- In oxygen-deprived clay: 300,000-year-old wooden tools unearthed in China The Jerusalem Post
- Oldest wooden tools unearthed in East Asia show that ancient humans made planned trips to dig up edible plants Live Science
- 361,000-year-old discovery in China: Oldest wooden tools shake up archaeology Interesting Engineering
- Top Comments: Early Humans Ate Vegetables Daily Kos
- Tools unearthed in China are first evidence of East Asia’s ‘Wood Age’ South China Morning Post
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In oxygen-deprived clay: 300,000-year-old wooden tools unearthed in China – The Jerusalem Post
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Croatian right-wing singer Marko Perkovic and fans perform pro-Nazi salute at massive concert
A hugely popular right-wing Croatian singer and hundreds of thousands of his fans performed a pro-Nazi World War II salute at a massive concert in Zagreb, drawing criticism.
One of Marko Perkovic’s most popular songs, played in the late Saturday concert, starts with the dreaded “For the homeland — Ready!” salute, used by Croatia’s Nazi-era puppet Ustasha regime that ran concentration camps at the time.
Perkovic, whose stage name is Thompson after a U.S.-made machine gun, had previously said both the song and the salute focus on the 1991-95 ethnic war in Croatia, in which he fought using the American firearm, after the country declared independence from the former Yugoslavia. He says his controversial song is “a witness of an era.”
The 1990s conflict erupted when rebel minority Serbs, backed by neighboring Serbia, took up guns, intending to split from Croatia and unite with Serbia.
Thousands attended the concert on Saturday.AP Perkovic’s immense popularity in Croatia reflects prevailing nationalist sentiments in the country 30 years after the war ended.
The WWII Ustasha troops in Croatia brutally killed tens of thousands of Serbs, Jews, Roma and antifascist Croats in a string of concentration camps in the country. Despite documented atrocities, some nationalists still view the Ustasha regime leaders as founders of the independent Croatian state.
Organizers said that half a million people attended Perkovic’s concert in the Croatian capital. Video footage aired by Croatian media showed many fans displaying pro-Nazi salutes earlier in the day.
The salute is punishable by law in Croatia, but courts have ruled Perkovic can use it as part of his song, the Croatian state television HRT said.
Perkovic has been banned from performing in some European cities over frequent pro-Nazi references and displays at his gigs.
Croatia’s Vecernji List daily wrote that the concert’s “supreme organization” has been overshadowed by the use of the salute of a regime that signed off on “mass executions of people.”
Regional N1 television noted that whatever the modern interpretations of the salute may be its roots are “undoubtedly” in the Ustasha regime era.
Religious light art at the Marko Perkovic concert.AP N1 said that while “Germans have made a clear cut” from anything Nazi-related “to prevent crooked interpretations and the return to a dark past … Croatia is nowhere near that in 2025.”
In neighboring Serbia, populist President Aleksandar Vucic criticized Perkovic’s concerts as a display “of support for pro-Nazi values.” Former Serbian liberal leader Boris Tadic said it was a “great shame for Croatia” and “the European Union” because the concert “glorifies the killing of members of one nation, in this case Serbian.”
Croatia joined the EU in 2013.
Croatian police said Perkovic’s concert was the biggest ever in the country and an unseen security challenge, deploying thousands of officers.
No major incidents were reported.
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AI Designs Ocean Gliders Inspired by Sea Creatures to Boost Underwater Research Efficiency
Marine animals like fish and seals have long inspired ocean engineers due to their fluid, energy-efficient movements. Now, researchers are turning to these sea animals to create a new class of underwater gliders that requires very little energy, according to a team led by researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. They used artificial intelligence to design forms that slide through the water with less resistance, making long-term ocean exploration more efficient. These gliders, fabricated via 3D printing, promise better data collection on currents, salt levels, and climate impacts.
AI-Powered 3D Designs Create Energy-Efficient Underwater Gliders Inspired by Marine Life Forms
As per a study published on the arXiv preprint server, the team used machine learning to create and simulate numerous novel 3D glider shapes. By comparing traditional models—like submarines and sharks—with digitally altered versions, their algorithm learnt how different designs behaved at various “angles-of-attack.” A neural network then evaluated the lift-to-drag ratio of each shape, identifying those most likely to glide efficiently through water. These shapes were then fabricated using lightweight materials that minimised energy use.
In tests, two AI-generated prototypes—one shaped like a two-winged plane and the other like a four-finned flatfish—were built and tested both in wind tunnels and underwater. Key hardware was integrated with the gliders, including buoyancy control by a pump and a mass shifter to move the angle during displacements. The new gliders, with better shapes and lift-to-drag ratios, could travel farther on less power than traditional torpedo-shaped types.
The team added that what they are doing not only makes new types of designs possible but also reduces design times and cuts the cost since it doesn’t require physical prototyping. “This high degree of shape diversity hasn’t been investigated before,” Peter Yichen Chen, an MIT postdoc and co-lead author on the project, mentioned. He also noted that their AI pipeline allows testing forms that would be “very taxing” for humans to manually design.
The future plans are to produce slimmer and more manoeuvrable gliders and to improve the AI system with more configurable options. Intelligent bioinspired vehicles like these, the researchers say, will be essential in studying dynamic ocean environments that are changing quickly with the intensifying demands of industrial activity, ultimately offering more flexible and efficient ways for us to explore Earth’s last frontier.
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Hubble Observations Give Forgotten Globular Cluster Its Moment to Shine
Narivetta OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch Tovino Thomas Starrer Political Drama Online?
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Thrilled fans celebrate monster drives at the 18th green.
+++ Saturday at Eichenried ends with a golfing experience of a
different kind +++ Long drivers, including German world champion
Martin Borgmeier, deliver a thrilling show at the 18th green +++ The
“Bryan Bros” take on the long drive challenge +++
Munich. It was long, it was loud, it was spectacular.
On Saturday, right after the third round of the 36th BMW International
Open, the 18th green in front of the main grandstand
transformed into a long drive arena. During the “Launch Control”
event, top-tier long drivers faced off in an adrenaline-charged show
match. Also taking part were content creators Wesley and George Bryan
(USA) as well as Peter Finch (ENG), all highly skilled golfers who
proved their talent.In the so-called celebrity matches, Finch came out on top with a
330-meter drive against Wesley Bryan. The only woman in the field,
long driver Cassandra Meyer (USA), bravely took on George Bryan and
narrowly lost with a drive of 320 meters to his 322.The professional long drive competition was played in a semifinal and
final format. “Long Way” Bobby Ray (USA) surprisingly beat Ryan “The
Canadian Lumberjack” Gregnol in the first semifinal with a 400-meter
drive. German world champion Martin Borgmeier advanced to the final
with a 405-meter blast against Sam Judah (USA). And the best was saved
for last: Borgmeier claimed victory with the longest hit of the
evening – a massive 425-meter drive to edge out Ray, who posted 408 meters.Continue Reading
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Ozzy Osbourne says farewell to live performance with a hometown show for 40,000 fans – The Washington Post
- Ozzy Osbourne says farewell to live performance with a hometown show for 40,000 fans The Washington Post
- Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath go out on a high at farewell gig BBC
- Black Sabbath’s Back to the Beginning Will Be the ‘Most Important Day’ in Heavy Metal History, Tom Morello Teases Billboard
- Jack Osbourne shares tribute as father Ozzy Osbourne bids farewell with final concert in Birmingham The Express Tribune
- Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne: Back to the Beginning review – all-star farewell to the gods of metal is epic and emotional The Guardian
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Pakistan: Death toll in Karachi's Lyari building collapse rises to 27 as rescue efforts continue – ANI News
- Pakistan: Death toll in Karachi’s Lyari building collapse rises to 27 as rescue efforts continue ANI News
- Death toll in Lyari building collapse stands at 27 as rescue operation ends on 3rd day Dawn
- Death toll rises to 14 in Karachi building collapse Ptv.com.pk
- Most Lyari victims belong to Hindu community The Express Tribune
- Karachi Liyari building collapse: death toll rises to 27 Business Recorder
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Brain stimulation could change the future of math education
People who breeze through multiplication often chalk it up to good teachers or hard study. New evidence shows that some brains start the race to learn math with stronger internal wiring.
Researchers also found that a tiny dose of brain stimulation, an electrical buzz, can narrow the gap for those born with weaker brain wiring.
For the study, a five‑day experiment was led by Roi Cohen Kadosh at the University of Surrey, working with colleagues in Oxford, Toronto, and Stanford.
The research centered on 72 right‑handed adults who trained on calculation or memorization tasks while researchers watched activity in the frontoparietal network and applied gentle current to specific sites.
Brain stimulation may boost math skills
Long before electrodes enter the picture, studies show that robust traffic between the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) and posterior parietal cortex (PPC) predicts sharper arithmetic gains in school‑age children and adults.
These front and back hubs share data with the hippocampus to shift a learner to quick fact retrieval.
People whose signals are faint across this route often stall at the procedural stage, echoing the classic Matthew effect in education, where early advantages snowball over time.
Testing brain stimulation for math education
Participants sat for baseline scans that gauged connectivity strength and local levels of the messenger chemicals GABA and glutamate, a well‑known marker pair for plasticity.
They then solved novel two‑operand problems either by learning an algorithm or by rote rehearsal. During practice, half received sham stimulation, a third received current over the left and right dlPFC, and the remainder over the PPC.
The team used transcranial random noise stimulation, a method introduced in 2008 that sprinkles high‑frequency currents over the scalp and temporarily boosts cortical excitability.
Random noise is thought to raise the signal‑to‑noise ratio for neurons that hover just below firing threshold, giving sluggish circuits a clearer pulse without overshooting in healthy tissue.
The device delivered less than a milliamp, about the tingle you feel from a nine‑volt battery on your tongue, and participants were blind to the condition.
Stimulation aids weak brain connections
Learners who started with feeble dlPFC‑PPC links but received frontal stimulation shaved reaction times on calculation problems by roughly six percent over five sessions, an edge the sham group never matched.
Those with naturally strong links showed no extra benefit and, in rare cases, slight interference when current was added.
The boost also hinged on neurochemistry. Improvement tracked with a drop in local GABA, hinting that the brain shifted into a plastic phase where change beats stability, but only when connectivity stayed modest rather than surging.
Efforts to improve math education
Drill trials, where answers were simply rehearsed, showed little or no gain from stimulation.
The authors suggest that memorization leans less on executive control and more on localized storage, so frontoparietal tuning adds limited value once the answer is locked in.
“So far, most efforts to improve education have focused on changing the environment, training teachers, redesigning curricula, while largely overlooking the learner’s neurobiology,” said Cohen Kadosh.
He added that addressing brain constraints directly could broaden access to diverse career pathways and reduce long‑term inequalities in income, health and well-being.
Brain stimulation may help math struggles
The results revive the idea that brief, well‑timed stimulation could pair with instruction to help stragglers close arithmetic gaps rather than languish under cumulative deficits.
Importantly, the benefit was selective, underscoring the need for screening tools that flag students with weak network strength before any device is applied.
Safety remains favourable at these intensities, but researchers warn against DIY use; stimulating the wrong region or at the wrong time could impair other skills or harden circuits prematurely.
Regulators are still drafting guidelines for non‑medical cognitive devices, and large‑scale school trials have yet to clear ethics boards.
Broader implications of the research
Past work links higher math fluency in children to elevated parietal GABA, but the relation flips in adulthood, showing that the plasticity window moves with age.
This developmental switch reminds educators that interventions may need age‑specific dosing and targeting.
Animal studies and computational models further suggest that random noise can stabilize synapses once learning consolidates, offering a route to lock in gains without chronic stimulation.
Future projects will watch how long the boost lasts and whether repeated cycles can replace expensive tutoring for some learners.
The future of math education
While electrodes will never replace good teaching, they may act as scaffolds, lifting under‑connected brains so that practice sticks.
If larger trials replicate these findings and prove durable benefits, policy makers could consider targeted neuro-support alongside curriculum reform to help close the widening achievement gap that still defines math education.
The study is published in the journal PLOS Biology.
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Sony’s WH-1000XM5 headphones are $115 off for Prime Day
Sony’s WH-1000XM5 headphones are $115 off as part of the Prime Day festivities, which brings the price down to $285. This discount applies to multiple colorways.
These headphones once topped our list of the best wireless headphones before being usurped by the XM6. They are still fantastic, despite being slightly outshined by the newer kid on the block. We praised the “supreme comfort” and “great sound” in our official review, along with the powerful ANC technology.
Sony
The battery life is also incredible here. Users can expect around 30 hours per charge, which will more than handle a long train ride or flight. It’s also lighter than the XM4, which adds to the overall comfort. There are touch controls on the outside panel of the right ear cup, with the ability to play, pause, skip tracks and adjust the volume.
These cans also work with various voice assistants and there’s an affiliated app that allows for even more customization. The headphones offer multipoint connectivity and there are a handful of integrated microphones for phone calls. The only downside here remains the price, which has been somewhat alleviated by this sale.
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Drinking Coffee This Way May Extend Your Life, Study Finds
- A new study linked daily coffee consumption to a potentially longer life.
- We asked experts to explain how the morning delicacy can have such an impact.
- There are a few catches.
The ritual of brewing and sipping fresh coffee each morning is one many of us look forward to, and a new study’s findings may give you the push to pour another cup. Researchers connected coffee consumption to mortality among a large population of participants and found that coffee may actually help you live longer, with a few caveats.
Meet the Experts: David Perlmutter, M.D., a neurologist and fellow of the American College of Nutrition and Michelle Routhenstein, M.S., R.D., a cardiology dietitian at Entirely Nourished.
Keep reading to learn more about how your daily cup of joe may offer you more than a jolt of energy and happiness.
What did the study find?
Researchers tracked the self-reported coffee drinking habits of over 46,000 U.S. adults for nearly a decade. Participants disclosed how they drank their java. Regular or decaf? With sugar and milk or without? If with, how much? They then compared that information to National Death Index data to deduce how coffee consumption could have impacted mortality from all causes, including cancer and heart disease.
After examining the data, researchers found that drinking one to three cups of coffee per day was linked to a reduced risk of death from all causes, “especially when the coffee is black or has minimal added sugar and saturated fat,” explains David Perlmutter, M.D., a neurologist and fellow of the American College of Nutrition. Specifically, they found that drinking black coffee or coffee with less than 2.5 grams (or a little more than a half-teaspoon) of sugar and less than a gram of saturated fat from milk or cream per 8-ounce cup was associated with a 14% lower risk of dying from any cause compared to not drinking coffee at all, Dr. Perlmutter adds.
The catch here is, the study also found that most Americans add around 3.2 grams of sugar and a half-gram of saturated fat to each mug, which means the majority of coffee drinkers are less likely to get its life-extending benefits. “This is the problem with so many coffee specialty drinks that seem to be so popular,” Dr. Perlmutter says.
Benefits of coffee
There is plenty of existing research that purports coffee’s health boost. Without added sugar or fat, it’s a naturally good source of antioxidants like polyphenols and chlorogenic acid, explains Dr. Purlmutter. “These components and others help fight inflammation and oxidative stress,” he adds, both of which are contributors to chronic disease. That’s how coffee may help reduce risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and congnitive decline, “all of which influence lifespan,” he concludes.
Side effects of coffee
Coffee’s caffeine content can even exhibit perks by improving alertness, metabolism, and brain health, Dr. Pelrmutter says. However, there is such a thing as overdoing it and reaping negative side-effects such as anxiety, increased blood pressure, heart palpitations, digestive issues, and insomnia, says Michelle Routhenstein, M.S., R.D., a cardiology dietitian at Entirely Nourished.
She adds that a “very high coffee intake may also slightly reduce calcium absorption, potentially affecting bone health.”
How to drink coffee for good health
The study supports drinking one to three cups of black or minimally altered coffee per day. Dr. Perlmutter recommends keeping sugars below 2.5 grams and saturated fats below 1 gram per cup by using low-fat milk or plant-based creamer alternatives. Routhenstein adds that if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or have otherwise been prescribed a specific caffeine intake, follow your doctor’s recommendations.
Lastly, to avoid over-caffeination, Dr. Perlmutter suggests enforcing a “coffee curfew” that marks the time of day after which you turn off the pot. “I generally recommend 2 p.m. to minimize coffee’s impact on sleep,” he concludes.
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