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Blizzard Is Rewarding Diablo IV Players for Donating Their Blood
Blizzard Is Rewarding Diablo IV Players for Donating Their Blood
Blizzard is celebrating the release of Season of Blood for Diablo IV by asking players
2023-10-23 20:16
Uber launches UK flight ticket bookings - FT
Uber launches UK flight ticket bookings - FT
Uber Technologies Inc has launched international and domestic flight bookings on its UK app, the Financial Times reported
2023-05-10 13:27
Inside China's underground market for high-end Nvidia AI chips
Inside China's underground market for high-end Nvidia AI chips
By Josh Ye, David Kirton and Chen Lin HONG KONG/SHENZHEN, China Psst! Where can a Chinese buyer purchase
2023-06-20 18:24
Who is Sweaty Eddie? Drag king on 'AGT' Season 18 is on mission to popularize less-known forms of drag
Who is Sweaty Eddie? Drag king on 'AGT' Season 18 is on mission to popularize less-known forms of drag
Sweaty Eddie specializes in captivating cameo performances that are both amusing and mysterious
2023-06-21 06:20
Scientists discover that plants make sounds when hurt that you can hear
Scientists discover that plants make sounds when hurt that you can hear
Plants make sounds when they’re distressed and humans are only hearing them now for the first time, scientists have found. New research has discovered that sounds are used by plants to communicate with their ecosystems – and they could be studied and used to improve growing conditions for plants in the future. Itzhak Khait of Tel Aviv University led the research, which involved studying tobacco and tomato plants. As the findings showed, the plants made high-frequency noise which could be detected five metres away. The study was published in the journal Cell, and the results “can alter the way we think about the plant kingdom, which has been considered to be almost silent until now”. Not only that, but by studying the sounds emitted by the plants experts could tell whether they were in need of water or suffering from cuts. Lilach Hadany, an evolutionary biologist at Tel Aviv University, told Vice: “We started this project from the evolutionary question: why are plants mute? It appears that plants could have a lot to benefit from acoustic communication.” “We were particularly happy that the sounds turned out to be informative – containing information on the type of the plant and the type of the stress.” The findings could change the way plants are grown and communicate with their environments in future, given that we now know information can be conveyed via the sounds. Hadany went on to say: “What we do know is that there are sounds in the air, and they contain information. “Thus, natural selection may be acting on other organisms (animals and plants) to whom the sounds are relevant, to be able to hear the sounds and interpret them. That includes animals that can hear the sounds and can use the information to choose a food source or a laying site, or potentially plants that can prepare for the stress.” The team said in the study: “Plant sound emissions could offer a way for monitoring crops water and possibly disease states—questions of crucial importance in agriculture. “In times when more and more areas are exposed to drought due to climate change, efficient water use becomes even more critical, for both food security and ecology.” Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-08-23 19:27
Scientists baffled by discovery of completely mummified man just 16 days after he was last seen alive
Scientists baffled by discovery of completely mummified man just 16 days after he was last seen alive
Warning: This article does contain images some readers might find disturbing. Investigators have been left puzzled after finding a man’s body in a stage of “complete mummification” just 16 days after he was last seen alive. The man was found alongside a railway line in Bulgaria on 3 September. Identity checks later found he was 34 when he died, with a history of alcoholism, and was last seen alive on 16 August. However, his insides had been reduced to “structureless masses”, and case workers have been unable to explain how the body reached such an advanced state of mummification so quickly. A report published in Cureus journal shows a full set of pictures of the corpse – linked at the foot of this article. Trigger warning, they’re pretty gruesome. It has got scientists fascinated though. The report’s authors reveal that the “skin surface showed coloration ranging from light to dark brown, and it was hard and leathery.” “The internal examination of the body showed that the internal organs in the cranial, thoracic, and abdominal cavities had decayed into dried, brownish-black masses,” they write. Researchers stressed that natural mummification “usually takes several weeks to 6-12 months”, and that such a fast transformation would only normally happen in extreme heat. The temperature in Sofia has ranged from 16 to 33 degrees Celsius in the time period, which scientists said is not hot enough. The authors speculated that passing trains could have created a windy environment that could have contributed to drying out the body and causing bodily fluids to evaporate. They said it almost certainly wasn’t the weather in Sofia that caused the bizarrely fast mummification process. As of yet, it remains a mystery. Here’s the journal article. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-09-22 17:17
Best Buy expects tech demand to hit a low this year
Best Buy expects tech demand to hit a low this year
Best Buy expects declining tech sales to hit a low this year before stabilizing, in another sign of consumer caution around discretionary spending and retail purchases.
2023-08-29 22:27
GOP attorneys general shift the battle over affirmative action to the workplace
GOP attorneys general shift the battle over affirmative action to the workplace
Thirteen Republican state attorneys general are cautioning CEOs of the 100 biggest U.S. companies on the legal consequences for using race as a factor in hiring and employment practices
2023-07-15 06:18
Broadcom's $61 billion VMware purchase wins UK competition watchdog's approval
Broadcom's $61 billion VMware purchase wins UK competition watchdog's approval
Computer chip and software maker Broadcom’s $61 billion plan to buy cloud technology company VMware has cleared another hurdle after Britain’s competition regulator gave the deal provisional clearance
2023-07-19 20:28
Japan AI Stocks Surge After SoftBank Joins ChatGPT Clone Race
Japan AI Stocks Surge After SoftBank Joins ChatGPT Clone Race
SoftBank Group Corp.’s mobile unit has declared it’s joining a global race to build a version of ChatGPT,
2023-05-11 09:17
Forza Motorsport Known Issues: How to Track
Forza Motorsport Known Issues: How to Track
Forza Motorsport comes out today! Some players are wondering how they can track all of the game's bugs.
2023-10-11 02:51
The Best Cheap Printers for 2023
The Best Cheap Printers for 2023
For most of the Information Age, pundits predicted that sooner or later, much of the
2023-06-19 23:48