Author: admin

  • Valve wants Half-Life: Alyx to work well standalone on Steam Frame

    Valve wants Half-Life: Alyx to work well standalone on Steam Frame

    When I tried Half-Life: Alyx streaming from a PC to Valve’s new Steam Frame VR headset, I was blown away; thanks to the Frame’s dedicated wireless adapter and a cool trick Valve calls “foveated streaming,” I didn’t detect any latency as…

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  • Building a clean-energy future, brick by brick

    Building a clean-energy future, brick by brick

    Chemistry Professor Julio D’Arcy leads a student research team to develop state-of-the-art technology aimed at improving human lives

    A house constructed from red “smart bricks” charged to provide electricity. A hospital operating room…

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  • Atomic insights could boost chemical manufacturing efficiency

    Atomic insights could boost chemical manufacturing efficiency

    URochester researchers develop algorithms that reveal how propane becomes propylene for everyday products.

    Countless everyday products from plastic squeeze bottles to outdoor furniture are derived by first turning propane into propylene. A 2021 study in Science demonstrated chemists could use tandem nanoscale catalysts to integrate multiple steps of the process into a single reaction—a way for companies to increase yield and save money. But it was unclear what was happening at the atomic level, making it difficult to apply the technique to other key industrial processes.

    Researchers at the University of Rochester developed algorithms that show the key atomic features driving the complex chemistry when the nanoscale catalysts turn propane into propylene. In a study published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, they discuss these intricate reactions that are complicated by materials in multiple states.

    “There are so many different possibilities of what’s happening at the catalytic active sites, so we need an algorithmic approach to very easily yet logically screen through the large amount of possibilities that exist and focus on the most important ones,” says Siddharth Deshpande, an assistant professor in the Department of Chemical and Sustainability Engineering. “We refined our algorithms and used them to do a very detailed analysis of the metallic phase and oxide phase driving this very complex reaction.”

    Desphande and his chemical engineering PhD student Snehitha Srirangam found several surprises in their analysis. The oxide in the chemical reaction preferred growing around defective metal sites very selectively, which proved critical for the stability of the catalyst. And even though the oxide can exist under different chemical compositions, it never really left its function of being around the defective metal sites.

    According to Deshpande, researchers can leverage this knowledge and the team’s algorithmic approaches to understand the atomic structure of other chemical reactions such as methanol synthesis used for products ranging from paints to fuel cells. Eventually, he believes this could help companies strategically seek more efficient ways to produce propylene and other industrial materials and rely less on the trial-and-error methods they have used for decades.

    “Our approach is very general and can open the doors to understand many of these processes that have remained an enigma for decades,” says Deshpande. “We know these processes work, and we produce tons of these chemicals, but we have much to learn about why exactly they’re working.”

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  • This useful MacOS 26.2 feature turns your laptop screen into a ring light – how to try it

    This useful MacOS 26.2 feature turns your laptop screen into a ring light – how to try it

    Kerry Wan/ZDNET

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    ZDNET’s key takeaways

    • Apple’s second MacOS 26.2 developer beta is now available.
    • Edge Light is a beta feature that turns your display into a ring light.
    • Developer betas can be…

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  • A recent breakout points to a ‘stealth bull market’ in this exchange stock, according to the charts

    A recent breakout points to a ‘stealth bull market’ in this exchange stock, according to the charts

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  • Images Beamed from Space Celebrate 25 Years of Ham Radio on the ISS

    Images Beamed from Space Celebrate 25 Years of Ham Radio on the ISS

    11/13/2025

    Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) will mark two major milestones this month with a special Slow Scan Television (SSTV) event aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Beginning November 12 through…

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  • Nicki Minaj dropped by longtime lawyer amid lawsuit from ex-fan Tameer Peak

    Nicki Minaj dropped by longtime lawyer amid lawsuit from ex-fan Tameer Peak

    Nicki Minaj loses longtime lawyer Judd Burstein amid ongoing defamation lawsuit filed by former fan Tameer Peak

    Nicki Minaj is facing another legal…

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  • One of world’s last dinosaurs goes on sale for $4 million – UNILAD

    1. One of world’s last dinosaurs goes on sale for $4 million  UNILAD
    2. One of world’s last dinosaurs on sale for £3m  The Telegraph
    3. Extremely rare dinosaur to sell for up to $6.5M  Dagens.com
    4. Spike, the ‘American’ dinosaur that stars in a…

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  • Game Preview: Warriors at San Antonio Spurs (NBA Cup) – 11/14/25 – NBA

    Game Preview: Warriors at San Antonio Spurs (NBA Cup) – 11/14/25 – NBA

    1. Game Preview: Warriors at San Antonio Spurs (NBA Cup) – 11/14/25  NBA
    2. NBA: San Antonio Spurs 120-125 Golden State Warriors: Stephen Curry outshines Victor Wembanyama  BBC
    3. Ayesha Curry drops four-word flirty message for shirtless Stephen Curry after…

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  • Machine learning teaches membranes to sort by chemical affinity

    Machine learning teaches membranes to sort by chemical affinity

    Ultrafiltration membranes used in pharmaceutical manufacturing and other industrial processes have long relied on separating molecules by size. Now, Cornell researchers have created porous materials that filter molecules by their chemical…

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