U S STATE DEPARTMENT

Apr 27 2026CRYPTO

Solana Prepares for Quantum Future with New Signature Tech

Solana’s team is already thinking ahead about the day when quantum computers might break current security methods. They have chosen a new digital signature called Falcon that can resist attacks from quantum machines. Two main groups working on the network, Anza and Jump Crypto’s Firedancer, have bot

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Rat Brain Healing: Tiny Vesicles Beat Cerebral Palsy

Scientists studied a way to help rats with brain damage that mimics human cerebral palsy. They used tiny packages called exosomes, which come from stem cells. These vesicles carry useful signals that can calm inflammation and support brain repair. The team gave the exosomes to rats that had suffere

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

A New Twist on Glycerol Fuel Cells

Scientists have figured out exactly which parts of a cobalt‑based material make it good at turning glycerol into useful energy. Instead of guessing, they built three similar crystals that differ only in the tiny details around cobalt atoms. The key discovery was that the reaction happens mainl

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Reducing Allergy in Gout Treatment with Tiny Carbon Helpers

Scientists have found a way to make a gout drug less likely to trigger the immune system. The drug, uricase, normally comes from a fungus called Aspergillus flavus and can cause allergic reactions in some patients. Researchers attached very small particles, called carbon dots, made from citric acid

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Apr 27 2026FINANCE

PS5 Gets New Price Tags in Korea

South Korean gamers will see higher prices for the PlayStation 5 this month. Starting on May 1, Sony will raise the Disc Edition to ₩948, 000 and the Digital Edition to ₩858, 000. The upgraded PS5 Pro will cost ₩1, 298, 000. Even the PlayStation Portal remote player will climb to ₩378, 000. T

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

The Hidden Rules Behind How We Treat Tiny Creatures

Some people think insects only have simple nerves, but research shows they can feel pain. If that is true, it raises the question: do we owe them a moral responsibility? Scientists who study animal sentience argue that many insects react to harmful stimuli in ways similar to vertebrates. They

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Understanding How Chemicals Separate in Water-Based Tests

Scientists use a special method called Hydrophilic Interaction Chromatography to sort molecules that are almost identical but mirror images. These molecules, called positional isomers, can be tricky because they behave almost the same yet need separate identification. The challenge lies in figuring

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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

How streaming shows got serious and changed TV forever

Streaming wasn’t always about making its own shows—it started as a digital video store where people could finally watch whatever they wanted anytime. The turning point arrived when platforms began producing original series, not just borrowing from movie libraries. Amazon Prime Video took the lead wi

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Apr 26 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tokyo Tech Hub 2026: What to Expect

SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026 is not just another tech show. It breaks the usual pattern by focusing on four clear areas, each with real demos and people who made them possible. The event partners with a major tech media outlet, giving startups a chance to jump into a bigger launchpad if they shine. A

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Apr 26 2026ENVIRONMENT

Fish struggle when plastic bits and pesticides team up

Scientists tested what happens when tiny plastic fibers and a common insect killer show up together in the water where young tilapia live. Over six weeks, fish exposed to both pollutants grew less and ate food less efficiently than fish exposed to just one or none at all. Their guts showed damage to

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