Twenty years ago, the seafloor west of Indonesia abruptly pushed upward as a deep undersea fault, where two of Earth’s tectonic plates meet, slipped. The upward shove violently shifted the seawater above, transferring deadly energy…
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Adoption of AI calls for new kind of communication competence from sales managers
Artificial intelligence, AI, is rapidly transforming work also in the financial sector. Conducted at the University of Eastern Finland, a recent study explored how integrating AI into the work of sales teams affects the interpersonal…
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Synthetic Skin Inspired by Electric Fish Detects Objects
The ability to detect a nearby presence without seeing or touching it may sound fantastical—but it’s a real ability that some creatures have.A family of African fish known as Mormyrids are weakly electric, and have special organs that can…
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Can people change? — Harvard Gazette
Nothing is certain except death and taxes, the saying goes — but there’s another sure thing to add to that list: change.
“The more we resist change, the more we suffer. There’s a phrase I like. It says, ‘Let go or be dragged,’” said
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Robotaxis Are Blazing the Trail for Self-Driving Cars
Editor’s note: A version of this article originally appeared in the author’s newsletter, Exponential View.
When people ask me to describe my work, I say I take a critical look at exponential technologies—which I define as technologies…
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Transformer Shortage Crisis: Can New Engineering Solve It?
To Nick de Vries, chief technology officer at the solar-energy developer Silicon Ranch, a transformer is like an interstate on-ramp: It boosts the voltage of the electricity that his solar plants generate to match the voltage of grid transmission…
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Graphene Interconnects to Moore’s Law’s Rescue
The semiconductor industry’s long held imperative—Moore’s Law, which dictates that transistor densities on a chip should double roughly every two years—is getting more and more difficult to maintain. The ability to shrink down
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Traces of 10,000-Year-Old Rice Beer Found in China
The Shangshan culture in ancient China’s Lower Yangzi region is central to understanding the origins of rice domestication and early alcohol fermentation. To address these issues, researchers examined artifacts from the early phase of the…
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Work satisfaction, pay are worse for those who stutter, study finds
People who stutter have lower earnings, experience underemployment and express lower job satisfaction than those who don’t stutter, a new University of Florida study finds.
Led by a UF College of Public Health and Health Professions researcher,…
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Poop of the Ocean’s Tiniest Organisms Could Combat Climate Change
Scientists are experimenting with an unconventional source to trap the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide: zooplankton poop.
Earth needs more carbon sinks. As the planet warms, many of the places that trap CO2 are now releasing it into the atmosphere,…
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