"A galaxy made of 99.94% to 99.98% dark matter immediately challenges and updates models for how dark matter works. It also sheds light on how the universe arrived at the large-scale distribution of matter we see. The galaxy in question is called CDG-2, or Candidate Dark Galaxy 2. But how did astronomers manage to find something that's basically defined by how difficult it is to locate?" |
|
|
Momentum often shows up in the media before it becomes common knowledge. When outlets like Rolling Stone, Forbes, and Fast Company all start covering the same young company, it's usually because something interesting is happening behind the scenes. Lately, all eyes have been on the same predictive marketing platform — RAD Intel — which is using AI to help brands better understand what content will actually perform before campaigns go live. Sometimes that kind of attention signals the early stages of a bigger story. [Ad] |
|
|
"Female visual artists have long had to struggle, not just to have their work widely seen, but to create at all. But women have made art as long as there's been art, though their work has historically been hidden or discounted in the Western art world. Many persevered, both through the strength of their work and the force of will, and in celebration of Women's History Month, we want to highlight some of our favorite places where you can see these contributions in person." |
|
|
"Ohio-based Pete Wenzler estimates he's spent over $20,000 on games and services using his PlayStation Network (PSN) account, but he lost it all to a hacker, and Sony refuses to help. 'If I call customer service, they won't speak to me at all,' he tells PCMag. Wenzler, whose account was hijacked on Jan. 12, is just one victim in a growing trend in which hackers allegedly manipulate Sony's customer support into granting access to PlayStation accounts. The incidents are alarming because they bypass two-factor authentication (2FA) and even passkeys on a PSN account, two security mechanisms designed to prevent hijackings." |
|
|
Using AI right now feels weirdly medieval. You find something interesting, copy it, open another tab, paste it into a chatbot, ask a question, copy the answer, then paste it back where you started. BrowserCopilot hits CTRL+ALT+DEL on that entire ritual. The AI lives inside your browser, reads the page you're on, and helps you write, research, and reply without leaving the tab. [Ad] |
|
|
"The very existence of left-handedness seems to defy Darwin. According to the theory of evolution by natural selection (in very simplified terms), a species should retain the characteristics necessary for survival and reproduction and discard those that are not very useful. And yet, around 10% of people continue to develop greater dexterity in their left hand, a rate that has remained stable throughout history. Why do humans continue to retain this peculiar ability?" |
|
| Interested in having one of your social posts featured in The Futurist? |
|
|
Powered by StackCommerce 17383 Sunset Blvd. Suite A345 Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 Copyright © 2026 StackCommerce All rights reserved | |
|
This is a paid advertisement for RAD Intel made pursuant to Regulation A+ offering and involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. The valuation is set by the Company and there is currently no public market for the Company's Common Stock. Nasdaq ticker "$RADI" has been reserved by RAD Intel and any potential listing is subject to future regulatory approval and market conditions. Brand references reflect factual platform use, not endorsement. Investor references reflect factual individual or institutional participation and do not imply endorsement or sponsorship by the referenced companies. Please read the offering circular and related risks at invest.RADIntel.ai. |
|
|
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar