TECH

Apr 04 2026TECHNOLOGY

Making the Weather App Your Personal AI Meteorologist

Apps like Storm Radar now let you turn weather updates into a custom AI host. You can tweak the tone and style to fit your mood, turning dry data into something closer to a weather show. Most people just want a quick forecast, but this feature turns app time into a mini-experience. Testers found the

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Apr 04 2026SCIENCE

Tiny Lights from a Salted Heat Trick

Scientists discovered that heating and salting two hard‑to‑treat bacteria can make them glow. Instead of complex machines, the team simply soaked the microbes in warm salty water for a short period. One bacterium, Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum, began to emit light after just a minute in the sol

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Apr 04 2026FINANCE

Simple tools win in the busy world of online trading

Online investing used to feel like piloting a spaceship: dozens of buttons, endless menus, hidden charges, and pages of numbers flashing at the same time. Each new platform promised “more power, ” yet the first thing most users wanted was just to buy a share without reading a manual. Wise Equites la

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Apr 03 2026HEALTH

Nanoparticles Step In to Heal the Brain’s Gatekeeper

The brain has a special wall called the blood‑brain barrier that keeps harmful things out. In diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, this wall gets damaged and lets troublemakers in, which makes the brain hurt more. New tiny machines called nanoparticles are learning how to fix that wall and bri

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Apr 03 2026OPINION

Safety Tech Helps Keep Riverton Secure

Riverton’s council members often think about how to protect the town and its families. A violent crime in the neighborhood a little over two years ago made everyone feel unsafe. After that, people called for help and worried about children playing outside or being alone at home. The town’s

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Apr 03 2026BUSINESS

A Quiet Exit for a Controversial Apple Fitness Leader

Jay Blahnik, who helped shape Apple’s fitness tech for over a decade, is stepping down this summer. His departure follows years of complaints about his management style, including claims of verbal abuse and inappropriate behavior. The news comes just as Apple’s Fitness+ service faces scrutiny over i

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Apr 03 2026SCIENCE

Controlling Catalyst Shape Boosts Chemical Reactions

Scientists found a clever way to fine-tune chemical reactions by adjusting the shape of special sponge-like materials. These materials, called metal-organic frameworks, are built from tiny building blocks that lock together like Lego pieces. By changing the overall structure while keeping the same c

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Apr 03 2026BUSINESS

Sustainable Shoes Big Name Struggles with Huge Loss in Value

A once-famous shoe brand from California just got sold at an incredibly low price. It was worth billions at its peak but now its entire company is changing hands for just $39 million. The brand made shoes from wool and eucalyptus, attracting eco-conscious buyers in tech hubs like Silicon Valley. Sta

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Apr 03 2026TECHNOLOGY

Google’s new open AI tools for everyday tech

Google just dropped a set of free AI models called Gemma 4, built from the same tech behind its premium Gemini 3 systems. Instead of keeping them locked up, the company made these models public under a flexible license that lets anyone tweak and use them however they want. That’s a big deal because

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Apr 03 2026TECHNOLOGY

Weather apps get an old-school twist and a high-tech upgrade at the same time

The Weather Channel isn’t just stuck in the past—it’s also racing into the future. This week, it launched two very different ways to check the forecast. One is a brand-new AI-powered tool called Storm Radar, designed for anyone who wants quick, personalized weather updates. The other is a nostalgic

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