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SciencePowered by Microsoft Start
 · 4hCBS News
2023 is officially the hottest year ever recorded, scientists say
After record-breaking temperatures in November, the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service determined that 2023 will officially be the hottest year humanity has ever experienced.
 · 1hThe Irish News (US)
November breaks heat record for sixth straight month
November set a new monthly record for heat – the sixth month in a row which has beaten previous records. With only weeks remaining, 2023 is on course to smash the record for hottest year. November
 · 5hFOX News
Penguin parents take more than 10,000 tiny naps per day, study reveals
Nesting chinstrap penguins take more than 10,000 micronaps per day, according to a new study. National Geographic senior editor Christine Dell’Amore comments on how this benefits penguin parents.
 · 11hFortune
Meta and IBM’s new AI Alliance wants to redefine the ‘open’ debate that’s fracturing the AI community
Meta has been accused of stretching the open-source label to advance its business interests. Under the AI Alliance worldview though, there will be different levels of gradation of what open means.
 · 7hEarth
If alien life exists on Enceladus, scientists have ‘unambiguous’ proof they will find it
Astrophysics and space research have long been intrigued by one persisting question: Is there life beyond Earth? Saturn's icy moon, Enceladus, emerges as a prime candidate in this search.
 · 15hThe Atlantic
War in the Congo Has Kept the Planet Cooler
The Belgian empire invaded the Congo rainforest during the late 19th century and swiftly established itself as the cruelest imperial force in Africa. The Congo is the world’s second-largest
 · 15hBusiness Insider
Earth's core may be coated in a layer of crystals created by water leaking from the surface: study
Scientists have long looked for an explanation for a mysterious zone in the outer core. Now some think it could be due to water leaking from the surface.
 · 12hInteresting Engineering
Novel AI method tracks neurons in moving animals
When animals move, it's tricky for scientists to study neurons' activity and follow what's happening in their brains using special 3D images. The traditional approach involves training a type of
 · 12hDaily Mail
Meta is quietly killing Facebook and Instagram cross-app messaging
Meta is quietly shutting down cross-app messaging between Instagram and Facebook Messenger. Some observers suspect it has to do with the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA).
 · 18hFortune
The future of AI is too important to be decided behind closed doors. There is a better way
Somewhere during the 96 hours between the surprise firing of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and his rehiring, observers and social media users started speculating about an eventual movie and which famous
 · 14hThe Conversation
Golden mole that swims through sand is rediscovered in South Africa after 86 years
The De Winton’s golden mole was last seen in 1937 on the north-western coast of South Africa, and later declared officially lost. This iridescent blind mole with hearing superpowers evades contact
 · 14hNew York Post
Bottlenose dolphins seem to have a shocking sixth sense, scientists say
Some dolphins appear to have a shocking sixth sense. Researchers in Germany found that bottlenose dolphins can detect electric fields underwater — a skill that could help them better hunt down prey

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