Protein indirectly contributes to your daily energy levels. However, the body typically relies on carbohydrates as its ...
PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are not called "forever chemicals" for nothing. These ...
Warmer waters are fueling stronger, snowier storms—at least for now. Here’s how scientists think this phenomenon will evolve as the planet gets hotter. Steam is seen rising off a frozen Lake Michigan ...
Cloudflare, an internet management company, experienced a widespread outage that affected popular sites like X, Spotify and ChatGPT on Tuesday, Nov. 18. A fix has been implemented and Cloudflare ...
Fabien Curto Millet is Google’s chief economist. Diane Coyle is Bennett professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge. Is artificial intelligence going to destroy jobs, as some recent ...
Food is complicated. We eat to stay alive, we eat for pleasure, we eat to stay healthy or get healthier. And increasingly, we eat because the food is telling us to eat more. Consider the gummy worm.
Congress failed to pass funding by Oct. 1, 2025, kicking off a government shutdown, and the effects will reach well beyond Washington D.C. Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid benefits will ...
The United States federal government is facing a possible shutdown after midnight tonight, raising concerns about the FAA, TSA, air travel, airports, and flights. Here's what to know about potential ...
Darth Vader never said, “Luke I am your father.” So why do we all think he did? Here’s the science behind this strange phenomenon—and how AI is poised to send it into overdrive. Cape Town street art ...
SAN ANTONIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nearly half of Gen Zers (45%) lack a good understanding of the factors that affect their credit score, with roughly 1 in 5 (18%) having never checked their credit score ...
Topics like "old people smell" and "Ozempic smell" have recently circulated on social media, sparking a renewed focus on how people's bodies react to and produce scents. Many foods (and not just ...