
Adtran expands Mosaic One subscriber solutions with Intellifi® for next-generation in-home Wi-Fi
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2023-08-21 20:21

US National Lab, Nuclear Waste Site Hit by Cyberattack
A contractor at a US national lab and a radioactive waste storage site managed by the Department of
2023-06-16 05:48

23 of the funniest blue couch memes
Social media can be a nasty place at times, but every now and then a trend comes along which reminds you just how fun it can be. The most recent is the blue couch, which has been the talk of Twitter for the past week or so. In case you missed it, influencer Amanda Joy got a lot of people talking recently after finding a couch abandoned on the streets of New York. After doing a little research and believing it to be the $8,000 ‘Bubble’ couch from French brand Roche Bobois, she decided to take it back to her apartment and clean it up. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Joy’s dad picked up the couch in his van and Joy filmed the entire process of brightening up the sofa and moving it to her living room. The TikTok now has over 40 million views, and over 4 million likes – but not everyone thought it was a good idea to take the couch off the sidewalk. Some believed the unique-looking piece wasn’t the real deal and instead claimed it was a knockoff. Others were concerned about possible bed bugs and roach infestations, with no sign of how long the couch had been on the street. In the days that followed it continued to raise eyebrows across the internet, and these are some of the biggest reactions and memes. 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.
2023-05-24 18:27

Exclusive-US set to allow GE to make engines in India for New Delhi's military jets
By Trevor Hunnicutt, Krishn Kaushik and Rajesh Kumar Singh WASHINGTON/NEW DELHI The Biden administration is poised to sign
2023-06-01 05:59

Kenya’s Ruto, AfDB’s Adesina Say Tackling Climate Depends on Africa Debt Fix
Kenyan President William Ruto and the heads of two major finance and climate institutions said without a 10
2023-10-08 19:25

Grab a new pair of Sony headphones, speakers, or earbuds, on sale now at Amazon
As of May 22, several Sony headphones, earbuds, and speakers are on sale at Amazon
2023-05-23 00:21

The Best Inkjet Printers for 2023
Is your preferred choice for your next printer an inkjet? You can find the technology
2023-06-30 10:29

This comprehensive ChatGPT and AI training bundle is on sale for under £20
TL;DR: The Complete ChatGPT and Artificial Intelligence Training Bundle is on sale for £15.71, saving
2023-08-17 12:20

Mystery signals coming from space might finally have been explained by ‘starquakes’
Mysterious blasts coming from deep in space could be the result of “starquakes”, according to a new study. For years, scientists have been observing fast radio bursts, or FRBs, coming from distant parts of space. They are very intense, very short blasts of energy – and despite finding many of them, researchers still do not know where they are coming from or how they might be formed. Now, scientists have spotted that there is appears to be similarities between those FRBs and earthquakes. Researchers behind the new study suggest that the blasts could be the result of similar behaviour on neutron stars, known as starquakes. It is just one possible explanation for the unusual bursts, which have led to suggestions they could be anything from neutron stars colliding with black holes to alien technology. Most have settled on the belief that at least some of those FRBs come from neutron stars, however, which are formed when supergiant stars collapse into an incredibly dense, small object. In the new study, researchers looked at data from nearly 7,000 bursts, taken from three different sources that are sending out repeated FRBs, examining the time and energy that they emerged in. They then also looked at earthquake information taken from Japan, and data on solar flares, and looked to compare the three. There was little connection between FRBs and solar flares, the researchers found. But there was a striking similarity between the blasts and earthquakes. “The results show notable similarities between FRBs and earthquakes in the following ways: First, the probability of an aftershock occurring for a single event is 10-50%; second, the aftershock occurrence rate decreases with time, as a power of time; third, the aftershock rate is always constant even if the FRB-earthquake activity (mean rate) changes significantly; and fourth, there is no correlation between the energies of the main shock and its aftershock,” said Tomonori Totani from the University of Tokyo, one of the leaders of the study. The findings have led scientists to speculate that there is a solid crust on the outer surface of neutron stars. That crust then experiences starquakes in the same way the Earth’s surface does – and those quakes then let out powerful blasts of energy that make their way to us as FRBs. But researchers say they will need to further examine those FRBs to better understand the connection between the two – as well as to help give us information about quakes and other physical phenomena that are closer to home. “By studying starquakes on distant ultradense stars, which are completely different environments from Earth, we may gain new insights into earthquakes,” said Professor Totani. “The interior of a neutron star is the densest place in the universe, comparable to that of the interior of an atomic nucleus. “Starquakes in neutron stars have opened up the possibility of gaining new insights into very high-density matter and the fundamental laws of nuclear physics.” The research is described in a new paper, ‘Fast radio bursts trigger aftershocks resembling earthquakes, but not solar flares’, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
2023-10-11 23:26

Despite China’s iPhone Ban, Buyers and Scalpers Are Flocking to Apple Stores
Chinese customers flocked to Apple stores to buy the latest iPhone 15 despite government restrictions and local competition,
2023-09-22 12:58

Biden's Climate Law Only Halves US Greenhouse Gas Emissions by 2050: Study
US President Joe Biden’s signature climate law, the Inflation Reduction Act, could slash US greenhouse gas emissions in
2023-08-02 19:20

Sunak to Attend COP28 Summit Amid Green Policy Balancing Act
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he would attend the United Nations COP28 climate change conference in the
2023-09-10 15:16
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