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26 votes
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After quitting antidepressants, some people suffer surprising, lingering symptoms
36 votes -
2025 Physics Nobel awarded to three scientists for work on quantum computing (in the 1980s)
19 votes -
Scientists make most authentic kidney replicas so far
4 votes -
Earth is getting darker and it’s changing the planet’s climate balance
15 votes -
Swedish startup Saveggy launches pilot scheme for edible, plastic-free packaging for cucumbers – innovative solution made from just two ingredients: rapeseed oil and gluten-free oat oil
21 votes -
Prospect of life on Saturn’s moons rises after discovery of organic substances
34 votes -
KeenWrite 3.6.3
30 votes -
Watch ticks fly through the air via the power of static electricity
12 votes -
Human impacts of wildfires worsen even as total burned area declines
6 votes -
Why do some gamers invert their controls? Scientists now have answers, but they’re not what you think.
36 votes -
Why people embrace conspiracy theories: It's about community, not gullibility
36 votes -
Did NASA just find alien life on Mars? Here's what we know.
21 votes -
Earth has now passed peak farmland. What's next?
23 votes -
A NASA food scientist tackled the problem of how to feed astronauts. Now, his idea fuels first responders and mothers of infants.
12 votes -
After ten years of black hole science, Stephen Hawking is proven right
23 votes -
British endurance swimmer Ross Edgley has become the first person to swim around Iceland, after spending nearly four months circumnavigating 1,000 miles of coastline
8 votes -
James Webb Space Telescope detects possible atmosphere around Earth-like exoplanet TRAPPIST-1e, forty light years away from Earth
21 votes -
The case for cultured meat has changed
29 votes -
He knew Greenland's melting ice better than anyone. Then he disappeared into it.
13 votes -
Deep in the Swedish forest lies one of Europe's hopes for a spaceport that can ultimately compete with the United States, China and Russia
12 votes -
In 1975, Swedish socialists and unions devised a program to democratically seize the means of production, but terrified elites dismantled it
31 votes -
Norway's Olympic gold medallists Marius Lindvik and Johann André Forfang accept three-month suspensions for suit-tampering at the 2025 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships
6 votes -
‘Sex reversal’ is surprisingly common in birds, new study suggests
40 votes -
Climate change made a two-week-long heatwave in Norway, Sweden and Finland around 2°C hotter and at least ten times more likely, study says
26 votes -
Dicing an onion the mathematically optimal way
44 votes -
New research on the ancient origins of the potato
8 votes -
We're launching Stargate Norway, OpenAI's first AI data center initiative in Europe under our OpenAI for Countries program
9 votes -
Early universe’s ‘little red dots’ may be black hole stars
17 votes -
NASA-ISRO satellite lifts off to track Earth’s changing surfaces
9 votes -
New DNA map of the pistachio could create better varieties
9 votes -
A huge fight looms over the NASA budget this fall
26 votes -
What Danish climate migration drama, Families Like Ours, gets wrong about rising sea levels
9 votes -
Beware of the “lasagna cell”: The danger of food and metals
31 votes -
No, of course I can! Refusal mechanisms can be exploited using harmless fine-tuning data.
9 votes -
US National Institutes of Health suspends dozens of pathogen studies over ‘gain-of-function’ concerns
32 votes -
Disappearing polymorph
42 votes -
'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers to influence automated review
29 votes -
Nichelle Nichols Space Camp for teen girls to open in 2026
32 votes -
Novo Nordisk's ad campaign, which aimed to speak ‘without filters’ by declaring obesity a disease, has faced strong criticism on social media and from some scientific societies
21 votes -
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will discover billions of dynamic objects while building up a deep map of the universe
13 votes -
Giving your house plants genetically enhanced super powers
4 votes -
Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
22 votes -
Genetic variant tied to doubled dementia risk for older men
14 votes -
The strange (pre-tectonics) hypothesis of Earth expanding like a balloon
6 votes -
A history of dome movie theaters
10 votes -
If you could travel back in time and bring one thing back to the modern day, what would it be?
I was having a conversation that made me go "damn the Romans for using up all the herbal birth control." Normally I'm not interested in doing time travel because I am too queer, loud, non-binary,...
I was having a conversation that made me go "damn the Romans for using up all the herbal birth control." Normally I'm not interested in doing time travel because I am too queer, loud, non-binary, woman coded, etc. to not get some sort of societal consequence in most of history. Also I like modern medicine and such. But, it got me thinking about how it'd be cool to be able to bring a large silphium plant back from before it went extinct.
Obviously I have no idea of the efficacy of silphium for medicinal purposes but it would be super cool to be able to grow it, sequence the DNA, and try to reintroduce it, even if only in gardens. And maybe it's actually even effective medically.
So what would you bring back?
Caveats:
- You must be able to carry the thing
- The thing will not age when traveling forward in time but you'll be able to demonstrate that you brought it from the past.
- It should be one "thing." If that "thing" is made up of multiple smaller things (not atoms ಠ_ಠ)... Well, if you're trying to loophole then you're on thin ice, but if a reasonable case could be made, then make it and let your fellow Tildese judge you.
- You can't bring anything back in time besides yourself, your clothes and your time machine remote control button.
- You cannot bring a person to the present. An animal that you personally can carry, and that will let you carry it, is up to you.
- ˗ˏˋ Bonus Style Points ˎˊ˗ (there are no points) for presenting your historical artifact in old timey Victorian gentleman inventor/traveler/archaeologist fashion, should the mood take you.
63 votes -
How the little-known ‘dark roof’ lobby may be making US cities hotter
30 votes -
Value of a Computer Information Systems degree
I've been considering going back to school and taking some courses that are available to me. With the associates that I already have, I was weighing the options that I have available to me....
I've been considering going back to school and taking some courses that are available to me. With the associates that I already have, I was weighing the options that I have available to me. Computer Science is a classic and could probably get me very far with the "need a piece of paper" folks, but it's more software development than I have a passion for, compared to my troubleshooting, find a problem, solve a problem desires. Cybersecurity is probably going to be more dependent on certs than anything I can learn in a class, especially if it's ever evolving and a degree can be outmoded very quickly. Computer Information Systems sort of has my attention because it seems like an IT based degree with elements of a business setup and not as laser focused on coding. With the courses that I currently have under my belt, it would be more for CIS than it would be for CS, but more CLEP and ACE options so it about evens out.
Does Computer Information Systems hold any water in any of your opinions to what Computer Science has to offer? Or is it somewhat arbitrary anyway?
10 votes -
Finland's obsession with saunas is going global – what does science say about the claimed health benefits?
28 votes