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  • Humpback Dolphins in Western Australia are Wearing Sea Sponges as Hats to Impress the Ladies

    Humpback Dolphins in Western Australia are Wearing Sea Sponges as Hats to Impress the Ladies

    “Hey ladies, how do you like my new hat?” Photo: Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions//Instagram


    The Inertia

    You might’ve heard about orcas swimming around with salmon…

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  • Study tests mobile app for schizophrenia care – UW Medicine

    Study tests mobile app for schizophrenia care – UW Medicine

    Patients who used a mental health-focused smartphone app for treatment of schizophrenia experienced modest positive effects in symptoms and recovery measures, according to a new research trial. Findings were published today in Psychiatric…

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  • UCL Scientists Aid NASA Hunt for Earth-like Worlds

    UCL Scientists Aid NASA Hunt for Earth-like Worlds

    UCL researchers are investigating how a UK-led team could design and build one of the core instruments on a flagship NASA mission, the Habitable Worlds Observatory, which will search for signs of life on…

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  • Windows 11’s Snipping Tool just got a Google Lens-like feature – here’s how to use it

    Windows 11’s Snipping Tool just got a Google Lens-like feature – here’s how to use it

    Screenshot by Lance Whitney/ZDNET

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    ZDNET’s key takeaways

    • The Windows 11 Snipping Tool now has a visual search engine.
    • You can learn more about the item you capture via a Bing search.
    • You can…

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  • Goats and Soda : NPR

    Goats and Soda : NPR

    Viruses are tiny — and sneaky.

    So sneaky that some play a deadly game of hide and seek. The “seek” part is all too familiar: They’re always looking for…

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  • Some viruses can play a deadly game of hide and seek

    Some viruses can play a deadly game of hide and seek

    Viruses are tiny — and sneaky.

    So sneaky that some play a deadly game of hide and seek. The “seek” part is all too familiar: They’re always looking for ways to infect humans. Their ability to hide is far…

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  • Your gut microbes might be turning fiber into extra calories

    Your gut microbes might be turning fiber into extra calories

    Deep within your gut lives a bustling world of microbes, each playing a role in digesting your food. Among them is one unusual microbe that produces methane — a gas more often associated with cows and landfills than humans. According to new…

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  • Jon Bon Jovi talks first tour since vocal cord surgery, new album and Bruce Springsteen

    Jon Bon Jovi talks first tour since vocal cord surgery, new album and Bruce Springsteen

    LONDON — Bon Jovi will embark on their first tour in four years in 2026 — and it’s more than just a victory lap.

    In 2022, singer Jon Bon Jovi saw a doctor who said one of his vocal cords was atrophying. He had major surgery and has been in…

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  • MDpanel CEO Jason Erdell ’95 talks AI, adaptability in Cheng Lecture

    MDpanel CEO Jason Erdell ’95 talks AI, adaptability in Cheng Lecture

    At a time when artificial intelligence is transforming industries across the globe, Cornell Engineering alumnus Jason Erdell ’95 returned to campus Oct. 17 to offer students a candid look at how to thrive in a time of rapid technological change.

    Erdell, chairman and CEO of MDpanel, delivered his talk as part of the Mei-Mei Wei and Amy Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series, which brings accomplished alumni back to campus to share their insights on leadership, innovation and the future of engineering.

    Erdell’s path since graduating from Cornell’s School of Operations Research and Information Engineering has taken him through Silicon Valley, management consulting and the private equity world. Today, he leads MDpanel, a company that uses AI, machine learning and data science to transform the delivery of medical opinions for insurers and healthcare organizations.

    “Cornell taught me rigor,” he said. “It may not feel like it at the time, but that grit, that ability to struggle through a hard problem, is one of the greatest advantages you’ll carry forward.”

    Before MDpanel, Erdell served as CEO of Aspirion, where he led similar AI-driven innovations in reimbursement services for major health systems. Across three decades of experience at the intersection of health care, technology and finance, he has focused on modernizing a system he calls “one of the most inefficient and complicated in the world.”

    Erdell began his talk by reflecting on the extraordinary pace of AI development and the implications for productivity and work. “If you look at what’s happening right now,” he said, “the level of productivity increase that AI is driving is astronomical. The prosperity that’s going to come from it is immense.”

    Jason Erdell ’95 organized his talk around what he called his three “bubbles” of growth: comfort, competency and innovation, with each representing a key to career success in an AI-driven world.

     

    Comparing the current AI boom to the dawn of the internet, he argued that the stakes are even higher today. “When I was leaving Cornell, the web was just emerging. That was a huge wave of innovation, but this one is far bigger.”

    Still, Erdell urged caution and reflection. AI, he said, may ultimately force society to rethink the very concept of work.

    “There could come a point where the idea of a traditional job doesn’t exist anymore,” he said. “So what differentiates us as humans? Adaptability, creativity and continuous learning.”

    Erdell organized his talk around what he called his three “bubbles” of growth: comfort, competency and innovation, with each representing a key to career success in an AI-driven world.

    Expanding your comfort bubble

    Erdell encouraged students to “embrace the struggle,” citing his own decision to leave consulting for an unexpected role at Gap, Inc.

    “I knew nothing about fashion,” he admitted. “But I learned how to influence and/ or lead creative people and make decisions driven by empathy, not just logic.”

    Expanding your competency bubble

    In a world where entire professions can vanish overnight – “cartographers, for example,” Erdell said – breadth of skill is insurance against obsolescence.

    “Don’t just go deep, go wide,” he advised. “The more competencies you have, the more adaptable you’ll be when the world shifts.”

    Finding innovation bubbles below the surface

    Rather than chasing the biggest, most obvious markets, Erdell argued that innovators can often find success by applying proven ideas in overlooked sectors.

    “You don’t have to invent the next AI chip,” he said. “You can take what’s already working and apply it where others aren’t looking. For me, that’s health care administration, an industry that’s lagging, but full of opportunity.”

    Throughout the lecture, Erdell emphasized the importance of lifelong learning and resilience.

    “My life has been a beautiful collection of failures,” he said. “It’s through failure and discomfort that you grow.”

    He urged students to take advantage of Cornell’s breadth, including its liberal arts courses, business law electives and cross-disciplinary environment, as a way to build flexibility of thought.

    “You’re building yourself as an asset,” he said. “Don’t stop learning after you leave here.”

    As a final takeaway, Erdell shared one of his company’s guiding principles – borrowed, he said, from the Mayo Clinic: “Think big, start small, move fast.”
    “Focus on solving big problems,” he explained, “but start with the smallest viable step. Get your idea into the world, see how it behaves and iterate quickly.”

    The talk ended with a Q&A that ranged from generative AI applications to the ethical use of technology. Erdell’s message to students was both pragmatic and optimistic: “AI will change everything,” he said. “But the people who succeed will be those who stay curious, keep learning and aren’t afraid to adapt.”

    The Mei-Mei Wei and Amy Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series celebrates Cornell Engineering alumni whose work exemplifies leadership, innovation and impact across diverse industries.

    Chris Dawson is a communications coordinator for Cornell Engineering.

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  • Epomaker’s surprisingly great P75 keyboard is on sale for just $79.99

    Epomaker’s surprisingly great P75 keyboard is on sale for just $79.99

    When the Epomaker P75 launched last year, it impressed us with its build quality and laundry list of features, especially for a board that retails for less than $100. And while the mechanical keyboard has since been discontinued, it remains an…

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