2 March 2026
Chicago 12, Melborne City, USA

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Curiosity

Secret Ingredients | Hackaday

We were talking on the podcast about rope. But not just any rope – especially non-stretchy rope for using in a mechanical context. The hack in question was a bicycle wheel that swapped out normal metal spokes for lighter and stronger high-density polypropylene weave, and if you can tension up a bike wheel and ride

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Curiosity

With speeds of 100 miles per hour, it leaves birds like swifts and albatrosses eating its dust.

You can forget your swifts, your peregrine falcons, and your grey-headed albatrosses. They may be fast, but when it comes to level flight, it’s not a bird, but a mammal that holds the record.  Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) are nimble, sleight mammals, that weigh about the same as a walnut. They are known for their enormous

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Curiosity

Supernova whose light will ‘reappear’ in 60 years could solve the biggest problem in cosmology

Two incredibly rare supernovas that erupted billions of years ago provide a unique opportunity to explain cosmology’s biggest mystery — How fast is the universe expanding? But there’s a twist: Even though astronomers have already observed these exploding stars, we will have to wait up to 60 years for their light to reach us again.

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Curiosity

Giant Virus Discovered in Japanese Pond May Hint at Multicellular Life’s Origins : ScienceAlert

Scientists in Japan have discovered a previously unknown giant virus, offering new insight into this enigmatic category of viruses – and possibly also into the origins of multicellular life. The virus was found infecting an amoeba in a freshwater pond near Tokyo, the researchers report. They named it “ushikuvirus” after the pond, Ushiku-numa, located in

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Curiosity

Artemis 2 SLS wet dress rehearsal latest news: NASA to take stations for moon rocket fueling test

Refresh 2026-01-31T16:48:13.998Z Artemis 2 fueling test to begin preps tonight (Image credit: Space.com / Josh Dinner) Good morning, Space Fans! Today is Saturday, Jan. 31 and tonight NASA is gearing up to to begin its first fueling test for the the Artemis 2 Space Launch System moon rocket for a so-called “wet dress rehearsal.” That’s

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Curiosity

February’s full snow moon will shine in the night sky this weekend

Look to the sky this weekend for a chance to see February’s wintry full moon, which comes as four astronauts prepare to make a historic journey around the silvery orb. The full moon will peak at 5:09 p.m. ET Sunday, occurring near sunset and appearing fullest while low in the eastern sky, according to EarthSky.

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Curiosity

The Age of the Most Distant Galaxy Ever Seen Barely Makes Any Sense

The Webb space telescope has allowed us to peer farther back into the universe than ever before, providing a rare glimpse of the cosmos a mere 280 million years after its very existence began. Using Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph, scientists have confirmed a new cosmic record of the most distant galaxy ever observed. Galaxy MoM-z14 existed

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Curiosity

Our Entire Galaxy Appears to Be Embedded in a Colossal Sheet of Dark Matter

The Milky Way — and in fact our entire galactic neighborhood known as the Local Group — appear to be lodged in a vast, extended “sheet” of dark matter flanked on each side by cosmic voids, new research suggests. The findings, described in a new study published in Nature Astronomy, could help explain the puzzling

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Curiosity

NASA’s Juno spacecraft spots the largest volcanic eruption ever seen on Jupiter’s moon Io

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. (Left) Io as seen by NASA’s Galileo spacecraft on 3 July 1999 (Right) A massive volcanic hotspot observed by Juno in 2024. | Credit: NASA / JPL / University of Arizona/ NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI/INAF/JIRAM The most violent volcanic cataclysm ever

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Curiosity

Self-driving cars, drones hijacked by custom road signs • The Register

Indirect prompt injection occurs when a bot takes input data and interprets it as a command. We’ve seen this problem numerous times when AI bots were fed prompts via web pages or PDFs they read. Now, academics have shown that self-driving cars and autonomous drones will follow illicit instructions that have been written onto road

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