2026-05-27
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WA paper plant: 'Major chemical explosion' kills, injures multiple people
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Chemistry behind the Garden Grove chemical tank
Poly(methyl methacrylate) or PMMA itself was first commercialized in the early 1930s, and it’s familiar under a lot of early brand names like Plexiglas, Perspex, and Lucite. Acrylic paint is PMMA in water with pigments, along with some additives to keep everything homogeneous.
Horseshit
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A look inside ITER, the world's largest fusion energy project
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Scientists MayHave Foundthe Blueprint of the HumanBody Atthe Bottom of the Ocean
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Dog shoots woman with shotgun at Nebraska convenience store
Local TV station KNOP News 2 reported that police in the town of Scottsbluff were called out to a local store recently after reports of a blast involving a shotgun. Upon arrival they found a truck with blast damage in one of its doors and a woman who had been struck in the arm by a pellet from a shotgun. However, investigation showed a canine cause behind the shooting when it was revealed the blast happened as the vehicle had pulled up to the store as a dog had been moving from one side of its back seat to another. Somehow, the dog had triggered the shotgun – which had a live round chambered – to fire, damaging the vehicle and striking a female passerby. The victim was taken to hospital though not seriously injured.
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Sometimes, the Best Way to Explore a Landscape Is to Sit Down
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`A sense of trusting one's self': how to start building confidence
Obit
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
Musk
Electric / Self Driving cars
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
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Peter Higgs: I wouldn't be productive enough for today's academic system
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Centennial, Franklin high schools hold graduations in torrential downpour
Heavy rains Thursday night did not stop high school graduations in Williamson County. Both Centennial High School and Franklin High School read the names of their graduating class in a torrential downpour. Students dressed in caps and gowns walked across the stage as the rain fell.
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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HP customer claims firmware update shoved printer off support cliff
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Standard WiFi can identify individuals with near-perfect accuracy
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Tech CEOs summoned to Congress for another hearing on social media's risks
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Motorola phones have started hijacking the Amazon app to insert affiliate codes
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SK Group chairman says memory chip shortage will last until 2030
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7-Eleven data breach exposes personal information of 185,000 people
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Capacitors: Guess what else the PC industry is short of now?
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Nvidia Vera CPU seems to beat AMD and Intel on server workloads
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Nvidia has retired its GeForce Control Panel app after 20 years
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US Supreme Court won't hear Meta's challenge to Vermont social media lawsuit
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Modern Blu-ray drives can now rip GameCube, Wii, and Xbox 360 games to PC
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California push bill to exempt open-source projects from age verification law
TechSuck / Geek Bait
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
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CIA accused of using Ancestry and 23andMe to 'hunt down' alien bloodlines
The CIA has been accused of gaining secret access to the DNA information of millions of people as the intelligence agency allegedly searches for alien life on Earth. Jason Reza Jorjani, a philosophy PhD and science fiction writer, recently claimed that he spoke with a retired US Army sergeant who served as a 'psychic spy' and knew of the government's secret program to hunt down individuals with extraterrestrial DNA. Jorjani said on the American Alchemy podcast that the CIA, the nation's premier foreign intelligence agency, has a backdoor program that allows it to search through genetic testing companies such as 23andMe and Ancestry.com.
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Analyst on China's spent rocket stages: "Things only continue to get worse"
China appears to be ignoring long-established norms about disposing of the upper stages of rockets.
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NASA takes steps toward building Moon Base, including discussing a "perimeter"
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Uber president says AI spending is getting 'harder to justify'
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Checking the math behind OpenAI and Anthropic's latest headlines
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AI guardrails stripped from Meta and Google models in minutes
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$2k/mo: Joi AI is hiring masturbation consultants to test "Daily Guided Masturbation"
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Artificial Intelligence Floods Court Dockets with Home-Brewed Lawsuits
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This big university system is embracing AI. Students and faculty aren't on board
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Sam Altman: I was wrong, AI unlikely to lead to jobs apocalypse
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Managers Are Struggling to Keep Up with the AI Productivity Boom
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Microsoft's GitHub was positioned to win AI coding race. Outages got in the way
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Too dangerous to release: is Mythos the start of the restricted-AI era?
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Rogue states are putting AI agents to work on sanctions evasion
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AI may fuel US business creation, but few signs of similar trend in Canada
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Bay Area mom out thousands after scammers use AI to mimic daughter's voice
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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California landlords turn to squatter removal teams to reclaim property
In their desperation, owners are increasingly turning to a rising crop of private rights enforcers to solve the problem. That includes Jacobs and his company, ASAP Squatter Removal. "In most industries, swords just don't make any damn sense," Jacobs says. "In this particular one, it actually does." It's also an ingenious marketing ploy in the competitive world of squatter removal services. Jacobs' company has received a healthy amount of media attention from local and international outlets that never fail to mention his sword in the headline.
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A Beautiful Theory Falls to Ugly Data
For all this theory, there have been almost no direct tests of the Coase Conjecture apart from a handful of lab experiments. Ours is one of the first papers to take the conjecture to the real world. We look at e-books, an unusually clean setting: digital goods are durable, marginal costs are low, resale is limited, and prices can be changed quickly. Using the prices of e-books that are in the public domain as a proxy for marginal cost, we ask: (a) do prices rapidly fall to MC, and (b) does the market clear in the first period? The answer to both is no. E-book prices begin well above MC, sales continue over many periods, and prices don’t even decline monotonically. We reject the Coase Conjecture decisively.
- How many vendors of e-books are there? Is it in any way a "free" market? Or is this a case of carefully choosing the experiment so the "result" can be used for propaganda? ie; "Economics" as normal.
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PayPal's online checkout empire under siege as rivals squeeze its core business
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Uber, Lyft drivers in Massachusetts form first US ride-share union
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It's not just SpaceX: Big Tech is dominating bond markets too
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Bond traders are surrendering to inflation fears. It’s raising the stakes for Washington.
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Walmart shopper found $3 shoes, then paid 6 times the price at checkout
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GDP Is a Flawed Measure of Prosperity. Alternatives Are on the Way
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IT Capex Now Accounts for More Than a Third of S&P 500 Capex Spending
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Left Angst
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Trump admin shutting key US researchers out of global virus response talks
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As Trump Politicizes Justice Dept., Prosecutors Struggle with Grand Juries
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Supreme Court sides with Trump in fight tied to speech curbs on immigration judges
The U.S. Supreme Court sided on Tuesday with President Donald Trump's administration in a dispute involving a free-speech challenge by federal immigration judges to a U.S. government policy restricting what they can publicly say about immigration. The court's ruling did not address the legality of the policy's speech restraint, which was first implemented in 2017 during Trump's first term as president, and appeared to leave the door open for an association representing the judges to continue pursuing their legal challenge in a lower court. The justices faulted the 4th Circuit for basing its ruling on an argument that had not been raised by the National Association of Immigration Judges, violating what is known as the "party-presentation" principle.
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U.S. Seeks to Give Weapons-Grade Plutonium to Startups for Fuel
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Federal judge blocks Alabama redistricting plan
Alabama Republicans sought to use a previously blocked 2023 congressional map following the Supreme Court’s recent ruling curbing the use of race in the drawing of electoral districts that helped minority communities increase their representation in Congress. Under that map, Republicans were slated to gain one electoral seat by erasing a Black-majority seat held by Democrats in the southeastern part of the state. However, the three-judge panel said Republicans must continue to use a map that has two majority-Black districts where Democrats hold significant advantages. "Ultimately, we cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination," the federal judges wrote. "We again cannot understand the 2023 Plan as anything other than intentionally discriminatory."
- Supreme Court be damned, this here is Alabama!
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Trump's 25% cut on Nvidia chips to China backfired as Beijing blocks H200 sales
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Trump DOJ mass-deletes info on Jan. 6 riot cases, incl violent assaults on cops
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Trump Administration to Send Americans Exposed to Ebola to Kenya
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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EU plans to fine Google high triple-digit million euro sum, Handelsblatt reports
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FIFA World Cup turns up gentrification pressures in Mexico City, say experts
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Stockholm poised to become leading European geospatial intel player
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Netherlands blocks US takeover of vital digital supplier
Dutch firm Solvinity runs a platform for the country's DigiD app, which allows the country's citizens to authenticate themselves online when they want to book a doctor's appointment, buy a house or interact with public authorities. In November, U.S.-based Kyndryl announced it would acquire Solvinity, triggering concerns that a key Dutch online identification tool would fall under foreign control. Across Europe, there have been increased concerns about the bloc's reliance on U.S. technology.
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'Incredible' milestone reached as Sweden becomes a smoke-free country
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Ontario man dies of MAID after being assessed outside Tim Hortons
A London, Ont., doctor who assessed a patient with inflammatory bowel disease and a history of mental health issues for MAID outside a Tim Hortons location and later personally drove the man to the place his life was ended has agreed to a minimum six months’ supervision. In another case, Dr. James MacLean failed to administer one of three drugs used in assisted deaths — one that paralyzes the body’s muscles, including the muscles involved in breathing. The patient resumed spontaneously breathing again after initially being pronounced dead, and after MacLean had already left the home.
In addition to agreeing to mandatory clinical supervision for at least six months as part of an “undertaking” with the college, MacLean will undergo ongoing review of his MAID patient charts and mandatory professional education related to MAID, consent, documentation, professional boundaries and professional behaviour. After six months, he’ll undergo an assessment of his practice, the results of which “may form the basis of further action by the College,” Laura Zilke, a CPSO spokesperson said in an email to National Post.
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Social media as bad for children as smoking, British doctors say
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Germany's regulator considers rule requiring platforms to boost "trusted" media
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Starlink and Amazon may be able to buy into EU mobile satellite spectrum plan
Iran / Houthi
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
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Ultrasound aimed at the brain offers new hope for Parkinson's patients
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Is "colorectal cancer" rising in "young people"?
if you are currently young, you face higher CRC risk than previous generations did when they were young. That’s the bad news. The other bad news is that when you are old, you may also face higher CRC risk than previous generations did when they were old.
