ASU’s Beyond Center is Bridging the Gap Between Quantum Mechanics and Human Philosophy
27.02.2026 , 09:54

ASU’s Beyond Center is Bridging the Gap Between Quantum Mechanics and Human Philosophy

Inside one small academic center, conversations float far beyond the Sonoran horizon, while the beige stone buildings of Arizona State University’s Tempe campus glow subtly in the desert sun. Philosophers and physicists sit side by side in seminar rooms with half-erased diagrams of spacetime curves and chalkboards covered in layers of equations, asking questions that
The 19.7% Miracle: How the New ‘Triple G’ Agonist is Redefining Severe Weight Loss
27.02.2026 , 09:47

The 19.7% Miracle: How the New ‘Triple G’ Agonist is Redefining Severe Weight Loss

Last winter, patients arrived outside a clinical research building in Shanghai, bundled in heavy coats, holding paper cups of hot soy milk and appointment cards. For decades, some people had battled their weight. They were inside getting weekly injections of an experimental treatment that few people outside of endocrinology circles had heard of at the
Patients Are Using AI for Medicine—Here’s What’s Safe and What Isn’t
27.02.2026 , 09:41

Patients Are Using AI for Medicine—Here’s What’s Safe and What Isn’t

It’s difficult to ignore how frequently people now bring up contacting an AI regarding a child’s fever, a lab result, or a rash. Patients scroll through chatbot responses in waiting rooms from Cleveland to Karachi, their phones glowing as the nurse calls their name. It seems like a fundamental change has occurred. These days, patients
Lab Automation’s Big Question: Who Owns the Robots’ Discoveries?
27.02.2026 , 09:34

Lab Automation’s Big Question: Who Owns the Robots’ Discoveries?

Robotic arms silently and confidently move microliters of liquid between plates in a glass-walled lab outside Cambridge. No lab coat. No breaks for coffee. Only the gentle click of plate readers measuring optical density at 595 nanometers broke the constant hum. It’s difficult to ignore how commonplace this feels right now. Although repetitive tasks like
The Secret World of Geopolitical Short Sellers: Profiting Off the China-Taiwan Chip War
27.02.2026 , 09:23

The Secret World of Geopolitical Short Sellers: Profiting Off the China-Taiwan Chip War

The rustle of clipboards and the smell of antiseptic are not the first things one notices in some urban clinics nowadays. Before a patient has even seen a receptionist, they are asked to describe their symptoms on a tablet that is placed close to the entrance. Squinting, a man wearing a construction vest taps at
ASU’s Beyond Center is Bridging the Gap Between Quantum Mechanics and Human Philosophy
The 19.7% Miracle: How the New ‘Triple G’ Agonist is Redefining Severe Weight Loss
Patients Are Using AI for Medicine—Here’s What’s Safe and What Isn’t
Lab Automation’s Big Question: Who Owns the Robots’ Discoveries?
The Secret World of Geopolitical Short Sellers: Profiting Off the China-Taiwan Chip War
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The hum of fluorescent lights and the antiseptic odor are not the first things one notices in many contemporary clinics. It’s the quiet. Before their names are called, patients use their phones to tap symptoms into portals. Software is making decisions about who needs care right away and who can…

Spotlight

Inside one small academic center, conversations float far beyond the Sonoran horizon, while the beige stone buildings of Arizona State University’s Tempe campus glow subtly in the desert sun. Philosophers and physicists sit side by side in seminar rooms with half-erased diagrams of spacetime curves and chalkboards covered in layers of equations, asking questions that seem both archaic and oddly urgent. The Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science interprets the universe rather than merely measuring it. This place seems to exist a little outside of the typical academic rhythms. Here, disciplinary turf wars, grants, and publication counts don’t feel as important. Rather, debates veer from mathematical symmetry to whether human consciousness can actually understand reality, from quantum uncertainty to the origin of life. CategoryDetailsInstitutionArizona State UniversityCenter NameBeyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in ScienceDirectorPaul DaviesKey FieldsCosmology, Astrobiology, Quantum Physics, Philosophy of ScienceMissionExplore foundational scientific questions and their philosophical meaningInterdisciplinary FocusPhysics,…

Inside one small academic center, conversations float far beyond the Sonoran horizon, while the beige stone buildings of Arizona State University’s Tempe campus glow subtly in the desert sun. Philosophers and physicists sit side by side in seminar rooms with half-erased diagrams of spacetime curves and chalkboards covered in layers of equations, asking questions that seem both archaic and oddly urgent. The Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science interprets the universe rather than merely measuring it. This place seems to exist a little outside of the typical academic rhythms. Here, disciplinary turf wars, grants, and publication counts don’t feel as important. Rather, debates veer from mathematical symmetry to whether human consciousness can actually understand reality, from quantum uncertainty to the origin of life. CategoryDetailsInstitutionArizona State UniversityCenter NameBeyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in ScienceDirectorPaul DaviesKey FieldsCosmology, Astrobiology, Quantum Physics, Philosophy of ScienceMissionExplore foundational scientific questions and their philosophical meaningInterdisciplinary FocusPhysics,…

It’s difficult to ignore how frequently people now bring up contacting an AI regarding a child’s fever, a lab result, or a rash. Patients scroll through chatbot responses in waiting rooms from Cleveland to Karachi, their phones glowing as the nurse calls their name. It seems like a fundamental change has occurred. These days, patients do more than just look up symptoms. They’re looking at algorithms. The promise is clear. AI systems can compare symptoms to databases that would take a human days to review, scanning vast amounts of medical literature in a matter of seconds. Machine learning tools are being used in hospitals to track lung nodules, identify early strokes, and clear radiology backlogs. It seems less like science fiction as you watch this happen and more like a silent infrastructure upgrade, with software humming in the background to speed things up. However, a patient at home at midnight…

A Greek soccer team chairman and two other individuals were arrested on Sunday following a violent incident at a football stadium in the Greater Athens area, according to local authorities. The arrests came after the group allegedly assaulted both rival fans and police officers who intervened to stop the altercation during a match. The police statement released Monday did not disclose the names of the suspects or identify the soccer team involved in the incident. Law enforcement officials confirmed that the three arrested individuals were part of a larger group of approximately 20 people who wore the colors of a team that was not playing in the match taking place on the field. Violence Erupts During Greek Soccer Match The group targeted away supporters in the stands, initiating an attack that prompted immediate police intervention. When officers attempted to stop the assault, the suspects allegedly turned their aggression toward law…

A controversial injury-time penalty decision rescued Olympiakos from defeat against AEK Athens in the Greek Super League derby on Sunday, as the match at Nea Filadelfia ended 1-1. The late equalizer allowed PAOK to climb into second place in the league standings, with AEK maintaining their position at the top of the table. The dramatic conclusion came in the 106th minute after 14 minutes of stoppage time were added to the contest. According to match reports, AEK took the lead just before the hour mark when Razvan Marin delivered a corner kick from the right side. Substitute Varga rose in…

Greek alpine skier AJ Ginnis made his Olympic debut at the Games on Monday in what became an emotional farewell to competitive skiing. The 31-year-old athlete competed in the Olympic slalom race knowing it would mark both his first and last appearance at the Games, as ongoing injuries have forced him to retire from professional skiing. Ginnis, who captured a silver medal in slalom at the 2023 World Championships in Courchevel, France, has been unable to return to peak form following his latest setback. The day before his Olympic slalom race, Ginnis realized during training that his body could no…

Olympiakos strengthened its position in the Euroleague standings after defeating Red Star Belgrade 92-86 on Thursday, moving into second place with their 18th victory of the season. Meanwhile, Panathinaikos suffered a heartbreaking home defeat to league leader Fenerbahce, losing 85-83 on a last-second shot at the Telekom Center Athens on Friday. The Euroleague results highlight the competitive nature of this season’s campaign, with Olympiakos now trailing only Fenerbahce in the overall standings. The Greek champions improved their record to 18 wins in 27 matches, continuing their impressive form with seven victories in their last eight games. Olympiakos Dominates Red Star…

The small mountain town of Metsovo in northwestern Greece has achieved a remarkable feat in cross-country skiing, continuously sending athletes to the Winter Olympic Games for approximately three decades. With a population of just 2,000 permanent residents between Metsovo and neighboring Anilio, this unique tradition has made the region a cornerstone of winter sports in Greece. The legacy continues at the current Olympics in Cortina, Italy, where local athlete Apostolos Angelis is competing in his fourth Winter Games. According to Kathimerini, which visited Metsovo shortly before the Olympics began, the community’s connection to skiing runs deep. Coach Afroditi Katsora was…

The rustle of clipboards and the smell of antiseptic are not the first things one notices in some urban clinics nowadays. Before a patient has even seen a receptionist, they are asked to describe their symptoms on a tablet that is placed close to the entrance. Squinting, a man wearing a construction vest taps at the screen while choosing “chest discomfort.” A gentle chime is heard. He is escorted past the waiting line by a nurse who shows up moments later. This is the entrance to the “new clinic economy,” as some administrators refer to it. Hospitals, urgent care facilities, and telehealth platforms are increasingly using AI triage systems, which are software programs created to evaluate symptoms and rank patients. These systems, which promise to separate the urgent from the routine in a matter of seconds, are based on clinical guidelines and machine-learning models that have been trained on extensive…

It begins, as these things usually do, in a well-lit grocery aisle with a subtle scent of warm bread and floor cleaner. A figure is standing in front of a wall of boxes, including snack bars, cereal, and “high protein” cookies. They are flipping the packages over as if they were reading tea leaves. The list of ingredients is a little different. It’s a billboard on the front. Between the two, the term “ultra-processed” has evolved into a sort of political gimmick that is practical, direct, and simple to present to cameras. UPF warnings weren’t created overnight. The NOVA framework,…

Last fall, customers were silently recalculating outside a Boston grocery store, standing next to carts half-full of necessities—nothing fancy, just eggs, milk, and detergent. But the sum continued to take them by surprise. Almost imperceptibly, like rent notices that slip under the door every year, the idea of living “comfortably” has crept upward. It feels provisional now, where it was once secure. The well-known antagonist of economic cycles, inflation, rarely makes an appearance with much fanfare. A higher utility bill, a mid-year increase in the daycare bill, or a rent renewal that arrives with bureaucratic calm are all examples of…

A young man is seen squinting, zooming, and rotating his phone toward a station map on a packed commuter train. The routine is the same: take out the device, finish the task, put the device back in your pocket. Apple seems certain that this small dance is only a passing phase, a clumsy transition from the era of screens to something more subdued. The idea that the next interface won’t be held in the hand is suggested by its reported push into smart glasses, AirPods with cameras, and even a pendant. They’ll wear it. The company’s strategy, which should be…

With their metal frames quivering in winds capable of sandblasting exposed skin in a matter of minutes, the drill rigs appear almost delicate against the vast white silence of Antarctica. But what they extract from beneath the ice feels heavier than anything that can be explained by machinery: cylinders of frozen time, layered with ash, dust, trapped air, and tiny pieces of extinct worlds. Once debated in abstract graphs, climate history now rests in the palm of the hand like a glass rod. Drilling ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica, cutting them into meter-long segments, and keeping them in specialized…

Last week, the announcement of the Pixel 10a felt almost anticlimactic as I stood inside a mobile shop with fluorescent lighting and glass counters that reflected rows of identical black rectangles. One more phone. Another improvement to the camera. AI magic holds yet another promise. However, when the release date was mentioned, the salesperson hesitated. He said, tapping the counter, “It’s early.” “That is important.” With only minor adjustments, Google’s new mid-range phone boasts a brighter 6.3-inch OLED screen, Gorilla Glass 7i, quicker 30-watt charging, and the silent removal of the camera bump. It reads more like refinement than reinvention…

Markets used to believe that war would never break out because it was tragic, unstable, and eventually contained. That presumption is being undermined. As if geopolitics were background noise, equity analysts continue to discuss rate cuts and consumer sentiment despite the fact that defense budgets are increasing in German factory towns and Brussels policy corridors with a seriousness not seen in decades. Investors might be tied to the protracted peace that followed the Cold War, when globalization reduced prices, spurred economic growth, and rendered war appear economically illogical. Capital moved in the direction of efficiency for forty years. Across continents,…

The warnings come softly, frequently before dawn. Dashboards shine in dimly lit rooms in security operations centers from Northern Virginia to Frankfurt to Karachi, while coffee cools next to unattended keyboards. One more update. One more vulnerability that was exploited. Another reminder that the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, which is kept up to date by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, has expanded once more. Six Microsoft zero-day vulnerabilities that are already being exploited in the wild made this month’s addition feel both familiar and more significant. These include privilege-escalation bugs that hackers exploit once they have established a…

In Singapore, traders were already updating their screens before the sun rose. Futures fell slightly, then precipitously, in response to a tariff announcement made in Washington hours earlier rather than a central bank decision. Coffee cups on trading desks remained unopened. The market value had already vanished by the time European markets opened. Central bankers had remained silent. Monetary policy has dominated world markets for the majority of the last ten years. In order to find hints regarding interest rates and liquidity, investors analyzed every word the Federal Reserve said. It’s a different rhythm. Politics started to move more quickly…

Once, columns of armor, fighter jets slicing across the horizon, and radio bulletins interrupting afternoon routines were all signs that war was coming. These days, it frequently starts with a slight buzz. A drone that can fit in a car’s trunk hovers over a waiting tanker, a radar site, or a refinery. No announcement, no show. Only a radar screen flicker, followed by a smoke plume a few seconds later. Unmanned aircraft are now used in modern conflicts because they reduce the cost of violence while increasing its scope. For hours, a drone can linger, transmitting live video while evading…

In the past, the grocery receipt was just a plain piece of paper that was folded and left behind. It now rests like proof on kitchen counters. Once more, milk up. Even worse is cooking oil. Again, eggs. It’s difficult to ignore how families spend a lot of time staring at those small printed totals, performing mental calculations with the same gravity that was previously only used for tax returns. The language of central banking has subtly entered living rooms in 2026. Standing next to humming refrigerators, people discuss “rate pressure,” “price stickiness,” and “cash flow smoothing.” Previously an intangible…

A technician carefully prys open a smartphone with a swollen battery on a packed repair bench in a small electronics store, pushing the screen outward like a slow breath. Vendors shout out prices as motorcycles idle outside. The air inside is filled with the smell of warm plastic and solder. These kinds of scenes are becoming more frequent, implying something small but important: the days of purchasing a gadget and then forgetting about it are coming to an end. Electronics had a sense of permanence for decades. For years, there was a television in the living room. A stereo system…

The shape of the soft-landing story is familiar and comforting. You could practically see it on a TV screen at an airport gate: unemployment remaining low, growth slowing to a civil jog, and inflation declining. CEOs can continue to hire, politicians can continue to make promises, and investors can continue to act as though their portfolios are made of granite thanks to this type of narrative. What’s strange about a good macro story, though, is how easily it becomes second nature. The term “soft landing” is already a product on the market by the time it makes headlines again; consumers…

Previously, audits were sent in heavy envelopes. a letter from authorities. A visiting inspector holding a clipboard. These days, the audit functions silently in the background, integrated into software that tracks purchases, flags suspicious activity, scores human reliability, and measures productivity in ways that most people are unaware of. It’s possible that the audit just refreshes itself every second and never truly ends. Software systems in contemporary businesses record almost everything. Identity is confirmed by login prompts. Anomalies are flagged by exception reports. Unusual transactions are rejected by range checks. Accountants are accustomed to the reasoning behind completeness, accuracy, and…

Faisalabad’s meeting rooms were brightly lit but slightly dusty, with the kind of municipal brightness that makes fluorescent bulbs shine on paper folders. Textile workers drifted home in loose clusters as motorcycles threaded through evening traffic outside. Inside, Denmark’s ambassador discussed wind, grids, and financing mechanisms—words that, although they appeared technical at the time, had a subtle significance. What might have seemed like a diplomatic routine could turn into something more significant: a decision made over the course of a weekend, maybe in Islamabad or Copenhagen, that changes the way energy is priced from port terminals in Karachi to the…

There was an almost metallic tension in the winter air of Seoul on a chilly December night. An extraordinary announcement flashed across television screens at 10:30 p.m.: martial law had been imposed by President Yoon Suk-yeol. Legislators hurried through barricades, taxis started swerving toward Yeouido, and regular people gathered outside the National Assembly with flags and phones in hand. When soldiers suddenly appear in the political landscape, it’s difficult to ignore how quickly a contemporary democracy can feel vulnerable. Upheaval is nothing new to South Korea. Democracy in this country was difficult to achieve and frequently disrupted, from Syngman Rhee’s…

Behind a glass wall, the hiring manager’s office looks out onto an open floor filled with movable desks and bright screens. Neither the walls nor the resumes piled on the table display any framed diplomas. Rather, the term “AI-literate” keeps coming up in candidate notes. No one can clearly define it, despite the fact that it sounds technical and possibly even futuristic. Nevertheless, it’s turning into the silent filter that separates courteous rejections from callbacks. Degrees served as a shorthand for competence a few years ago. Employers no longer seem to believe that formal education indicates preparedness for work shaped…

There is something that nearly defies observation in the Perseus galaxy cluster, a dense area of space where galaxies float like sluggish ships in a dark harbor. Even powerful telescopes find it difficult to detect the object, known as CDG-2, because it emits so little light. However, its gravitational pull is undeniable, suggesting that there is a massive mass concealed in the shadows. One of the most extreme examples of a galaxy dominated almost exclusively by dark matter, a cosmic structure that appears to exist more in theory than in starlight, may be CDG-2. The majority of galaxies make their…

The mountain doesn’t “collapse” in the neat manner that people think it will. It tears. First, a whomp, low and distant, like the sound of a door closing in a different room. The slope then accelerates into something that appears nearly liquid, the snow acting like a freight of white concrete, and it begins to move, tearing itself apart into blocks and powder. The unsettling question that keeps coming up after Castle Peak, after the Alps, after another winter headline, is this sense of force: why do backcountry skiing deaths continue to rise when survival equipment has never been better?…

From Earth, the Moon has always appeared serene as a pale disk that hangs over rooftops and power lines, but as scientists get closer, the moon appears less motionless. According to new research, our satellite is still shrinking, with its crust cracking and wrinkling as the interior gradually cools. Even though it’s a gradual process that takes millions of years to measure, the effects seem immediate now that people are getting ready to go back and perhaps stay. The lunar plains look like dried paint from orbit, smooth and inert. They tell a different story up close. The total number…

Inside a packed U-Bahn carriage on a gloomy afternoon in Berlin, a college student browsed through her phone with the distracted cadence of someone passing the time between stops. News, memes, arguments, and all the usual cacophony were displayed on her screen. She later confessed to a friend that the odd calm was what really got to her. Some of the contentious videos that she was aware were being circulated elsewhere were just absent. She might not have been aware that she was viewing a filtered version of the internet that millions of Americans were using at the time. With…

The morning following the avalanche was unusually quiet in the Alder Creek trailhead parking lot. Rescue crews stood in groups, talking softly, while snowmobiles sat motionless, their engines cold. The violence that had occurred only hours before was concealed by the smooth white slopes of the mountains above, which once again appeared serene, almost unconcerned.There were eight skiers killed. There was still one more to go. The tragedy was initially explained using well-known terminology. I wish you luck. bizarre circumstances. No one could have predicted the sudden collapse of snow. These words came out fast, almost instinctively, as though everyone…

Last autumn, two men sat across from one another in a Berlin café, having a quiet argument. One maintained that the old system was irreparably flawed and that Germany urgently needed a comprehensive political overhaul. Older and more composed, the other kept saying the same thing: “Change is dangerous when it’s fast.” They weren’t actually debating ideologies. They seemed to be debating time itself more than anything else. Now, that conversation, heard in between bitter coffee sips, seems like a sneak peek at something bigger. The well-known conflict between the left and the right appears to be evaporating into something…

Silently, almost apologetically, the notification pops up in the browser’s upper-right corner. A tiny bit of color. Most people don’t pay attention to it. They always do. However, beneath that straightforward prompt—”Update Chrome”—far less commonplace activity frequently takes place, with engineers working through the night, security teams tracking down unseen threats, and hackers probing vulnerabilities that no one else has yet noticed. Most users were not particularly impressed by Google’s recent emergency patch for Chrome, which fixed a serious zero-day vulnerability that was already being exploited in the wild. It came in silence. silently installed. And that quiet seems illuminating.…

La Jolla’s lab is colder than anticipated. Researchers lean over trays containing samples smaller than a grain of rice inside, under fluorescent lighting and the constant hum of refrigeration units. Bright clusters of magenta dots show up on their computer screens, each one representing a neuron that is actively making proteins. Some have a strong glow. Some hardly flicker. The imbalance is difficult to ignore. Using a new tool called Ribo-STAMP, researchers from Scripps Research and UC San Diego have started mapping what they refer to as the brain’s “protein factories.” For the first time, they have monitored the production…

The hospital parking lot is already half full at 6:45 a.m. With coffee cups carefully balanced in one hand and jackets pulled tighter against the cold, nurses exit aging sedans and small SUVs. Fluorescent lights inside hum softly over empty hallways that are just waiting to be filled. Even though the shift hasn’t begun yet, the fatigue has already set in. Quietly, the healthcare industry has emerged as America’s most dependable employer. Hospitals continue to hire even as factories slow down and tech companies lay off employees. The data presents a comforting picture. Due to an aging population and ongoing…

Spotlight

Inside one small academic center, conversations float far beyond the Sonoran horizon, while the beige stone buildings of Arizona State University’s Tempe campus glow subtly in the desert sun. Philosophers and physicists sit side by side in seminar rooms with half-erased diagrams of spacetime curves and chalkboards covered in layers of equations, asking questions that seem both archaic and oddly urgent. The Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science interprets the universe rather than merely measuring it. This place seems to exist a little outside of the typical academic rhythms. Here, disciplinary turf wars, grants, and publication counts don’t feel as important. Rather, debates veer from mathematical symmetry to whether human consciousness can actually understand reality, from quantum uncertainty to the origin of life. CategoryDetailsInstitutionArizona State UniversityCenter NameBeyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in ScienceDirectorPaul DaviesKey FieldsCosmology, Astrobiology, Quantum Physics, Philosophy of ScienceMissionExplore foundational scientific questions and their philosophical meaningInterdisciplinary FocusPhysics,…

Inside one small academic center, conversations float far beyond the Sonoran horizon, while the beige stone buildings of Arizona State University’s Tempe campus glow subtly in the desert sun. Philosophers and physicists sit side by side in seminar rooms with half-erased diagrams of spacetime curves and chalkboards covered in layers of equations, asking questions that seem both archaic and oddly urgent. The Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science interprets the universe rather than merely measuring it. This place seems to exist a little outside of the typical academic rhythms. Here, disciplinary turf wars, grants, and publication counts don’t feel as important. Rather, debates veer from mathematical symmetry to whether human consciousness can actually understand reality, from quantum uncertainty to the origin of life. CategoryDetailsInstitutionArizona State UniversityCenter NameBeyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in ScienceDirectorPaul DaviesKey FieldsCosmology, Astrobiology, Quantum Physics, Philosophy of ScienceMissionExplore foundational scientific questions and their philosophical meaningInterdisciplinary FocusPhysics,…

It’s difficult to ignore how frequently people now bring up contacting an AI regarding a child’s fever, a lab result, or a rash. Patients scroll through chatbot responses in waiting rooms from Cleveland to Karachi, their phones glowing as the nurse calls their name. It seems like a fundamental change has occurred. These days, patients do more than just look up symptoms. They’re looking at algorithms. The promise is clear. AI systems can compare symptoms to databases that would take a human days to review, scanning vast amounts of medical literature in a matter of seconds. Machine learning tools are being used in hospitals to track lung nodules, identify early strokes, and clear radiology backlogs. It seems less like science fiction as you watch this happen and more like a silent infrastructure upgrade, with software humming in the background to speed things up. However, a patient at home at midnight…

A Greek soccer team chairman and two other individuals were arrested on Sunday following a violent incident at a football stadium in the Greater Athens area, according to local authorities. The arrests came after the group allegedly assaulted both rival fans and police officers who intervened to stop the altercation during a match. The police statement released Monday did not disclose the names of the suspects or identify the soccer team involved in the incident. Law enforcement officials confirmed that the three arrested individuals were part of a larger group of approximately 20 people who wore the colors of a team that was not playing in the match taking place on the field. Violence Erupts During Greek Soccer Match The group targeted away supporters in the stands, initiating an attack that prompted immediate police intervention. When officers attempted to stop the assault, the suspects allegedly turned their aggression toward law…

The rustle of clipboards and the smell of antiseptic are not the first things one notices in some urban clinics nowadays. Before a patient has even seen a receptionist, they are asked to describe their symptoms on a tablet that is placed close to the entrance. Squinting, a man wearing a construction vest taps at the screen while choosing “chest discomfort.” A gentle chime is heard. He is escorted past the waiting line by a nurse who shows up moments later. This is the entrance to the “new clinic economy,” as some administrators refer to it. Hospitals, urgent care facilities, and telehealth platforms are increasingly using AI triage systems, which are software programs created to evaluate symptoms and rank patients. These systems, which promise to separate the urgent from the routine in a matter of seconds, are based on clinical guidelines and machine-learning models that have been trained on extensive…

Floodlights bounce off the white core stage of the Artemis II rocket as it sits still against a lavender sky at sunset on Florida’s Space Coast. Workers at the perimeter fence move slowly. It appears ready, even inevitable, from a distance. The sensation is different up close. The concrete has hoses running across it. Sensors make blinking sounds. Spaceflight doesn’t feel easy at all. Early March had been circled by NASA as the time when people would finally return to the Moon. Teams hailed the simulation as a significant advancement following a fueling rehearsal in which over 700,000 gallons of…

A few years ago, people would use the word “cooling” to signal the end of a meeting. Facility managers owned it, and there were vendor booths with brochures that no one picked up. There is a feeling that it is becoming the true limitation—the factor that determines whether the AI boom is a smooth sprint or a sweaty crawl—and it now appears in board decks with the assurance typically reserved for revenue projections. You begin to notice the peculiar details when you spend time close to a contemporary data center layout. the more substantial doors. The pipes are thicker. The…

Last spring, outside a Long Island suburban nutrition store, a handwritten sign read, “ID REQUIRED FOR MUSCLE-BUILDING SUPPLEMENTS,” next to the protein tubs and neon pre-workout jars. Teens in gym hoodies stopped and narrowed their eyes at labels they had previously picked up carelessly. The scene seemed ordinary, but strangely symbolic—a culture fixated on physical appearance clashing with the cumbersome legal system. New York is the first state in the US to limit the sale of bodybuilding and weight-loss supplements to children. Ingredients are not what the law depends on. Rather, it changes the way products are advertised: retailers are…

The usual buzz on the trading floor had given way to a tense quiet by mid-morning on Monday. Minutes before, screens had been green, but now they were glowing red. A dense, dystopian, and surprisingly viral research note was bouncing around hedge fund group threads and chat terminals. Leaning over desks, traders read passages that predicted a “global intelligence crisis” that would cause white-collar jobs to disappear and lead to a deflationary spiral. It read more like speculative fiction than market analysis. But as if it were a piece of scripture, prices were shifting. James van Geelen, the founder of…

It is typically not in a lab or chart when it first appears. It is outside a low-slung gym in a parking lot with foggy windows from the cardio heat and a slight rubber-mat odor in the air. Without making it a defining characteristic of their personalities, people who once circled for the closest space now choose the far end. Something seems to have changed from “should” to “might as well,” and that change—which is so slight that it’s nearly embarrassing to explain—may be the most culturally significant consequence of the GLP-1 boom. These drugs, at least for many, are…

It wasn’t a court filing that started the Firefly frenzy. There was a pop-up at the start.When Creative Cloud users opened Photoshop or Illustrator in early June 2024—a moment that typically passes like lint on a dark sweater—they encountered updated terms that they had to agree to in order to continue working. People didn’t read the line about Adobe having access to user content for “content review” using both automated and manual methods like lawyers do. They interpret it as independent contractors would, such as when a client adds a new provision to a contract at 11:58 p.m. on a…

When people refer to it as “the man who hacked 7,000 Roombas,” the narrative is undermined because the robot in question wasn’t an iRobot Roomba at all. It was Romo from DJI. However, the moniker endures because it encapsulates the eerie essence: a tiny disc-shaped assistant that glides beneath couches, charts your hallways, and stealthily gathers the kind of data you wouldn’t give to a stranger at the door. How banal this episode starts is what makes it so unsettling. Instead of hunting down victims, Azdoufal was attempting to control his own vacuum using a video game controller—a weekend hobby…

The color is the first thing you notice when you arrive at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. Glistening like caution tape on a gray runway, bright yellow tails lined up in the humid Florida air. Depending on who you asked, those planes represented either consumer salvation or airborne misery for years. They also represented inexpensive tickets and endless fees. They now represent survival as well. Spirit Airlines emerged from Chapter 11 with a drastically changed balance sheet and an even more radical question: can America’s most derided airline reinvent itself without losing the brutal cost discipline that initially made it relevant?…

The silence is the first thing one notices when entering a contemporary operations center. There was a muted hum, not quite silence, with servers blinking, dashboards updating, and fewer people talking. Algorithms now finish tasks in seconds where teams used to handle claims or track spreadsheets. On wall-mounted screens, managers view performance metrics that demonstrate reduced expenses and faster turnaround times. Clearly, efficiency has arrived. From speculation to arithmetic, artificial intelligence now holds promise for business. Productivity increases. Costs decrease. The margins get wider. Executives who are responsible for delivering quarterly improvements see the benefits of automation right away: fewer…

It begins, as these things usually do, in a well-lit grocery aisle with a subtle scent of warm bread and floor cleaner. A figure is standing in front of a wall of boxes, including snack bars, cereal, and “high protein” cookies. They are flipping the packages over as if they were reading tea leaves. The list of ingredients is a little different. It’s a billboard on the front. Between the two, the term “ultra-processed” has evolved into a sort of political gimmick that is practical, direct, and simple to present to cameras. UPF warnings weren’t created overnight. The NOVA framework,…

Copenhagen traders didn’t require translation on the morning the data was released. Years of post-Wegovy euphoria were erased as Novo Nordisk shares fell, and screens glowed red across dealing desks. Bicycles leaned against railings in the gray winter weather outside the glass towers, and inside, analysts revised models that had assumed Novo still held the future of obesity medicine just weeks before. At first glance, the numbers themselves did not appear to be very bad. Over the course of 84 weeks, CagriSema caused about 23% weight loss, which would have seemed miraculous ten years ago. However, miracles are rated on…

Large data centers often have an oddly artificial feel to their air, with cold hallways, blinking lights, and a constant, low-pitched mechanical hum. Places like these are where Meta’s most recent wager starts to make sense. The company’s multi-year agreement with AMD, which guarantees up to six gigawatts of AI processing power, is not just another agreement with a supplier. It has more of the feel of a dependency insurance policy. Nvidia has been at the forefront of AI computing for many years. From recommendation engines to research labs, its GPUs became the standard engine of the current AI boom.…

There is no dramatic ringing of phones inside the Tennessee Poison Center. They make chirping sounds. A constant, medical noise reverberated through fluorescent-panel-lit cubicles. But in the last year, the calls have started to pile up into something more serious: nurses complaining of constant nausea, worried spouses reporting uncontrollable vomiting, and emergency doctors asking for advice after patients miscalculated an injection intended to aid in weight loss. There is a perception that the current weight-loss craze is a logistical issue rather than a medical discovery. Semaglutide medications, such as Ozempic and Wegovy, have gained widespread recognition and are discussed in…

People typically pause when they see bacteria swim under a microscope for the first time, feeling both happy and uneasy. The world appears serene in a shallow droplet pinned beneath a glass slide. The microorganisms then begin to move deliberately, forming arcs through the liquid as though they have been late all day. It’s difficult to overlook the implication: even on the smallest scale of life, remaining motionless is a decision, and frequently a losing one. That uneasy feeling is brought into focus by a new map of bacterial motility that was constructed from a massive sweep of genomes. In…

The employment situation in Britain is not in the midst of a recession. There aren’t any lengthy lineups outside of closed factories or abrupt waves of layoffs that make headlines. Rather, there is a freeze, which is more subdued and eerie. Employees cling tenaciously to their positions while graduates, school dropouts, and people changing careers wait outside a door that seldom opens. The numbers of vacancies tell the story. After declining for more than three years, open positions had dropped to roughly 717,000 by the middle of 2025. Just 11% of companies say they intend to hire. It’s possible that…

Last fall, customers were silently recalculating outside a Boston grocery store, standing next to carts half-full of necessities—nothing fancy, just eggs, milk, and detergent. But the sum continued to take them by surprise. Almost imperceptibly, like rent notices that slip under the door every year, the idea of living “comfortably” has crept upward. It feels provisional now, where it was once secure. The well-known antagonist of economic cycles, inflation, rarely makes an appearance with much fanfare. A higher utility bill, a mid-year increase in the daycare bill, or a rent renewal that arrives with bureaucratic calm are all examples of…

A young man is seen squinting, zooming, and rotating his phone toward a station map on a packed commuter train. The routine is the same: take out the device, finish the task, put the device back in your pocket. Apple seems certain that this small dance is only a passing phase, a clumsy transition from the era of screens to something more subdued. The idea that the next interface won’t be held in the hand is suggested by its reported push into smart glasses, AirPods with cameras, and even a pendant. They’ll wear it. The company’s strategy, which should be…

With their metal frames quivering in winds capable of sandblasting exposed skin in a matter of minutes, the drill rigs appear almost delicate against the vast white silence of Antarctica. But what they extract from beneath the ice feels heavier than anything that can be explained by machinery: cylinders of frozen time, layered with ash, dust, trapped air, and tiny pieces of extinct worlds. Once debated in abstract graphs, climate history now rests in the palm of the hand like a glass rod. Drilling ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica, cutting them into meter-long segments, and keeping them in specialized…

Last week, the announcement of the Pixel 10a felt almost anticlimactic as I stood inside a mobile shop with fluorescent lighting and glass counters that reflected rows of identical black rectangles. One more phone. Another improvement to the camera. AI magic holds yet another promise. However, when the release date was mentioned, the salesperson hesitated. He said, tapping the counter, “It’s early.” “That is important.” With only minor adjustments, Google’s new mid-range phone boasts a brighter 6.3-inch OLED screen, Gorilla Glass 7i, quicker 30-watt charging, and the silent removal of the camera bump. It reads more like refinement than reinvention…

Markets used to believe that war would never break out because it was tragic, unstable, and eventually contained. That presumption is being undermined. As if geopolitics were background noise, equity analysts continue to discuss rate cuts and consumer sentiment despite the fact that defense budgets are increasing in German factory towns and Brussels policy corridors with a seriousness not seen in decades. Investors might be tied to the protracted peace that followed the Cold War, when globalization reduced prices, spurred economic growth, and rendered war appear economically illogical. Capital moved in the direction of efficiency for forty years. Across continents,…

The warnings come softly, frequently before dawn. Dashboards shine in dimly lit rooms in security operations centers from Northern Virginia to Frankfurt to Karachi, while coffee cools next to unattended keyboards. One more update. One more vulnerability that was exploited. Another reminder that the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, which is kept up to date by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, has expanded once more. Six Microsoft zero-day vulnerabilities that are already being exploited in the wild made this month’s addition feel both familiar and more significant. These include privilege-escalation bugs that hackers exploit once they have established a…

In Singapore, traders were already updating their screens before the sun rose. Futures fell slightly, then precipitously, in response to a tariff announcement made in Washington hours earlier rather than a central bank decision. Coffee cups on trading desks remained unopened. The market value had already vanished by the time European markets opened. Central bankers had remained silent. Monetary policy has dominated world markets for the majority of the last ten years. In order to find hints regarding interest rates and liquidity, investors analyzed every word the Federal Reserve said. It’s a different rhythm. Politics started to move more quickly…

Once, columns of armor, fighter jets slicing across the horizon, and radio bulletins interrupting afternoon routines were all signs that war was coming. These days, it frequently starts with a slight buzz. A drone that can fit in a car’s trunk hovers over a waiting tanker, a radar site, or a refinery. No announcement, no show. Only a radar screen flicker, followed by a smoke plume a few seconds later. Unmanned aircraft are now used in modern conflicts because they reduce the cost of violence while increasing its scope. For hours, a drone can linger, transmitting live video while evading…

In the past, the grocery receipt was just a plain piece of paper that was folded and left behind. It now rests like proof on kitchen counters. Once more, milk up. Even worse is cooking oil. Again, eggs. It’s difficult to ignore how families spend a lot of time staring at those small printed totals, performing mental calculations with the same gravity that was previously only used for tax returns. The language of central banking has subtly entered living rooms in 2026. Standing next to humming refrigerators, people discuss “rate pressure,” “price stickiness,” and “cash flow smoothing.” Previously an intangible…