewis, who once observed: “I have learned now that while those who speak about one’s miseries usually hurt, those who keep silence hurt more.”
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S29Valentine   The deer in the snow turned away from my flashlight and kettle to let me fight with the ice alone. I was thinking of you then, of your sleeping head, of your maskless mouth. I used to think your heart was like an old waterway always locking and filling up, but it’s not just one thing —it could be this kettle. It could be the steam in the dark. The light bouncing around the branches at midnight. Mine might be an ancient furnace. The bunny tracks running up from the bramble to the catalpa. That tree will bloom in June. White clouds tacked on a knotty frame. Broad leaves with no teeth or lobes. I’ll remember then, the bunnies living in its roots, the furnace resting beyond the green crawl-space doors, and I’ll reach for your radiant hand before supper because that’s when we say grace.
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S30A Christmas-in-July-in-December Party   Lizzie: The Yuletide Blues are a real thing. Elvis had them. Charlie Brown had them. Tim Allen had them in Christmas With the Kranks and in The Santa Clause (during his custody battle). And that’s why we host holiday parties: to shoo away the blues until New Year’s, at which point we party again.When we last left you, I mentioned that I was planning a tiki-inspired holiday party. The whole thing came to fruition last weekend, minus the fruit tower and the shrimp luge. (It was really quite difficult, veering on impossible, to find a full-body pineapple in Brooklyn in December). Maybe this festive update, for you, is highly anticipated. Perhaps you’ve been waiting, breath bated, to hear how it all turned out. Well, you can unbate.
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S31Fast Car: Why a 35-year-old folk anthem became one of the songs of 2023   This year's most ubiquitous hits include Miley Cyrus's Flowers, a disco-tinged ode to self-care, and SZA's Tarantino-inspired revenge anthem Kill Bill. Meanwhile, Morgan Wallen's liquor-soaked love song Last Night spent an astonishing 16 weeks on top of the Billboard Hot 100. However, one of 2023's defining tunes isn't a freshly minted hit by a Gen Z or millennial superstar, but a country cover of a 35-year-old folk anthem. "I had a feeling I could be someone, be someone, be someone," Luke Combs sings yearningly on Fast Car, a song about escaping from poverty that was first made famous by its writer, Tracy Chapman, in 1988. Led by a finger-picked guitar intro that instantly evokes memories of Chapman's original, Combs' faithful but fuller-sounding version climbed to number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in July. When it was named song of the year by the Country Music Association in November, Chapman became the first black woman ever to receive this prestigious songwriting prize. Combs has been lauded, too, with a Grammy nomination for best country solo performance.
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S32How AI could dramatically improve cancer patients' prognosis   Professeur de marketing à ESCP Business School, professeur vacataire, ESCP Business School With 1.2 million deaths in the 2020, or 23% of the total number of deaths, cancer is the second biggest killer in the European Union. The figure is all the more tragic given 40% of these cancers could be prevented through early detection and lifestyle change such as not smoking or regular exercise.
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S33The Christmas when all the sodomites died   There is an obscure medieval legend that says once upon a time in Bethlehem, a child was born whose holiness was so great it required the slaughter of all the “sodomites” in the world. Sodomites, the legend says, are so impure God did not want to share His humanity with them. So, He killed them all before He became human.
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S34 S35 S36Relax - having different sleeping arrangements over the holidays probably won't wreck your child's sleep routine   Sleep, along with diet and physical activity, is one of the three pillars of good health. Good sleep makes it easier to grow, learn, perform, be happy, stay in our best weight range and generally be in the best mental and physical health. This is true for all humans but is particularly important with children.Regular sleep patterns are important for good sleep. But children and their families often stay with relatives or in holiday accommodation around this time of year. Parents may anxiously wonder: will changing sleeping arrangements during school holidays sabotage good habits formed and maintained during the school term?
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S37As Aussie as vanilla slice: how the delicate European dessert became the snot block of Aussie bakeries   In 1998, Victorian premier Jeff Kennett visited a town in regional Victoria and said he had discovered, in his opinion, the best vanilla slice in Australia at the local bakery. He was so inspired by his slice experience that he established a new competition to determine, conclusively, Australia’s best vanilla slice. The inaugural “Great Australian Vanilla Slice Triumph” was held in Ouyen, Victoria on October 23 that year. Kennett’s press release promoting the event declared this “important Australian culinary delicacy has tantalised Australians since white settlement” and “the pursuit of the best vanilla slice and the best vanilla slice baker in Australia should be of great national interest”.
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S38The Mysterious And Wild Spoke Season On Saturn Is Here!   Saturn is a lot like Santa: They’ll both deliver an exciting gift during a special season, but their logistics are a puzzle.More than four decades ago, astronomers beheld the first photos of Saturn. When they peered at these images from NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft, they noticed fuzzy stripes radiating outwards along the planet’s famous rings. They look like spoke-shaped stains. Since then, astronomers have seen the spokes time and time again. Their visual contrasts vary, as do their numbers. Plus, they don’t show up consistently. But, they’re abundant now. NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) published a new image of these spokes on Thursday, because ‘tis the season.
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S3925 Years Ago, the Most Underrated Sci-Fi Thriller Redefined an Entire Genre   A high school is the perfect setting for a horror movie. With so many different people on the verge of becoming adults, a few bad seeds going rogue is believable. Scream, The Craft, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and Carrie have all become classics within this ready-made ensemble scenario. One movie deserves to stand alongside those heavy hitters, but it’s been besmirched by its sci-fi crossover tone and nebulous title. Twenty-five years later, it’s clear that between its all-star ‘90s ensemble cast and paranoid alien impersonator threat, it may as well have been called That “Thing” You Do.
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S40This Out-Of-This-World Tool To Fight Climate Change Might Actually Work   It’s becoming increasingly clear that we will fail to meet our climate goals. We were already warming at 1.26°C in 2022 and are on track to blow through 1.5°C in the mid-2030s. Research even suggests that current climate policy will lead to more than 2.5°C of warming by the end of this century.Warming of this magnitude would devastate vulnerable communities and ecosystems around the world. It’s time we consider something radically new that could stop climate change in its tracks.
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S41The Best In-Car Tech of 2023   It’s not just about what’s “under the hood” anymore — cars are just as much about computing as they are about getting from A to B.It’s no secret — cars are computers. And just like computers, we’re not buying for the wrapper necessarily, but the goodness inside. That seems apparent to the folks responsible for filling new cars with tech, because 2023 saw some exciting breakthroughs in that arena.
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S4215 Years Later, a Forgotten Star Wars Artifact Could Bring Back a Fan-Favorite Jedi   Star Wars canon keeps getting more and more expansive, but the timeline is firm. In movies and television, Star Wars as we know it begins with the discovery of Anakin Skywalker on Tatooine in The Phantom Menace, and ends with Palpatine’s return and defeat in The Rise of Skywalker. However, that’s set to change with 2024’s The Acolyte, Leslye Headland’s Disney+ series about Sith shenanigans set a century before the prequels. The Acolyte’s timeframe makes it seem like it’s completely separate from others like Obi-Wan Kenobi or Ahsoka, but an ancient object from an old comic book could actually tie the shows together perfectly, bring back a beloved character, and introduce a popular comic book character or two to the current canon.
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S43An Enduring Mystery About Mars' Smallest Moons Could Finally Be Solved   The two small moons of Mars, Phobos (about 22km in diameter) and Deimos (about 13km in diameter), have puzzled scientists for decades, with their origin remaining a matter of debate. Some have proposed that they may be made up of residual debris produced from a planet or large asteroid smashing into the surface of Mars (#TeamImpact).An opposing hypothesis (#TeamCapture), however, suggests the moons are asteroids that were captured by Mars’s gravitational pull and were trapped in orbit.
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S44'Doctor Who' Revives an Old Tradition -- And Starts a Historic New Era   The Doctor Who 60th anniversary celebration has come and gone, but there’s still time for a new episode — and a new Doctor — before we ring in 2024. The 2023 Christmas special “The Church on Ruby Road” will see Ncuti Gatwa’s 15th Doctor crossing paths with his soon-to-be companion, Ruby Sunday, one Christmas Eve. But just when can you watch this? This episode will arrive on its new streaming home of Disney+ at an unusual time to coincide with its original BBC air time, so here’s everything you need to know about streaming the episode as soon as possible.
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S45This Bizarre Idea For A Supplement Reveals An Enduring Truth About Endurance Sports   Ketchup packets won’t enhance performance, and consuming enough beneficial compounds from ketchup seems impractical.In the world of endurance sports, how athletes fuel themselves can be the difference between success and struggle. Traditionally, athletes have relied on specialized energy gels for a quick and easily digestible source of carbohydrates during extended workouts. But now a surprising contender has emerged: Heinz ketchup packets, thanks to a new ad featuring runners using them as their supplement of choice.
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S4650 Things for Your Home Trending on Amazon That Are Sick as Hell   Ready to give your house some love? Or maybe you are happy with the furniture, but what about the little things? Those things that bring real comfort, charm, personality, and organization to your space. Surely those could use an upgrade. Luckily, there are so many hidden gems that can transform your home. From heating vent attachments that direct the air away from you to a charging station for all of your technology, these 50 things for your home are trending on Amazon because they are sick as hell.When the heat or AC vent blows right in your face or overheats your workspace or bedroom, stick this magnetic heat and air deflector to the vent and redirect it away from you. The size adjusts to fit the vents you have and, once installed, it’s nearly invisible. This is a two-pack.
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S47Apple's Vision Pro Is Already Influencing the iPhone 16   It looks like the Vision Pro is going to send major ripples throughout Apple’s entire ecosystem of products when it launches.The iPhone, the metal and glass rectangle we all know and love, is some of the most valuable tech real estate out there. To put it another way: If the iPhone was the Roku remote, Hulu, Vudu, and the like would be falling over themselves to be on it. Or they would be, if Apple “sold” its valuable “land” to anyone other than itself.
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S48Amazon's Selling a Ton of These 50 Weird, Cheap Things That Work So Freaking Well   Sometimes you have to think outside the box to come up with a great solution to all of life’s little problems. And the weird items on this list are gaining new fans daily thanks to their low prices and high level of functionality. From a popular cover that will keep your microwave clean to a bug-shaped flashlight that runs for 22 hours, everything has a genius design that allows it to work effectively.Thanks to its laser-etched stainless steel blade, this pizza wheel makes it easy to slice pizza, quesadillas, and more. Its removable shield keeps your fingers safe while slicing and makes it easier to get it clean when you’re done. One reviewer wrote, “It works beautifully. Weighted just right. Cleaned easily.”
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S492023's Last Great Film is the Perfect Comeback for a Legendary Director   Michael Mann has never really made a movie like Ferrari before. It’s a racing drama that is essentially split, both visually and narratively, in two. One half of it is a stately character drama about a man (Adam Driver’s Enzo Ferrari) trying to reckon with his dueling responsibilities to his mistress, Lina (Shailene Woodley), and their young son, and to his wife, Laura (Penélope Cruz), whose marriage to him has been in shambles ever since the demise of their one and only child. Its other half is a tactile thriller that puts you in the front seat for all of its dangerous, shockingly deadly races.Over the course of its 124-minute runtime, Ferrari keeps the two halves of itself largely separate. Like Enzo’s two families, though, the line separating Ferrari’s austere and thrill-seeking sides eventually crumbles. When it does, the film emerges as a bittersweet tale of masculine egotism and moral compromise. The drama, in other words, fits right in with so many of the other films that Mann has made throughout his staggering career. Few filmmakers have depicted the difficulties of achieving personal and professional fulfillment as beautifully as Mann has over the past 40 years.
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S50Video Games and Resilience: Science Explains Why Playing Zelda Is Good For Your Brain   When it comes to learning from video games, many people think of Lumosity or Big Brain Academy, edutainment games intended to slow brain aging. A 2023 French study, however, has suggested that players can learn other real-life lessons from their games. Data obtained from more than 300 adult MMORPG players suggested a correlation between gaming and resilience. The more a participant played video games, the more resilient they tended to be.It’s nice to see science genuinely examine the potential benefits of gaming instead of unequivocally writing them off as “bad.” It’s even nicer to know I’m not alone in the things I’ve learned from video games. Series ranging from The Legend of Zelda to Call of Duty taught me I could be many things and live many lives; not in a concerning, “If I pass, I’ll respawn” way, but in an adaptable, “I’m not scared to reinvent myself” one instead. They modeled resilience for me.
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S5119   George Cohon died this year at age 86. These quotes show the kind of man he was.
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S52 S53 S54 S55 S56 S57 S58 S59 S60 S61Shukubo: The Japanese temples where you can sleep alongside monks   In the serene world of Japanese Buddhist monks, life takes on a distinctive form, interwoven with discipline and mindfulness. These monks subscribe to a unique method of meditation, often sitting upright, supported only by a modest cushion. In this position, they uphold a constant state of awareness, embodying the Buddhist quality of prolonged concentration. This approach to faith is just one facet of a monk's lifestyle, which revolves around spiritual dedication and mindfulness.Their days typically commence with pre-dawn meditation, followed by a simple breakfast composed of vegetarian or vegan offerings. As the sun rises, the monks chant to foster self-awareness and inner peace.
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S62 S63The mystery of the medieval fighting snails   The knight pulls his arm back, poised to strike. He's dressed in the typical armour of the 14th Century, with a chainmail suit, belted tunic and bucket-style helmet. Standing within a small grassy clearing, he's holding up a shield which, inexplicably, has its own face. He also wields a club, which brushes the bottom of a swathe of religious text on the yellowed page of the medieval book he's drawn onto. But even within the pages of antique tomes, knights must face mortal perils. This one's chivalric opponent is a particularly slippery beast – a foe often found slinking along in their margins and engaging noblemen in deadly combat. Sometimes the creatures appear to be hovering, attacking knights in mid-air. Occasionally there is more than one. This is the uniquely medieval phenomenon of the fighting snail – and to this day, why they were depicted remains utterly mysterious.
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S64Intervention at an Early Age May Hold Off the Onset of Depression   Preventing initial episodes might stop depression from becoming a disabling chronic conditionEsther Oladejo knew she'd crossed an invisible boundary when she started forgetting to eat for entire days at a time. A gifted rugby player, Oladejo had once thrived on her jam-packed school schedule. But after she entered her teenage years, her teachers started piling on assignments and quizzes to prepare students for high-stakes testing that would help them to qualify for university.
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S65How to Escape a Time Loop You Don't Really Want to Leave   Time and grief are two inexorable companions in life, even when we are falling in love. It is truths like this one that set the scene for A Quantum Love Story. Tragedy has already struck when the novel begins, as neuroscientist Mariana Pineda has just lost her best friend, Shay. Carrying Shay's framed portrait, Mariana is headed to marvel at the new Hawke Accelerator with the team from ReLive, an experimental program that allows people to reenter their memories and live those moments once again. Mariana has given up her old life to start working at ReLive just before disaster hits.One morning she runs into Carter Cho, a mysterious man bearing doughnuts and a surprising amount of knowledge about who she is and what she's after. Carter tries to explain something to her about how they've been there before and how he needs her to remember. Carter, who has an eidetic memory, can do nothing but remember. He knows what's about to happen: there's going to be an explosion at Hawke, and time is going to bend around them in a time loop that restarts every four days.
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S66The 46 Best Movies on Netflix This Week   Netflix has plenty of movies to watch, but it’s a real mixed bag. Sometimes finding the right film at the right time can seem like an impossible task. Fret not, we’re here to help. Below is a list of some of our favorites currently on the streaming service—from dramas to comedies to thrillers.If you decide you’re in more of a TV mood, head over to our collection of the best TV series on Netflix. Want more? Check out our lists of the best sci-fi movies, best movies on Amazon Prime, and the best flicks on Disney+.
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S67AI Is Telling Bedtime Stories to Your Kids Now   The problem with Bluey is there's not enough of it. Even with 151 seven-minute-long episodes of the popular children's animated show out there, parents of toddlers still desperately wait for Australia’s Ludo Studio to release another season. The only way to get more Bluey more quickly is if they create their own stories starring the Brisbane-based family of blue heeler dogs.Luke Warner did this—with generative AI. The London-based developer and father used OpenAI's latest tool, customizable bots called GPTs, to create a story generator for his young daughter. The bot, which he calls Bluey-GPT, begins each session by asking people their name, age, and a bit about their day, then churns out personalized tales starring Bluey and her sister Bingo. "It names her school, the area she lives in, and talks about the fact it's cold outside," Warner says. "It makes it more real and engaging."
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S68The Tantalizing Mystery of the Solar System's Hidden Oceans  -copy.jpg) For most of humankind's existence, Earth was the only known ocean-draped world, seemingly unlike any other cosmic isle.But in 1979, NASA's two Voyager spacecraft flew by Jupiter. Its moon Europa, a frozen realm, was decorated with grooves and fracturesâhints that there might be something dynamic beneath its surface.
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S69Our Favorite Strollers for Carting Kids   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 WIREDWhen I started shopping for a stroller, I purchased the cheapest one that worked with my car seat and called it a day. To no one's surprise, that stroller is terrible, and both my child and I hated using it.
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S705 books you probably haven't read (and how to pretend you have)   For one reason or another, you sometimes have to talk about a book you haven’t read. It might be that you want to impress your boss or appear intellectual on a first date. It might be that you’ve got a selection of books on your shelves that one looks suspiciously new, with its pristine spine and unthumbed pages. So, what do you do if someone asks you about those books? How do you respond if someone presses you for more than a blurb’s worth of information?To help you on your way to Blagville, we’ve compiled five of the most common books people pretend to read and explain how to bluff your way through a conversation about them.
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