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8 votes
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More evidence points to China as source of ozone-depleting gas
8 votes -
Small molecule structures: A new world
7 votes -
When pop-up books taught popular science
9 votes -
Five in a row - the planets align in the night sky
5 votes -
How venoms are shaping medical advances
4 votes -
Why you should be skeptical of the latest nutrition headlines
11 votes -
How to get that great “hoppy” beer taste without the exploding bottles
6 votes -
Nand Game - Build a computer from scratch
11 votes -
Cheese played a surprisingly important role in human evolution
10 votes -
Love grilled cheese or mac & cheese? Learn why young cheese melts better than aged cheese.
4 votes -
The secrets of cooking rice — the cause of recipe failure is not what you might think
10 votes -
How game design transformed Hillary for America's supporter engagement
2 votes -
Architect of Paris climate accord says Morrison government's emissions stance is 'anti-science'
4 votes -
Brewing a great cup of coffee depends on chemistry and physics
9 votes -
Does where you live affect what you eat?
7 votes -
US kids eating more fast food, healthier offerings not helping
11 votes -
Human-driven climate change is literally making Earth ‘wobble’
10 votes -
Mediterranean diet 'may help prevent depression'
3 votes -
Why you literally can't overcook mushrooms
16 votes -
What is gluten? Here's how to see and feel gluten.
6 votes -
When to add salt during cooking—and why (it makes a huge difference)
25 votes -
Astronomers have found an exoplanet around the same star that Vulcan orbits in Star Trek canon
12 votes -
TESS is doing better than expected in hunt for exoplanets
13 votes -
Startups flock to turn young blood into an elixir of youth
7 votes -
Tact filters
9 votes -
European science funders ban grantees from publishing in paywalled journals
16 votes -
The new science of seeing around corners
10 votes -
The 10,000-step daily goal is totally arbitrary. The popular setting for wearable fitness tech originated with a Japanese marketing campaign in the mid-1960s.
10 votes -
Can you help me source this climate change map?
7 votes -
Fifty-four oenology students described white wine dyed red with descriptors strongly correlated with red wine
9 votes -
A study on the online "filter bubble" found that liberals and conservatives were actually recommended similar stories on Google News, representing a fairly homogeneous set of mainstream news sources
8 votes -
Banana domestication began some 7,000 years ago, but researchers are only now piecing together the global journey of the beloved yellow fruit
11 votes -
CMU engineers find innovative way to make a low-cost 3D bioprinter
3 votes -
Private dog cloning, what are your thoughts?
I had a discussion today about the ethics of cloning your pets. It's a thing you can currently pay (a lot) of money for, but I don't really see much discussion about it, even though it's absurdly...
I had a discussion today about the ethics of cloning your pets. It's a thing you can currently pay (a lot) of money for, but I don't really see much discussion about it, even though it's absurdly sci-fi and a little crazy to me that it's a real business.
So what are your thoughts? Is it ethical? Is it a bit weird? Is it perfectly healthy?
17 votes -
How a transplanted face transformed a young woman’s life
6 votes -
Delayed impact of fair machine learning
4 votes -
Bizarre “rogue planet” found lurking in Earth’s galactic neighborhood
9 votes -
Science’s search for a super banana
9 votes -
Computer science as a lost art
13 votes -
Thinking allowed
3 votes -
Radar evidence of subglacial liquid water on Mars
21 votes -
Meat and Salt and Sparks by Rich Larson [Sci-Fi] [7365 words]
tor.com/2018/06/06/meat-and-salt-and-sparks-rich-larson/ A futuristic murder mystery about detective partners—a human and an enhanced chimpanzee—who are investigating why a woman murdered an...
tor.com/2018/06/06/meat-and-salt-and-sparks-rich-larson/
A futuristic murder mystery about detective partners—a human and an enhanced chimpanzee—who are investigating why a woman murdered an apparently random stranger on the subway
Found this today and read it for my morning break. I'm worried about spoilers, but I'm curious about people's thoughts on being a non-human intelligence and the subsequent integration into human society. Did this short evoke any particular emotions in you?
9 votes -
The Evolution of Science Fiction
7 votes -
Chinese researchers achieve stunning quantum-entanglement record
2 votes -
Jupiter’s got twelve new moons — one is a bit of a problem child
8 votes -
How NASA’s mission to Pluto was nearly lost
6 votes -
Methane is giving noctilucent clouds a boost
3 votes -
Science under siege: Behind the scenes at US President Donald Trump’s troubled environment agency
8 votes -
Women making science videos on YouTube face hostile comments
11 votes