ANALYSIS

Apr 12 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Superhero Shows Can Be More Than Just Action

Jessica Jones started on Netflix but later moved to Disney+, surprising many fans. That move showed something interesting: mature stories can fit in places meant for lighter content. Most Marvel shows focus on heroes saving the world with flashy powers. But Jessica Jones does something different. It

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Apr 12 2026SPORTS

Measuring Player Exhaustion Without Wires in Tennis

Coaches have long struggled to track how tired tennis players get during matches. A new study shows a wireless approach might finally solve this problem. Researchers watched fifteen players go through a tough on-court routine that mixed sprints with tennis drills. Instead of bulky sensors, they used

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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

Missile Strikes in Iran: New Findings Raise Questions

In a recent study, experts examined fresh video and photos of attacks in Lamerd, Iran. The evidence suggests that the bombs were U. S. Precision Strike Missiles, or PrSMs. Earlier reports had said they might be Iranian missiles instead. The U. S. army denied that it fired any missiles at Lamerd on

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Apr 11 2026HEALTH

Testing dogs for tropical diseases in Panama: what works and what doesn't

In rural Panama, dogs act like living alarms for two dangerous diseases spread by bugs. One disease, called American cutaneous leishmaniasis, causes skin sores and is carried by sandflies. The other, Chagas disease, attacks the heart and is spread by kissing bugs. Both diseases are common in the sam

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Apr 11 2026BUSINESS

Behind the Numbers: What Two Big Firms Really Think About RoboSense’s Future

Two large investment houses have just kept their thumbs up for RoboSense, a company building sensors used in self-driving cars. Guosheng and DBS both say “Buy, ” though they don’t quite agree on the price you should pay. Guosheng’s target is HK$53; DBS sticks at HK$50. The spread shows experts still

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Apr 11 2026HEALTH

What makes some simple ankle breaks tricky to heal?

When the lower bone of the ankle gets a crack but stays in place, doctors often say rest is enough. Yet some people still end up with pain months later or even years. This surprise happens because every ankle behaves differently. A fresh way of sorting these injuries shows that soft-tissue damage—no

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Apr 10 2026FINANCE

What's pulling tech stocks in opposite directions?

In recent weeks, stock market trends haven’t just reflected economic shifts—they’ve spotlighted a growing gap between technology sectors. While fancy hardware and AI-related companies have surged ahead, traditional software firms have stumbled. Even after a temporary pause in the Iran conflict, this

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Apr 10 2026LIFESTYLE

Nice Bags That Also Do the Job Right

Travel bags usually fall into two camps: the fancy kind that never gets used and the practical kind that looks like it was picked up at an airport lost-and-found. Béis tries to straddle that line. The Medium Hard Shell Roller and the Weekender Bag are designed to catch your eye on Instagram while st

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Apr 10 2026CRIME

How Close People Really Stay to Monsters

When a crime shocks a community, outsiders often wonder how the criminal could hide in plain sight. The idea of a killer living quietly among family members feels impossible to many. Yet history shows that even people closest to a criminal can miss the warning signs. Serial killers like John Wayne G

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Apr 09 2026HEALTH

How Lifelong Habits Shape Brain Health Later in Life

The brain changes as we age, but some people handle those changes better than others. This ability to keep thinking clearly despite physical brain decline is called cognitive reserve. Research shows certain habits might build this reserve, but scientists still debate which habits matter most. Educa

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