If Swiatek had not already proved she should be ranked among the greats of the game, she has certainly done so now.
Mastering a surface considered her weakest – even though she won the Wimbledon junior title in 2018 – has added further credence to her case.
Swiatek has become the youngest woman since 23-time champion Serena Williams in 2002 to win Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces.
A sixth major takes her clear of Maria Sharapova and Martina Hingis, with only a total of 10 women now having won more in the Open era.
Swiatek became known as the ‘Queen of Clay’ after winning four French Open titles in five years, while her two-year reign as the world number one – ended by Aryna Sabalenka last year – was underpinned by consistent success on the hard courts.
Grass was the surface she had not cracked.
Before this triumph, Swiatek had made the second week at the All England Club only once, when she reached the quarter-finals in 2023.
Losing in this year’s Roland Garros semi-finals – early by her previous standards – meant she had longer to prepare on the surface, helping her quickly readjust improve her confidence and game.
Anisimova’s struggles meant she was not fully tested. Nevertheless, the weight and depth of Swiatek’s ball provided constant pressure which her opponent could not deal with.
He kicked off his season with a win at the Potch Invitational in South Africa before finishing second at the Doha Diamond League, where he breached the coveted 90m barrier with a massive 90.23m throw – a new national record.
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic gold medallist had to settle for a second-place finish again at the Janusz Kusocinski Memorial in Poland, but returned to winning ways at the Paris Diamond League.
Since then, he has logged back-to-back wins at the Ostrova Golden Spike in Czechia and the NC Classic in India.
Arshad Nadeem, meanwhile, recently marked a triumphant return to action by winning the gold medal at the Asian Athletics Championships in Gumi, the Republic of Korea.
The Pakistani hadn’t competed since his Paris 2024 exploits.
Neeraj had skipped the Gumi meet, averting a showdown between the two rivals in South Korea. Nadeem, in turn, had turned down Neeraj’s invite to the NC Classic.
The face-off in Silesia builds up to the impending clash between the two at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, Japan, this September.
Neeraj, who trains under Czech javelin legend and world record holder Jan Zelezny, is the reigning world champion, having claimed gold at Budapest 2023. Nadeem had to settle for silver.
Iga Swiatek is now a Wimbledon champion. The former World No. 1 stormed to her sixth career Grand Slam singles title — and a first at the All England Club — with a 6-0, 6-0 defeat of American Amanda Anisimova in Saturday’s final — making her a Grand Slam champion on all surfaces.
Wimbledon: Scores | Order of play | Draws
In a commanding 57 minutes — and just the second 6-0, 6-0 Grand Slam singles final in the Open Era — Swiatek swept to her first title since she lifted a fourth Roland Garros trophy last spring, and improved her record to 6-0 in major finals.
In addition to making her the first Wimbledon singles champion from Poland in the Open Era, the victory also marks Swiatek’s 100th career Grand Slam match win. She now is 100-20 in Grand Slam main draws since her Grand Slam main-draw debut in 2019.
Swiatek stamped her authority on the match with the first 6-0 opening set in a women’s singles final at Wimbledon since 1983 — when Martina Navrratilova defeated Andrea Jaeger 6-0, 6-3. Prior to that, the 1973-75 finals all saw 6-0 first sets — including Billie Jean King’s 6-0, 7-5 win over a then-18-year-old Chris Evert in 1973.
“I was in a fog,” recalled Evert of the early stages of that final while commentating for ESPN.
Anisimova found stronger strokes in the early stages of the second set — including a 90-mph forehand winner to pull to 30-30 with Swiatek serving 6-0, 1-0. But it did not translate to the scoreboard, and Swiatek joined Stefanie Graf in an exclusive club of players to win a major final without losing a game. Graf defeated Natasha Zvereva by the same score in the final of Roland Garros in 1988.
Despite the ending, Anisimova’s effort at SW19 was overall a career-changing one: She scored her first-ever win over a World No. 1 against Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals, and will crack the Top 10 for the first time in her career on Monday.
Astronomers have found evidence that Earth, Milky Way are trapped in ‘giant void’
Just imagine being trapped in a void—an endless, silent expanse where time seems frozen and direction has no meaning.
No sound, no light, no gravity to anchor you. It’s a place where the laws of nature unravel, where you are suspended in a vast nothingness that stretches beyond comprehension.
Such a picture seems scary. Interestingly, not a single soul but the whole universe is trapped in a void. Researchers have found evidence that our Earth and Milky Way galaxy are suspended in a cosmic void based on the echoes from the Big Bang.
According to research presented at the Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting on Wednesday, July 9, suggest that the Milky Way galaxy is floating in a 2 billion-light-year region of space with 20% less density than its surroundings. The theory is developed based on the sounds from the Bing Band, known as “baryon acoustic oscillation.”
This theory suggests that the local expansion rate of the universe could be faster due to this void. If proven true, this can help our astronomers to find the true age of the universe and solve the enigma of “Hubble Tension.”
What is the Hubble Trouble?
Hubble Tension suggests how fast our universe is growing at different rates. Currently, there are two standard methods to figure out the expansion rate, called Hubble Constant. The first method involves using the cosmic microwave background (CMB). This method yields a value of around 73 kilometers per second per megaparsec (km/s/Mpc), while the second lands closer to 67 km/s/Mpc, closely matched to predictions made by the standard model of cosmology.
The second method includes measuring the distance pulsating stars called Cepheid variables, giving 73.2 km/s/Mpc value for the Hubble Constant.
The difference between these two values suggests the potential error with our cosmological model.
Living in a ‘Giant Void’
“A potential solution to this inconsistency is that our galaxy is close to the centre of a large, local void,” explained Dr. Indranil Banik of the University of Portsmouth.
The region around the void would possess higher density, leading to gravitational pull that would cause the matter to be pulled towards the higher density exterior of the void. The void will become emptier with time.
That evacuation would trigger local expansion at a faster rate, Banik predicted.
This void theory supplements the idea that Earth would have to sit about in the centre of low-density “Hubble Bubble.”
After putting forth evidence, Banik and his team will not only compare their void model to other cosmological models to reconstruct the universe’s expansion theory but also try to resolve Hubble tension.
In a world where we reroute rivers, bottle oceans, and build barriers taller than cathedrals, it’s easy to forget what all that effort might be doing to the planet beneath our feet, until now. A new study reveals that over the past two centuries, humans have moved Earth’s geographic poles. Yes, you read that right.
By trapping trillions of gallons of water behind nearly 7,000 dams since 1835, enough to fill the Grand Canyon twice, humans have redistributed the planet’s mass enough to cause a phenomenon known as true polar wander. The result? The North Pole has tiptoed roughly one meter off course, its slow dance recorded in rock, water, and the planet’s rotational axis.
Earth’s crust floats atop molten rock like frosting on a warm cake. Move weight around, like ice sheets shrinking or water shifting, and the crust repositions itself. Think of sticking clay to a spinning basketball: the ball changes direction slightly to keep spinning smoothly. That’s what happens on Earth when we build enormous dams.
The study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, shows the shift happened in two phases:
1835–1954: Dams in North America and Europe nudged the pole toward Russia and China.
1954–2011: Dams in Asia and East Africa steered it back toward North America and the South Pacific.
On top of the drift, trapping all that water behind concrete walls caused a global sea level drop of 21 millimeters, a quarter of the expected rise in the 20th century.
Lead author Natasha Valencic from Harvard points out that while the pole’s movement won’t trigger an ice age, it does influence sea level geometry; where and how fast oceans rise isn’t uniform, and dam placement could skew future projections. If major ice sheets melt due to climate change, the effects could compound.
“We’re not going to drop into a new ice age,” Valencic says. “But the way water moves—or doesn’t—can reshape our planet in ways we’re only beginning to grasp.”
From engineering triumph to planetary choreography, dam-building may be the most surprising way humans have left their mark, not just on the land, but on Earth’s cosmic spin.
Journal Reference:
N. Valencic, E. Speiser, E. Doi, E. T. Lee, B. Ford, A. Hatzius, D. Komaravalli, B. Erdmann, W. Hawley, J. X. Mitrovica. True Polar Wander Driven by Artificial Water Impoundment: 1835–2011. Geophysical Research Letters. DOI: 10.1029/2025GL115468
Developers designed TumorSight Viz to employ 3D spatial visualization and automatic segmentation to display tumor shape, size, morphology, and location.
The FDA has granted 510(k) clearance to TumorSight™ Viz, an artificial intelligence (AI)–based tool, to convert standard breast MRI into 3D visualizations in breast cancer surgery, according to a press release from the developer, SimBioSys®.1
Version 1.3 of TumorSight Viz expands upon the regulatory agency’s foundation by providing new capabilities that may improve its performance, expand its clinical utility, and simplify its implementation into surgical workflows. According to the developers, the latest version of the platform includes superior AI-driven segmentation that fuels greater confidence in preoperative planning. Additionally, the tool enables same-day results and insights that inspire timely, informed conversations with patients. It also makes use of picture archiving and communication system connectivity to automate image transfer and reduce manual tasks, thereby improving efficacy for staff and physicians.
“TumorSight Viz 1.3 helps eliminate guesswork in the [operating room]. This latest version brings a new level of clarity and control to breast cancer surgery—delivering the anatomical insight and intuitive design surgeons have long needed,” Barry Rosen, MD, FACS, a breast surgical oncologist and chief medical officer at SimBioSys, stated in the press release.1 “It empowers us to make more informed decisions about margins, incisions, and reconstruction, and just as importantly, it helps patients visualize their care in a way that fosters trust, understanding, and confidence in the path forward.”
Developers designed TumorSight Viz to employ 3D spatial visualization and automatic segmentation to display tumor shape, size, morphology, and location.2 Additionally, the platform may provide reliable volume calculations to influence pre-surgical decision-making, helping clinicians decide on employing different breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy options. Tumor-to-landmark assessments also assist with planning optimal surgical outcomes during breast-conserving procedures.
The platform makes use of individual patient standard-of-care medical imaging and diagnostic data as inputs. Leveraging trained AI, the tool then automatically identifies tumor tissue to create a 3D model of the tumor and surrounding tissue to determine breast and tumor volume as well as distances to nearby anatomical features.
Based on an internal survey, 70% of surgeons rated TumorSight Viz as valuable or very valuable overall. Survey responses noted enhanced value in specific cases like multi-focal and multi-centric tumors, ductal carcinoma in situ, larger tumors, and disease near the skin or nipple.
“This latest clearance represents a pivotal step forward in our mission to bring greater precision and progress in the fight against breast cancer. As the leading cancer diagnosed in women worldwide, breast cancer presents a complex and urgent challenge—demanding tools that enhance surgical clarity and enable more individualized care,” Stacey Stevens, president and chief executive officer of SimBioSys, stated.1 “TumorSight Viz 1.3 delivers a new level of intelligence and insight, helping surgeons see what’s possible with greater confidence and enabling care that’s truly aligned with each patient’s unique anatomy and goals.”
The press release noted that studies assessing TumorSight Viz have demonstrated strong concordance with radiologist annotations, accurate delineation of tumor size relative to the breast, and consistent results in more than 1600 retrospective cases across more than 9 institutions. Findings exhibiting the software platform’s performance in precision surgery for patients with breast cancer were previously published in NPJ Breast Cancer.3
In a validation set including 98 patients and 100 surgical cases, study investigators noted that results support the “relevance of TumorSight Viz generated measurements compared to real-world surgical implementation.”3 The authors wrote that the platform would continue to undergo updates and expansions as development proceeds for additional indications and organ systems.
References
SimBioSys secures third FDA clearance for TumorSight™ Viz, advancing AI-powered precision surgery in breast cancer care. News release. SimBioSys. July 9, 2025. Accessed July 11, 2025. https://tinyurl.com/4bur9cwy
TumorSight Viz. SimBioSys. Accessed July 11, 2025. https://tinyurl.com/2scmdvfa
Weitz M, Pfeiffer JR, Patel S, et al. NPJ Breast Cancer. 2024;10(1):98. doi:10.1038/s41523-024-00696-6.
After coming to the web and iOS, the Gemini app is beginning to roll out chat search on Android.
Upon opening the navigation drawer, some users are seeing a “Search for chats” field at the top. Tapping takes you to a straightforward fullscreen interface. Search came to gemini.google.com in May, and iOS in recent weeks. As an Android user, I’ve just been using the PWA (which just picked up the new icon) as a workaround.
Search in the Gemini Android app is not widely rolled out. Similarly, the hamburger button/nav drawer is still seeing limited availability and not yet in the stable channel (or the iOS app). The four-color glow for the Gemini overlay is not widely rolled out either, while the old set of logos is still live in a few places.
Google app 16.26 widely rolled out to the stable channel yesterday, with a server-side update bringing the updated blue “Hello” greeting, which is now live across all platforms, and four-color “thinking” ring.
More on Gemini:
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Durham University scientists examining radar images of the ice sheet above the east coast of Antarctica have discovered an 80-million-year-old ancient landscape hidden beneath the ice that is filled with mysterious flat surfaces. The scientists suggested this hidden array of flat surfaces was preserved by the ice sheet rather than eroded over the millions of years since.
The research team also found evidence that the ancient landscape of flat surfaces is directly affecting the flow of melting ice on the continent. They suggest understanding this relationship and how rising global temperatures may influence it could improve efforts to predict and prepare for the consequences of melting Antarctic ice and rising sea levels.
‘Fragments of Evidence’ Hinted at Ancient Landscape Beneath Antarctica
According to a statement announcing the discovery of an ancient landscape hidden beneath the ice of Eastern Antarctica, the entire continent originally separated from Australia around 80 million years ago. Around 34 million years ago, the once-green land mass became completely covered in ice. This ice sheet, combined with Antarctica’s extreme cold and remote location, has made studying the hidden ancient landscape underneath challenging.
Configuration of East Antarctica, Australia, and India prior to continental break-up. Red outlines show the flat surfaces mapped in this study. Credit: Guy Paxman.
Dr. Guy Paxman, a Royal Society University Research Fellow in the Department of Geography, Durham University and the lead author of the published study detailing the team’s discovery said this 80-million-year-old ancient landscape is so inaccessible, it is among the most mysterious “not just on Earth, but on any terrestrial planet in the solar system.”
Research co-author Professor Neil Ross, a Professor of Polar Science and Environmental Geophysics at Newcastle University, agreed. Still, the professor also noted that scientists have “long been intrigued and puzzled about fragments of evidence,” hinting at the presence of ‘flat’ landscapes hidden beneath the ice sheet covering this area.
Motivated to learn more, the researchers joined forces with researchers from Exeter University, UK, the British Antarctic Survey, the Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany, the Polar Research Institute of China, and Beijing University of Technology. Together, the team used detailed radar imagery of the 3,500-kilometer-long coastline between Princess Elizabeth Land and George V Land to essentially ‘peer through’ millions of years of ice to image the landscape below.
The mysterious topography beneath the Antarctic Ice Sheet (graphics available via the open-access s-ink.org repository).
Paxman says the mysterious flat surfaces, which were found beneath roughly 40% of the examined area, immediately stood out from the rest of the hidden coastline.
“When we were examining the radar images of the sub-ice topography in this region, these remarkably flat surfaces started to pop out almost everywhere we looked,” the Durham University scientist recalled.
The research team suspects the flat surfaces likely formed over 80 million years ago during the separation from Australia and were ultimately preserved in almost pristine condition by the ice sheet. Dr. Paxman said the fact that the features managed to survive seemingly intact for the past 34 million years indicates that at least some parts of the ice sheet have “preserved rather than eroded” the landscape beneath. The team believes that preservation may hint at a “lack of intense, selective erosion” of these identified areas throughout Antarctica’s glacial history.
Deep Troughs and Melting Ice
Perhaps the group’s most significant finding was the possible relationship between the newly discovered flat surfaces and the movement of the ice sheet on top of them. For example, the imaging revealed that the ice above the flat surfaces moved significantly slower than the ice above other sections of the nearby ancient landscape.
The team also found that the flat surfaces were separated by “deep troughs” where ice moved significantly faster. They believe the flat surfaces may be steering these fast-moving glaciers into the troughs. Professor Ross explained that by bringing these “jigsaw pieces of data together,” his team was able to reveal “how these ancient surfaces formed, their role in determining the present-day flow of the ice, and their possible influence on how the East Antarctic Ice Sheet will evolve in a warming world.”
The Windmill Islands are small nunataks protruding above the surface of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Credit: David Small.
The team said it is possible the flat surfaces of this ancient landscape could be acting as “barriers to ice flow.” Because rising temperatures are causing Antarctica to lose ice at an increasing rate, the team said that understanding this potential regulation of Antarctic ice loss rate could be critical to climate prediction models, primarily since an entirely ice-free continent where all the surface ice has melted could raise global sea levels by 52 meters.
“Information such as the shape and geology of the newly mapped surfaces will help improve our understanding of how ice flows at the edge of East Antarctica.” Dr. Paxman said. “This, in turn, will help make it easier to predict how the East Antarctic Ice Sheet could affect sea levels under different levels of climate warming in the future.”
Bunger Hills, a small exposed fragment of a larger flat surface at the edge of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Credit: David Small.
The team suggests that future efforts to better understand this hidden ancient landscape could include going to Antarctica and drilling through the ice sheet to retrieve samples of the mysterious surfaces. Combining this data with the team’s findings on ice flow would help improve the computer models used to predict the future effects of rising global temperatures and aid efforts to prepare for those effects.
Christopher Plain is a Science Fiction and Fantasy novelist and Head Science Writer at The Debrief. Follow and connect with him on X, learn about his books at plainfiction.com, or email him directly at christopher@thedebrief.org.
Movie cars tend to go one of two ways at auction. They either go unnoticed and sell for what they’re worth (or less) as some regular, everyday car, because no one liked the movie or they were simply peripheral to the plot. The shabby $2300 Chevy Impala driven by Kate Bosworth in the 2002 film Blue Crush is a prime example. Or, as we witnessed this week at Bonhams’ Goodwood Festival of Speed auction, movie cars go BIG.
The dust from that auction is still settling, but when the hammer fell on the 1992 Mazda RX-7 Veilside Fortune Coupe from 2006’s The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, the all-in £911,000 ($1,229,434) sale price became a record for RX-7s, for Mazda road cars, and for F&F movie cars.
BonhamsBonhams
This RX-7, like all cars from that never-ending movie franchise, was heavily modified. Universal Studios commissioned Japanese body-kit supplier Veilside Co. Ltd. to turn the sumptuous FD-generation Mazda into something nearly unrecognizable, adding almost 8 inches in width and altering every body panel save the roof. It’s enough to get the side-eye from someone cruising Miami Beach in a Koenig Specials 911.
On screen, it was driven by Sung Kang’s character Han, a retired drifter, and was used primarily for static and stunt scenes, but not drifting, and is one of two such RX-7s that remain from the film. The odometer shows nearly 67,000 miles, though a full rebuild to stock specs of the 280-hp twin-turbo rotary engine took place 5000 miles ago. The Bonhams catalog entry states: “Spared the abuse often dished out to high-profile movie cars, this RX-7 has been preserved in outstanding condition, both inside and out, and is well documented.”
BonhamsBonhamsBonhams
Hagerty has tracked seven sales from the F&F movie franchise over the years, including that of the wild green Mitsubishi Eclipse driven by the late Paul Walker in the first film, which sold for $170,500 at Mecum Kissimmee in 2022, as well as the previous top seller, the 1994 Toyota Supra from movies one and two, which sold at Barrett-Jackson Las Vegas in 2021 for the then-eye-watering sum of $550,000. That this RX-7 result doubles the Supra price speaks not just to the ongoing cultural appeal of the popular franchise (despite Tokyo Drift ranking 9th of the 11 films, according to Rotten Tomatoes) but to the determination of two resolute bidders.
Bonhams set a presale estimate of £250K–£350K ($338K–$473K) on the car, and it drew no shortage of attention ahead of the sale. Our UK valuation analyst, Richard Salmons, reports the car absolutely stood out in the sale room—a room that included a Mercedes-AMG ONE, a Bugatti Veyron, a Jag XJ 220, and the wildest Morgan 4/4 on the planet. Once it shot past the high estimate, bidding went back and forth, eventually bouncing along in £10,000 increments between the final two bidders until the hammer fell.
Bonhams
The result is more than a million bucks higher than the previous $107,500 record high sale we saw for a standard FD RX-7 back in 2023. And it’s almost a million bucks higher than the previous record for a Mazda road car, a $264K Cosmo sold by Gooding 11 years ago (a 1989 767B endurance racer holds the title of most expensive Mazda overall, at $1.75M, back in 2017). And as movie cars go, it’s certainly up there, though still a far cry from the $3.74M Mecum got for the 1968 Mustang featured in Bullitt.
Of all the cars to appear in the movies of the Fast & Furious franchise, this Veilside RX-7 is arguably the most memorable, so it’s difficult to imagine something else eclipsing this result. That said, with R34 Skyline GT-Rs still on an ever upward trajectory, we may just see Walker’s silver and blue 2 Fast 2 Furious ride shake things up when and if it ever appears for sale.
Shielded from the midday blazing heat and the roar of motor cars in a darkened tent, Future Lab displayed technologies, robotics and virtual realities to excite the imaginations of festival goers in Chichester on Saturday.
Among the displays was a humanoid robot, with moving, re-active facial features powered by ChatGPT responses, creators call it Ameca.
The Ameca robot built by Cornwall based robotics company Engineered Arts on display in Future Lab at the Festival of Speed, Chichester. (PA/Stanley Murphy-Johns)
Major Peake, the first British man to visit the International Space Station, has worked with Future Lab since its first iteration in 2017.
Despite his excitement about the new technologies and possible uses of artificial intelligence (AI), he acknowledged the environmental impact of data centres used to run them.
He told the PA news agency: “There is no limit to how much they can use ChatGPT, they can be streaming cat videos and making avatars and doing what they want with no – no concern of how much energy that is using and how much water is using to cool.
“It’s limitless, and it shouldn’t be. Every single google search is having an impact, and an AI google search is a 30% increase in energy to function than a standard Google search and you don’t even get the choice now.”
Tech companies have hugely increased their water consumption needs for cooling data centres in recent years, according to The Times, writing one 100 word email using the (GP-4) version of the chatbot is equivalent to a 500ml water bottle.
“Maybe that’s what we need next to the google search box – ‘please search responsibly’,” the former astronaut added.
Business Energy UK has estimated that ChatGPT may presently use around 39.98 Million kWh per day — enough to charge eight million phones.
Major Peake was quick to argue that the answers lie in space, using “orbital data centres”, he added that he was working with a company, Axium Space, who were set to launch two nodes later this year.
He explained: “The idea being that by the mid-2030s you have cost-parity between choosing an Orbital data centre vs a cloud server – you know, a database that would be here on earth.
“Because in space you’ve got clean, free limitless energy and you’ve got limitless ability to have thermal rejection into the vacuum of space with no impact on the environment.”
Critics of this approach, such as Dr Domenico Vicinanza – associate professor of intelligent systems and data science at Anglia Ruskin University in the UK, say it may not be that simple.
“Space-based data centres would require not only the data equipment but also the infrastructure to protect, power, and cool them. All of which add up in weight and complexity,” Dr Vicinanza told the BBC.
Asked about space and the environment, Major Peake said: “It might not hold all the answers but it holds many answers and it forms a large percentage of the solution I think.
“In terms of right now, more than 50% of our climate data is coming from space so it’s the finger on the pulse of the planet.”
The displays at Future Lab presented a window into the cutting edge of science, mapping deep space, exploring the depths of the ocean, and the latest AI and robotics.
The CEO of the National Robotarium, Stuart Miller, said the event “helped people understand what’s coming” and added that they wanted to ask how robots and humans can “live in harmony together”.
Ameca, the humanoid robot created by Cornwall-based company Engineered Arts, was the star attraction for many – able to hold and double back to parts of a conversation and answer questions quickly.
Major Peake said: “Her non-verbal responses really surprised me, and then you realise that’s AI’s interpretation of human interaction as well so it’s not just the verbal responses you’re getting, you’re getting the AI response in terms of non-verbal skills.”
Surrounded by cars, in a corner of a field in Chichester, some of the UK’s newest scientific innovations piqued the interest of the crowds, but Major Peake acknowledged there has to be “a balance” in how much AI should do, and considered whether it erodes human curiosity.
“There is absolutely a balance and that’s why it’s important to educate people that AI’s just a tool – a tool for humans to use.” he said.
Later asking: “Does ChatGPT, does AI just make it too easy for us? Does it just give it to us rather than making us work for it? And how much pleasure is there in actually finding something out rather than just reading and learning something?”