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15 votes
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Sketches from US animation studios found on North Korean computer server
12 votes -
The troubling trend in teenage sex (it's strangulation) (gifted link)
26 votes -
Dozens of Texas water systems exceed new federal PFAS limits
12 votes -
Song lyrics are getting more repetitive, angrier
18 votes -
Rents are the Fed’s ‘biggest stumbling block’ in taming US inflation
16 votes -
Bug in glibc's iconv() function allows for RCE in PHP servers by setting charset to ISO-2022-CN-EXT to trigger buffer overflow (CVE-2024-2961)
9 votes -
San Francisco sues Oakland over proposed airport name change
18 votes -
Saudi Arabia’s 105-mile long Line city has been cut a little short – by 103.5 miles
28 votes -
The Hydra game
6 votes -
Laziness does not exist
46 votes -
Inflation in times of overlapping emergencies: Systemically significant prices from an input–output perspective
7 votes -
World Press Photo 2024 – global winners
9 votes -
It's time for operating systems to rediscover hardware (1hr 6mins)
17 votes -
Two years to save the planet, says UN climate chief
53 votes -
Artisan roastery based in the Finnish capital has introduced a coffee blend that has been developed by artificial intelligence
5 votes -
US House approves $95 billion aid bill for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan (gifted link)
41 votes -
The facts and fantasies of dissociation
5 votes -
Oysters: The luxury delicacy that was once a fast-food fad
14 votes -
Maui wildfire report: Officials declined extra help before a deadly inferno engulfed Lahaina, killing more than 100 people
12 votes -
Finnish startup hopes solein, protein grown with CO2 and electricity, will cut environmental impact of farming
10 votes -
‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ renewed for Season 4; ‘Lower Decks’ to conclude with Season 5
39 votes -
Fifty years later, this Apollo-era antenna still talks to Voyager 2
14 votes -
'Run Lola Run' will be back in theaters this Summer, with 4K restoration
23 votes -
Indiana now has a religious right to abortion
28 votes -
Modder packs an entire Nintendo Wii into a box the size of a pack of cards
27 votes -
The Evolution of Trust game
8 votes -
Intelligence community largely won House FISA fight. Now comes the US Senate.
27 votes -
The two cultures
11 votes -
Tesla recalls Cybertrucks over accelerator crash risk
31 votes -
Man sets himself on fire near courthouse where Donald Trump is on trial (gifted link)
41 votes -
‘We are full’: the rebirth of Europe’s sleeper trains
25 votes -
Bid to secure spot for glacier in Icelandic presidential race heats up – decade-old idea for Snæfellsjökull has snowballed into a full-blown campaign
5 votes -
A primer on Bitcoin cross-border flows: Measurement and drivers
2 votes -
Ryan Gosling movie 'Project Hail Mary' set for Spring 2026
22 votes -
Turning old maps into 3D digital models of lost neighborhoods
9 votes -
California sets nation-leading limit for carcinogenic chromium-6 in drinking water
17 votes -
The invisible seafaring industry that keeps the internet going
21 votes -
US Bureau of Land Management increases priority of conservation efforts vs other uses of public land
23 votes -
Sony and Apollo Management reportedly in talks to purchase Paramount
6 votes -
FYI: This site claims to have harvested 4B+ Discord chats, today all yours for a price
41 votes -
Taylor Swift adds fifteen songs to ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ with surprise release ‘The Anthology’
20 votes -
Why the short-lived Calvin and Hobbes is still one of the most beloved and influential comic strips
35 votes -
Indiana will test a highway that can charge moving vehicles
4 votes -
The parents in my classroom
25 votes -
Zacklabe: a site for great up-to-date visualizations regarding climate change, especially about Arctic and Antarctic
Zacklabe is a site, created by the climate scientist and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration researcher, Zachary Labe, that has many great visualizations of data regarding climate...
Zacklabe is a site, created by the climate scientist and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration researcher, Zachary Labe, that has many great visualizations of data regarding climate change, especially about the Arctic and Antarctic. It gathers its data from scientific observations, which are cited. You can access the visualizations following this link. Here are the visualizations, with many graphics for each entry.
Arctic Climate Seasonality and Variability
Arctic Sea Ice Extent and Concentration
Arctic Sea Ice Volume and Thickness
Arctic Temperatures
Antarctic Sea Ice Extent and Concentration
Climate Change Indicators
Climate model projections compared to observations in the Arctic
Global Sea Ice Extent and Concentration
Polar Climate Change FiguresNote: I briefly created a similar topic, but it was only about a single link from here. I deleted because I realized it's much better to create a thread about the site in general.
8 votes -
When provided with CVE descriptions of 15 different vulnerabilities and a set of tools useful for exploitation, GPT-4 was capable of autonomously exploiting 13 of which, yielding an 87% success rate
17 votes -
Hyundai's third car in the World Rally Championship is back in the hands of Andreas Mikkelsen for Rally Croatia
5 votes -
Tokyo starts ride-hailing service — but it may not be what you expect
19 votes -
A quick post on Chen’s algorithm
11 votes