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    A team of researchers in the UK say their AI-powered stethoscope can detect three different heart conditions in just 15 seconds. It’s also, they readily admit, horrendously inaccurate. Placed over the chest, the “smart” gizmo analyzes the rhythms of the heartbeat and blood flow that’re undetectable to the human ear, while also performing a quick

    NewsSeptember 7, 2025
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    Geoffrey Hinton, long considered a “godfather of AI” and who won the Nobel Prize in Physics last year, has a complicated relationship with the tech he pioneered at Google many years ago. He’s long argued that AI poses an existential risk to humanity, and signed a letter earlier this year calling on OpenAI not to

    NewsSeptember 7, 2025
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    Recently, a minor miracle was achieved in the world of film preservation. A long-lost version of “A Better Tomorrow II” (1987), John Woo’s sequel to his heroic bloodshed classic “A Better Tomorrow” (1986), was discovered and is now slated to be released to the public. For nearly 40 years, Woo’s preferred cut of the Hong

    NewsSeptember 7, 2025
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    Online safety watchdogs have found that AI chatbots posing as popular celebrities are having troubling conversations with minors. Topics range from flirting to simulated sex acts — wildly inappropriate conversations that could easily a real person a well-deserved spot on a sex offender registry, but which aren’t resulting in so much as a slap on

    NewsSeptember 7, 2025
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    As fall approaches and COVID cases tick up, you might be thinking about getting this season’s COVID-19 vaccine. The annually updated shots have previously been easily accessible to anyone over 6 months of age. Most people could get them at no cost by simply walking into their neighborhood pharmacy—and that’s what most people did. However,

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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    It was in 2002, during the George W. Bush administration, when NASA decided to put a satellite into orbit to track emissions of carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas pumped into the atmosphere through human activity. After many twists and turns, NASA’s 23-year remit of charting greenhouse gas emissions could come to a close as

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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    I landed on Funy.ai like someone peeking into a secret candy store. No signup, no splashy tutorials—just a clean interface with big buttons promising “Face Swap,” “AI Art,” “Text-to-Video,” and even fun extras like “AI Kissing Videos.” It feels like they knew exactly what kind of shortcuts non-tech folks need when they just want to

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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    Bogus personal essays vanished overnight from Business Insider. At least 34 articles were quietly deleted, each penned under fabricated bylines like Tim Stevensen, Nate Giovanni, and Margaux Blanchard. They weren’t on BI’s full-time roster; they were freelance contributors, pocketing $200–$300 for personal essays laced with inconsistencies. That’s a hard lesson: editors can plug AI detection

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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    Nobody’s whispering anymore. The latest upheaval in journalism has popped the lid off the AI-powered search engine of our times. You ask Google with AI features like Overviews and AI Mode, and poof—answers flash on your screen without ever clicking on a news article. Publishers call it “Google Zero,” and they’re feeling the pinch hard

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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    The upcoming version of PostgreSQL 18, the latest release of the popular open-source database due later this month, will introduce performance-enhancing features, promising significant gains for online transactional processing (OLTP) workloads. However, according to industry experts, PostgreSQL 18 falls short in AI readiness despite rapid proliferation. PostgreSQL has become a go-to database for developers, especially

    NewsSeptember 6, 2025
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