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Jan 30 2025CRIME

Undersea Cable Mystery in the Baltic Sea

Something fishy is happening in the Baltic Sea! A vital undersea cable between Latvia and Sweden was hurt this past Sunday. Latvia believes it might have been damaged by some outside force. This cable links the Latvian town of Ventspils to Sweden's Gotland island. It's a critical communications line

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Jan 29 2025SCIENCE

Discovering How 14-3-3ζ Protein Binds to MAP2c

Ever wondered how proteins interact in our cells? Let's dive into the relationship between MAP2c and 14-3-3ζ. MAP2c, a protein that hangs out near microtubules, gets cozy with 14-3-3ζ in a special way. This meeting depends on a process called PKA phosphorylation. Scientists used various tools like c

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Jan 29 2025POLITICS

Goma in Crisis: A City's Struggle Under Rebel Rule

Imagine a bustling city, known for its trade and as a refuge for many, suddenly thrown into chaos. That's what's happening in Goma, eastern Congo. A rebel group called M23, supported by Rwanda, has seized control. This isn't just any battle; it's a fight over a vital hub in the region. Hospitals are

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Jan 29 2025TECHNOLOGY

The Rise and Fall of Tech Hypes: From Nanotech to AI

In the early 2000s, nanotechnology was hailed as the next big thing, similar to artificial intelligence today. After the dot-com bubble burst, investors saw nanotech as the next promising tech. They hoped it would revolutionize industries and daily life. Conferences and political initiatives support

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Jan 28 2025HEALTH

What Beachgoers Think and Do About Skin Cancer

Did you know that people who hit the beach a lot are more likely to get sunburns? This review looked into what beachgoers and sunbathers know, think, and do when it comes to skin cancer. Researchers scoured databases like PubMed and CINAHL to find studies on this topic. They found 24 studies that fi

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Jan 28 2025SCIENCE

A Sugar-Coated Approach to Detecting Glycoproteins

Have you ever thought about how we can detect tiny proteins in our body that are crucial for understanding diseases? Scientists have found an interesting way to do this using sugar molecules and tiny gold particles. These proteins, called glycoproteins, have sugar chains attached to them. The scient

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Jan 28 2025CRIME

Swedish Cable Cut: A Mystery Under the Sea

Imagine this: a crucial communication cable connecting Sweden and Latvia gets damaged under the Baltic Sea. This isn't the first time such incidents have happened. In fact, it's part of a bigger pattern of suspected sabotage attempts. The Swedish authorities are taking this very seriously. They even

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Jan 28 2025SCIENCE

Fungus Power: A New Way to Make Proteins

Did you know that some fungi can help make proteins really quickly and easily? Out of 22 different types of filamentous fungi studied, 12 showed potential for cell-free protein synthesis. This means they can create proteins outside of a living cell. Pretty cool, right? The fungus Neurospora crassa w

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Jan 28 2025SCIENCE

Building a Better Phantom: A Tetrahedral Mesh for Chinese Women

Creating detailed surface phantoms of Chinese women of childbearing age is great, but they can't be used directly in Monte Carlo simulations. Instead, these surface phantoms have to be turned into voxel phantoms, which might lose some of their initial advantages. So, the goal of this study is to bui

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Jan 27 2025POLITICS

Germany's Big Anti-Far Right Stand

In Berlin and other German cities, thousands of people took to the streets on a Saturday. They were protesting against the rise of the far-right party, Alternative for Germany (AfD), just before the upcoming election. The protesters blew whistles, sang songs, and held banners against racism and clim

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