Author: admin

  • Quantum Brushes Advance Digital Art With Molecular-Inspired Color Evolution Techniques

    Quantum Brushes Advance Digital Art With Molecular-Inspired Color Evolution Techniques

    Computational art receives a boost from a new approach to image manipulation, as Jui-Ting Lu, Henrique Ennes, and Chih-Kang Huang, alongside Ali Abbassi and colleagues, demonstrate with their development of ‘Variational Quantum Brushes’….

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  • Rupee Ends Week With Win Streak Against Dollar Intact

    Rupee Ends Week With Win Streak Against Dollar Intact

    The Pakistani rupee (PKR) closed in green against the US Dollar (USD) for the 76th consecutive day on Friday.

    Meanwhile, it posted gains against all of the other major currencies during today’s session.

    The PKR closed at 280.02 after gaining two paisas against the US Dollar today.

    Other Currencies

    The PKR was green against all of the other major currencies in the interbank market today.

    It again ended on a positive note against both the UAE Dirham (AED) and gained one paisa against the Saudi Riyal (SAR).

    Currency 07-Jan

    2026

    08-Jan

    2026

    09-Jan

    2026

    Change

    +/

    USD 280.0621 280.0518 280.0235 0.0283
    EUR 327.1686 327.0165 326.1434 0.8731
    GBP 377.8038 376.5017 376.0716 0.4301
    AUD 188.7199 187.6907 187.0837 0.6070
    MYR 69.0149 68.9189 68.7934 0.1255
    CNY 40.0650 40.1094 40.1053 0.0041
    CAD 202.5839 201.8755 201.8042 0.0713
    AED 76.2489 76.2461 76.2384 0.0077
    SAR 74.6783 74.6805 74.6709 0.0096

    It gained 43 paisas against GBP and 60 paisas against the Australian Dollar.


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  • Australian scientists uncover key cell growth control mechanism-Xinhua

    MELBOURNE, Jan. 9 (Xinhua) — Researchers in Australia have solved a long-standing mystery in cell biology, revealing how cells decide when to grow and when to stop.

    This marks a breakthrough that could open new paths in treating cancers,…

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  • Impact of emphysema on the therapeutic efficacy and risk of immune-rel

    Impact of emphysema on the therapeutic efficacy and risk of immune-rel

    Introduction

    Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is one of the most prevalent and deadly malignancies worldwide.1 In recent years, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), such as programmed death-1 (PD-1) and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1)…

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  • Rugby at 30: Taking the leap of faith as an adult

    Rugby at 30: Taking the leap of faith as an adult

    Heading up the social media channels is Tayo’s girlfriend who, having been part of his journey, is considering joining a local team for the first time. 

    The aim is not to get views or followers, but to track his progress and see how far he…

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  • How world’s most powerful quantum chip outpaces fastest supercomputers

    How world’s most powerful quantum chip outpaces fastest supercomputers

    Even as the world focuses on the surge of artificial intelligence (AI) applications, a much more important race is being fought across continents – to build utility-scale quantum computers.

    Much akin to the race to build nuclear weapons or…

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  • World’s vast plant knowledge not being fully exploited to tackle biodiversity and climate challenges, warn researchers

    World’s vast plant knowledge not being fully exploited to tackle biodiversity and climate challenges, warn researchers

    In a new report published today in the journal Nature Plants, researchers based at more than 50 botanic gardens and living plant collections warn that a patchwork of incompatible, or even absent, data systems is undermining global science and conservation at a critical moment.

    They call for a unified and equitable global data system for living collections to transform how the world’s botanic gardens manage and share information. This would enable them to work together as a ‘meta-collection’ to strengthen scientific research and conservation efforts.

    Climate change, invasive species, habitat loss and increased global movement of plant material all require rapid access to high-quality, trusted information about living plants. Achieving this depends on a shared culture of open, accurate, and affordable data – allowing living collections of all sizes, particularly in the Global South where much of the world’s biodiversity is located, to participate on equal terms.

    Curator of Cambridge University Botanic Garden Professor Samuel Brockington, who led the work together with researchers at Botanic Gardens Conservation International, said: “The digital infrastructure needed to manage, share, and safeguard living plant diversity wasn’t designed to operate at a global scale.”

    He added: “We’ve built an extraordinary global network of living plant collections, but we’re trying to run twenty-first-century conservation with data systems that are fragmented, fragile, and in many cases inaccessible to scientists and conservationists working where most biodiversity originates. We urgently need a shared data system so the people managing collections can work together as a coordinated whole.”

    Thaís Hidalgo de Almeida, Curator of Living Collections, Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro and a co-author of the report, said: “Having an integrated and equitable global data ecosystem would greatly help us address urgent conservation needs in biodiversity-rich countries like Brazil, making our work faster, more collaborative, and more effective.”

    Scientific research in many areas depends on accurate, well-documented living plant material.  As climate change accelerates extinction risk, living plant collections are increasingly used to support species and ecosystem restoration, and climate-adapted urban planting.

    Yet many collections remain undigitised, and those that are often rely on incompatible systems shaped by institutional or commercial priorities rather than shared standards. As a result, vital information on threatened species, climate resilience, provenance, and legal status cannot be shared efficiently between institutions or across borders.

    “In healthcare, fragmented and proprietary data systems are recognised as a serious risk and the focus of major public investment,” said Brockington. “In plant conservation, we face the same problem, but without treating the data as critical public infrastructure.”

    At least 105,634 plant species – representing around one third of all plant species in the world – are grown in the world’s 3,500 botanic gardens. As much as 40% of the world’s plant diversity is at elevated risk of extinction and these living collections form a critical safety net against that.

    Organisations like Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI) have already established the foundations of a better data system but the researchers say coordinated, considered investment is now needed to create a long-lasting and trusted resource.

    Paul Smith, Secretary-General, BGCI and a co-author of the report, said: “In an era of accelerating biodiversity loss, harnessing the full conservation potential of living collections requires a step-change in how collections data are documented, standardised and connected through a global data ecosystem. This publication, supported by more than fifty gardens worldwide sets the stage for achieving that transformation.”

    Last year, Brockington announced his previous report showing how living collections metadata could be used to give global insights into the acquisition and conservation of the world’s plant diversity.

    References:

    Brockington, S.F. et al: ‘High-performance living plant collections require a globally integrated data ecosystem to meet twenty-first-century challenges.’ Nature Plants, Jan 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41477-025-02192-6

    Cano, A. et al: ‘Insights from a century of data reveal global trends in ex situ living plant collections.’ Nature Ecology and Evolution, Jan 2025. DOI: 10.1038/s41559-024-02633-z

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  • Chen, S. et al. Structural diversity of bacterial flagellar motors. EMBO J. 30, 2972–2981 (2011).

    Article 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar 

  • Kaplan, M. et al. The presence and absence of…

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  • Game over for old consoles as Christmas gift gaming boom sends abandoned total to 49 million

    Game over for old consoles as Christmas gift gaming boom sends abandoned total to 49 million

    • Virgin Media O2 data reveals approximately 49 million gaming consoles are now stashed in cupboards and drawers across the UK – worth a combined total of £4.14 billion.*  
    • The surge follows a Christmas gaming gift boom, with…

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  • “My dog had a facelift and is the happiest she’s ever been”

    “My dog had a facelift and is the happiest she’s ever been”

    At 4 years-old Dakota, a British bulldog, should have been in her prime, but due to overbreeding, her entire nose was covered by a heavy roll of wrinkly skin which left her struggling to breathe, play and exercise. But…

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