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May 25 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Late‑Night Show Goes Digital

The classic late‑night format is at a turning point. A former TV host has decided to move the show straight onto YouTube, hoping it will survive in a world where people watch clips instead of full episodes. He plans to film from his home in Los Angeles, keeping costs low and the crew small. Each

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May 25 2026LIFESTYLE

Memorial Day: What’s Open and Closed

The holiday that honors those who died for the country falls on the fourth Monday in May. Because it is a federal holiday, many places shut down or change their hours. Mail stops on this day. The Postal Service is closed, so no letters or packages arrive at homes or businesses. Delivery compa

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May 25 2026BUSINESS

Buying Instead of Building: The New Way to Start a Business

People who dream of owning a company are now looking at ready‑made options instead of building from scratch. When a business already has customers, steady money coming in, and a set of working procedures, it can be an attractive purchase. Entrepreneurs who choose this path are called acquisition e

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May 25 2026BUSINESS

Dress Like a Boss: How Your Clothes Shape Workplace Power

The first thing people notice when you walk into a meeting is what you’re wearing, not your words. A smart suit signals authority; jeans and sneakers send a different message. Research shows that leaders who keep their wardrobe consistent earn more trust from staff and clients alike. When you switc

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May 25 2026WEATHER

Storm Season Outlook: What to Expect in 2026

The official start of the 2026 tropical storm and hurricane season is fast approaching, with scientists forecasting a quieter year overall. NOAA’s latest models suggest about a 35 % chance that the season will be near normal, while only a 10 % probability exists for more named storms than usual. A d

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

Ecosystem Signals: How Coral Algae Talk Through Electricity

Symbiodinium microadriaticum, a tiny dinoflagellate that lives inside coral tissues, can release electrons into its surroundings during photosynthesis. This process, known as extracellular electron transfer (EET), lets the algae send electrical signals to nearby cells. Researchers discovered that th

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

Thermal‑Light Mix in Tumor Treatment: A New Computer View

Researchers have built a computer model that shows how light, heat and chemical reactions work together when treating cancer with a dye called indocyanine green (ICG). The model uses a fast Monte‑Carlo method on graphics cards to trace how 808‑nanometer laser light moves through a three‑dimension

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

A Quiet Tumor That Spreads Slowly Around the World

AOT is a small, non‑cancerous growth that forms in the jaw. It looks like tiny tubes or circles under a microscope and usually stays inside its capsule, so it rarely invades nearby tissues. Because AOT grows very slowly, many people do not notice it until it becomes large enough to cause a visibl

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

\Platelet Signals: How Blood Clues Help Spot Mouth Ulcers

Researchers are looking at tiny blood cells to learn more about a common mouth problem called recurrent aphthous stomatitis, or RAS. RAS shows up as painful sores inside the mouth that come and go over time. Two blood measures, the platelet‑to‑lymphocyte ratio (PLR) and mean platelet volume (MPV),

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May 25 2026TECHNOLOGY

Huawei’s New Chip Trick Boosts Speed and Saves Money

Huawei has shown a fresh way to make its chips faster and cheaper. The company uses a design called “LogicFolding” that lets more transistors fit on the same chip and makes them run quicker. The new approach can add 53% more transistors and lift clock speeds by about 13%. Because Huawei cannot us

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