META

Feb 15 2026SCIENCE

Plant Stress Defense: How Tiny Proteins Turn Off Key Enzymes

Plants use a tagging system called ubiquitination to control the life span of many proteins. In the case of phenylpropanoid production, which supplies important compounds like lignin and flavonoids, several enzymes are marked for destruction by this system. F‑box proteins act as the taggers. They

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Feb 14 2026TECHNOLOGY

Smart Glasses: A New Way to Spy on You?

Meta, the company behind Facebook, is planning to add facial recognition to its smart glasses. This is not a surprise, but it is a concern. The company has been working on this for a year, even though it knows there are risks. Meta thinks people will be too busy with other things to notice or care.

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Feb 13 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Game That Never Was: Kojima and Zampella's Unrealized Project

Hideo Kojima, the mastermind behind Metal Gear Solid, once explored a unique idea with Vince Zampella, the co-founder of Respawn Entertainment. This was not just any idea, but a first-person shooter set in the Metal Gear Solid universe. The concept emerged after the release of Metal Gear Solid 4, a

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Feb 12 2026HEALTH

Which Workout Wins for Seniors? A Fresh Look at Fitness Choices

The study compares how different kinds of exercise affect heart health and metabolism in people over 55. Researchers used a special statistical method that lets them combine results from many trials at once, giving a broader view than any single study could provide. They focused on three common t

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Feb 11 2026HEALTH

Heart Health: The Truth About Cutting Carbs

Researchers followed 200, 000 health workers for three decades to see how different eating patterns affect heart disease. The study shows that simply cutting carbs or fats does not guarantee protection. If people ate a low‑carb diet filled with refined sugars and processed foods, their risk of heart

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Feb 10 2026SCIENCE

Proton‑Friendly Oxides: How Oxygen Makes Fast Energy Storage Work

Scientists are looking for ways to store energy quickly and safely. One idea is to use tiny hydrogen ions, called protons, as the moving charge in batteries. Protons can move fast through solid materials, which could let a battery charge and discharge almost instantly. The big problem is that not m

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Feb 10 2026BUSINESS

Dotdash Meredith Wins Court Battle Over Meta Data Sharing

In a recent court decision, Dotdash Meredith Inc. – the company behind popular magazines like People and Entertainment Weekly – won a case that challenged its sharing of video‑viewing data with Meta Platforms Inc. The lawsuit, filed in Massachusetts, claimed that Dotdash Meredith violated the Video

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Feb 08 2026OPINION

Super Bowl: America’s Big Game and the Fans Who Live It

The Super Bowl is a huge event that many people call a kind of religion. More than 120 million viewers watch it, and the fans bring bright face paint, shiny bracelets, colorful wigs, and giant jerseys. They act like they are part of a ritual that keeps their team alive. Some fans even bring s

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Feb 06 2026SCIENCE

Faster Food, Stronger Shape: How Sugar Pathways Shape Fungal Growth

Fungi can change their shape on the fly. When the outside world shifts, they switch between cell forms to survive or infect. Scientists know a lot about the genes that trigger these changes, but they have not looked closely at what fuels them. A new study shows that the sugar‑processing rou

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Jan 29 2026SCIENCE

How Cells Learn to Make Better Antibodies

Inside the body, there are tiny factories called germinal centers. Their job is to make top-notch antibodies. These antibodies help fight off germs. Recently, scientists found a special group of cells called pre-plasma cells in mice. These cells are like apprentices learning to become full-fledged p

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