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  • NASA to Launch New Livestream Service on Netflix Starting This Summer

    NASA to Launch New Livestream Service on Netflix Starting This Summer

    NASA to Launch New Livestream Service on Netflix Starting This Summer originally appeared on L.A. Mag.

    Photo courtesy NASA

    NASA+ will offer live programming of rocket launches, astronaut spacewalks, mission coverage, and live views of Earth from the International Space Station through its new streaming platform on Netflix.

    “The National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 calls on us to share our story of space exploration with the broadest possible audience,” Rebecca Sirmons, general manager of NASA+ at the agency’s headquarters in Washington said. “Together, we’re committed to a Golden Age of Innovation and Exploration – inspiring new generations – right from the comfort of their couch or in the palm of their hand from their phone.”

    NASA+ first launched in 2023 to make space content more accessible to the public. The service will continue to be available for free and ad-free through the NASA app and website. NASA wrote that they hope to bring even more awareness to their work through Netflix’s global audience of more than 700 million people.

    “Through this partnership, NASA’s work in science and exploration will become even more accessible, allowing the agency to increase engagement with and inspire a global audience in a modern media landscape,” Cheryl Warner, NASA news chief, wrote in a press release.

    Livestream schedules will drop closer to launch day, so Netflix advises viewers to check for more details in the coming weeks.

    This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Jul 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

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  • Japan Leads Asian Stocks Lower on Tariff Angst: Markets Wrap

    Japan Leads Asian Stocks Lower on Tariff Angst: Markets Wrap

    (Bloomberg) — Asian shares edged lower at the open after President Donald Trump said he won’t delay the July 9 deadline for imposing higher levies on trading partners. 

    A regional stocks gauge fell 0.2%. Japanese stocks declined 1% after Trump threatened to hike tariffs on the country and deepened his criticism of Japan for not accepting US rice exports. A gauge of the dollar slipped in early Asian trading after touching its lowest since 2022 in the prior session. Treasuries were steady Wednesday after yields rose on Tuesday.

    Investors are closely watching how Trump decides to handle the current pause on his April tariffs, which he put on hold for 90 days to allow time for talks. Stock markets – which once swung wildly on trade headlines – appear to see little risk, as equity indexes sit near all-time highs. The calm is being fueled by expectations that Trump will extend his tariff deadline based on his pattern of threatening first and backing down later.

    “While US stocks are probably overly optimistic, international stocks have been prone to an overly pessimistic knee-jerk response each time Trump escalates,” said Phillip Wool, head of portfolio management at Rayliant Global Advisors Ltd. “It’s not surprising at all to see Trump holding the prospect of a July 9th impasse and a painfully high tariff out as a threat to push for better deals. There’s also an element of political theater here.”

    Trump for weeks has sought to exert leverage over trading partners with threats to set high levies on governments he sees as being difficult. His top economic adviser, Kevin Hassett, earlier signaled agreements would be announced after the July 4 holiday and the signing of the tax and spending bill the US Senate approved.

    Trump’s latest tariff comments don’t pose a major threat to Japanese stocks, said Neil Newman, head strategist at Astris Advisory Japan.

    “I read from his rhetoric President Trump has run out of things to complain about,” he said. “I believe there is too much on the Japanese negotiation table for the Americans to walk away from, but we know Trump will push to the limits to get more. This is just noise.”

    Meanwhile, US job openings hit the highest since November, largely fueled by leisure and hospitality, and layoffs declined. Fed policymakers have consistently characterized labor-market conditions as strong in recent weeks. Fed Chair Jerome Powell repeated that the US central bank probably would have cut rates further this year absent Trump’s expanded use of tariffs, although he didn’t rule out easing at its meeting later this month.

    The government’s June employment report, due Thursday, is expected to show a slowdown in nonfarm payroll growth and an uptick in the unemployment rate.

    Separate data Tuesday showed US factory activity contracted in June for a fourth consecutive month as orders and employment shrank at a faster pace, extending the malaise in manufacturing.

    Trump’s $3.3 trillion tax and spending cut bill passed the Senate after Vice President JD Vance’s tie-breaking vote. House lawmakers are returning to Washington from a holiday week to vote Wednesday on the Senate version of the bill but face Republican resistance from moderate and ultra-conservative GOP lawmakers.

    In commodities, gold held an advance, after rallying 2% over the previous two sessions while oil steadied in early Wednesday trading.

    Some of the main moves in markets:

    Stocks

    • S&P 500 futures were little changed as of 9:30 a.m. Tokyo time
    • Nikkei 225 futures (OSE) fell 0.7%
    • Japan’s Topix fell 0.3%
    • Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.4%
    • Euro Stoxx 50 futures were little changed

    Currencies

    • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
    • The euro was little changed at $1.1801
    • The Japanese yen fell 0.1% to 143.58 per dollar
    • The offshore yuan was little changed at 7.1619 per dollar
    • The Australian dollar was little changed at $0.6581

    Cryptocurrencies

    • Bitcoin fell 0.3% to $105,659.61
    • Ether fell 0.3% to $2,408.72

    Bonds

    • The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.24%
    • Australia’s 10-year yield advanced three basis points to 4.14%

    Commodities

    • West Texas Intermediate crude was little changed
    • Spot gold was little changed

    This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

    –With assistance from Alice French, Rob Verdonck and Aya Wagatsuma.

    ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • NASA, SpaceX prepare for Crew-11 Launch to Space Station

    NASA, SpaceX prepare for Crew-11 Launch to Space Station

    NASA is preparing for its 11th rotational mission of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft carrying astronauts to the International Space Station for a science expedition. NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 mission is targeted to launch in the late July/early August timeframe from Launch Complex 39A at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

    The mission includes NASA astronauts Zena Cardman, serving as commander; Mike Fincke, pilot; JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut Kimiya Yui, mission specialist; and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov, mission specialist. This is the first spaceflight for Cardman and Platonov, the fourth trip for Fincke, and the second for Yui, to the orbiting laboratory.

    Image: The four crew members of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 mission to the International Space Station train inside a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft in Hawthorne, California. From left to right: Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov, NASA astronauts Mike Fincke and Zena Cardman, and JAXA astronaut Kimiya Yui. Credit: SpaceX


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  • A Texas Boy Needed Protection From Measles. The Vaccine Cost $1,400. | The Transmission

    A Texas Boy Needed Protection From Measles. The Vaccine Cost $1,400. | The Transmission

    KFF In the early days of the West Texas measles outbreak, Thang Nguyen eyed the rising number of cases and worried. His 4-year-old son was at risk because he had received only the first of the vaccine’s two doses.

    So, in mid-March, he took his family to a primary care clinic at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

    By the end of the visit, his son, Anh Hoang, had received one shot protecting against four illnesses — measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox. He also received a second shot against tetanus, diphtheria, and whooping cough, as well as a flu shot. His twin daughters, who had already had their measles vaccinations, got other immunizations.

    Nguyen, who is a UTMB postdoctoral fellow in public health and infectious disease, said he asked clinic staff whether his family’s insurance would cover the checkups and immunizations. He said he was assured that it would.

    Then the bills came.

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  • Durham to Host 2025 National Astronomy Meeting

    Durham to Host 2025 National Astronomy Meeting

    Almost a thousand of the world’s top space scientists will visit Durham University next week (7 to 11 July) as we host the UK’s National Astronomy Meeting (NAM) 2025.

    NAM is the flagship annual event of the UK’s Royal Astronomical Society and sees scientists present the latest in cutting-edge space research.

    It will connect diverse communities – from researchers and amateur astronomers to schools, artists, industry, and the public – fostering scientific collaboration and inspiring thousands of non-professional astronomers through both professional sessions and public outreach events.

    Long history of astronomical research

    Durham has a long history of astronomical research dating back to the appointment of Temple Chevallier as Professor of Astronomy in 1835.

    Since then, our physicists, engineers and mathematicians have played an important role in furthering our understanding of the Universe. See just a few examples below.

    Evolution of the Universe

    Our centres for Advanced Instrumentation (CfAI) and Extragalactic Astronomy (CEA) helped develop and engineer the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

    The most powerful space telescope ever built, the JWST is giving researchers – including our astronomers – unprecedented new images and insights into the evolution of the Universe, its stars, galaxies and black holes.

    The CfAI is also involved in the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT). Currently under construction, the ELT will have a mirror the size of four tennis courts allowing us to see even fainter objects in space.

    Dark matter and dark energy

    Our Institute for Computational Cosmology (ICC) and the CEA are leading the hunt for dark matter – the mysterious substance which binds galaxies together – through our involvement in major international projects like Euclid.

    The ICC is also investigating dark energy – the equally mysterious force driving the accelerating expansion of the Universe – through projects such as the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI).

    And we host the COSMA supercomputer. COSMA allows our cosmologists to simulate the evolution of the Universe in precise detail which is then tested by astronomers’ observations of the real thing.

    Large Hadron Collider

    Our Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology (IPPP) researchers are heavily involved in the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

    The LHC investigates the fundamental building blocks of the Universe.

    IPPP scientists are researching neutrinos – sub-atomic particles that play a crucial role in the evolution of the Universe.

    They’re also involved in the hunt for dark matter, providing theory support and model simulations for dark matter detection.

    Sustainable space exploration

    Through the Centre for Particle Theory, particle physicists also work closely with our mathematicians.

    This includes studying the large-scale properties of the Universe, its origin, evolution and fate.

    Our Applied Mathematics researchers are studying the processes behind our closest star – the Sun.

    This includes investigating processes in the Sun’s atmosphere, solar flares and computational modelling of the Sun’s magnetic field.

    And we’ve recently launched the Durham University Space Research Centre to support North East England’s growing space industry and lead on the sustainable exploration of the cosmos.

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  • Google AI Mode Shows 91% URL Change Across Repeat Searches

    Google AI Mode Shows 91% URL Change Across Repeat Searches

    A new study analyzing 10,000 keywords reveals that Google’s AI Mode delivers inconsistent results.

    The research also shows minimal overlap between AI Mode sources and traditional organic search rankings.

    Published by SE Ranking, the study examines how AI Mode performs in comparison to Google’s AI Overviews and the top 10 organic search results.

    “The average overlap of exact URLs between the three datasets was just 9.2%,” the study notes, illustrating the volatility.

    Highlights From The Study

    AI Mode Frequently Pulls Different Results

    To test consistency, researchers ran the same 10,000 keywords through AI Mode three times on the same day. The results varied most of the time.

    In 21.2% of cases, there were no overlapping URLs at all between the three sets of responses.

    Domain-level consistency was slightly higher, at 14.7%, indicating AI Mode may cite different pages from the same websites.

    Minimal Overlap With Organic Results

    Only 14% of URLs in AI Mode responses matched the top 10 organic search results for the same queries. When looking at domain-level matches, overlap increased to 21.9%.

    In 17.9% of queries, AI Mode provided zero overlap with organic URLs, suggesting its selections could be independent of Google’s ranking algorithms.

    Most Links Come From Trusted Domains

    On average, each AI Mode response contains 12.6 citations.

    The most common format is block links (90.8%), followed by in-text links (8.9%) and AIM SERP-style links (0.3%), which resemble traditional search engine results pages (SERPs).

    Despite the volatility, some domains consistently appeared across all tests. The top-cited sites were:

    1. Indeed (1.8%)
    2. Wikipedia (1.6%)
    3. Reddit (1.5%)
    4. YouTube (1.4%)
    5. NerdWallet (1.2%)

    Google properties were cited most frequently, accounting for 5.7% of all links. These were mostly Google Maps business profiles.

    Differences From AI Overviews

    Comparing AI Mode to AI Overviews, researchers found an average URL overlap of just 10.7%, with domain overlap at 16%.

    This suggests the two systems operate under different logic despite both being AI-driven.

    What This Means For Search Marketers

    The high volatility of AI Mode results presents new challenges and new opportunities.

    Because results can vary even for identical queries, tracking visibility is more complex.

    However, this fluidity also creates more openings for exposure. Unlike traditional search results, where a small set of top-ranking pages often dominate, AI Mode appears to refresh its citations frequently.

    That means publishers with relevant, high-quality content may have a better chance of appearing in AI Mode answers, even if they’re not in the organic top 10.

    To adapt to this environment, SEOs and content creators should consider:

    • Prioritizing domain-wide authority and topical relevance
    • Diversifying content across trusted platforms
    • Optimizing local presence through tools like Google Maps
    • Monitoring evolving inclusion patterns as AI Mode develops

    For more, see the full study from SE Ranking.


    Featured Image: Roman Samborskyi/Shutterstock

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  • How to Plan In an Uncertain Economy – Harvard Business Review

    1. How to Plan In an Uncertain Economy  Harvard Business Review
    2. Focusing on the future in uncertain times  KPMG
    3. Traditional business planning doesn’t cut it anymore. Here’s what leaders should embrace instead  Fast Company
    4. Transformative strategies unveiled: Leveraging future-back thinking for business resilience  The Business Journals
    5. The future won’t follow your roadmap—here’s how to lead anyway  Fast Company

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  • Danish trial reveals how structured exercise and guidance affect life with chronic conditions

    Danish trial reveals how structured exercise and guidance affect life with chronic conditions

    A new study reveals that combining tailored exercise therapy with self-management support can safely improve the quality of life for individuals managing multiple chronic conditions​​​​​​.

    Study: Exercise therapy and self-management support for individuals with multimorbidity: a randomized and controlled trial. Image Credit: Halfpoint / Shutterstock

    In a recent article published in Nature Medicine, researchers investigated whether a program combining support for self-management with personalized exercise therapy would enhance the quality of life for adults living with multimorbidity.

    The findings from their research indicate that this intervention could statistically significantly improve the quality of life for individuals living with multimorbidities, without increasing their risk of experiencing adverse events.

    Background

    Multimorbidity, which occurs when individuals have at least two long-term health conditions, affects over one-third of adults worldwide and is projected to increase by 84% by 2050. It tends to develop 10-15 years earlier in socially disadvantaged populations, worsening health inequalities.

    People with multimorbidity often experience reduced mental and physical functioning, lower quality of life, and a higher risk of early death. As chronic conditions increase, so do healthcare costs, hospital visits, and sick leave, placing a growing burden on healthcare systems.

    Despite its widespread impact, effective treatments for managing multimorbidity are lacking. Current healthcare approaches often treat each disease separately, resulting in fragmented, conflicting, or inefficient care that can frustrate both patients and providers.

    Experts emphasize the need to move towards person-centered care and have identified self-management support and exercise therapy as promising strategies for achieving this goal.

    Exercise has proven benefits for a range of chronic illnesses, including depression, diabetes, and heart disease, conditions that commonly co-occur. Similarly, supporting individuals in managing their health has shown promise in reducing healthcare utilization and enhancing quality of life.

    However, high-quality evidence has been limited. As a result, robust studies are needed to confirm their effectiveness in real-world settings.

    About the Study

    This multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) was part of a five-year project called MOBILIZE. It compared a self-management support and personalized exercise therapy program with usual care in adults with multimorbidity, defined as having at least two of six specified long-term conditions: knee or hip osteoarthritis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and depression.

    Conducted in Denmark over 12 weeks, participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention or control groups.

    The intervention consisted of 24 supervised sessions, combining 30 minutes of self-management support with 60 minutes of personalized exercise. Exercise intensity was adjusted based on participants’ perceived exertion, and physiotherapists were trained to deliver the program. The control group continued with standard medical care.

    Outcomes were assessed at baseline and after 4, 6, and 12 months using validated questionnaires and physical performance tests.

    The primary outcome was health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measured after 12 months. Secondary outcomes included physical function, disease burden, mental health, and self-efficacy.

    Key Findings

    Of the 632 screened individuals with multimorbidity, 228 were randomized: 115 received the 12-week support program in addition to usual care, while 113 received only usual care.

    After 12 months, 197 participants (86%) completed the follow-up, with similar retention rates between groups. Adherence to the program was high, with approximately 75% of participants attending at least 18 sessions.

    The primary outcome, HRQoL, improved significantly more in the intervention group than in the control group, as determined by the intention-to-treat analysis. Within-group analysis revealed that the intervention group’s HRQoL score improved by 0.050 points, whereas the control group’s score declined slightly by 0.014 points. More participants in the support group also achieved a patient-acceptable symptom state (55% vs. 40%).

    Among the secondary outcomes, self-rated health (measured on the EQ-VAS) showed a significant between-group difference, favoring the intervention. Within the intervention group, participants demonstrated statistically significant improvements in physical function (as measured by both the 30-second chair-stand test and the 6-minute walk test), self-rated health, disability, illness burden, and depression. However, these improvements were not statistically significant compared to those seen in the usual care group.

    Crucially, in the per-protocol analysis (which included only participants who fully adhered to the program), the between-group difference in HRQoL was not statistically significant.

    Safety analyses showed no significant differences in serious or non-serious adverse events between groups, indicating that the intervention was well tolerated. Overall, the results support the potential benefit of the combined program in improving quality of life without increased risk.

    Conclusions

    This trial demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in HRQoL after 12 months for adults with multiple morbidities who received personalized self-management support and exercise therapy, without increasing the risk of adverse events.

    However, the observed improvement of 0.064 points was modest and did not reach the 0.074-point threshold for what is considered a ‘minimum important difference’ in some patient populations, raising questions about its clinical relevance. Only one secondary outcome, self-rated health, showed a statistically significant benefit compared to usual care.

    The study’s strengths include its pragmatic, real-world design, high participant adherence, and comprehensive co-design process involving stakeholders.

    Limitations include potential bias due to unblinded participants, the potential treatment burden of the intensive 24-session intervention, and limited generalizability resulting from the specific definition of multimorbidity used. The heterogeneity in participants’ conditions and baseline health status may also have influenced the findings. The paper also notes that the additional attention from healthcare professionals in the intervention group could have contributed to the effect.

    In conclusion, while the results support the safety and potential value of personalized self-management and exercise programs in improving quality of life for people living with multimorbidity, further large-scale trials are needed to confirm these findings and clarify their long-term clinical significance.

    Journal reference:

    • Exercise therapy and self-management support for individuals with multimorbidity: a randomized and controlled trial. Skou, S.T., Nyberg, M., Dideriksen, M., Rasmussen, H., Overgaard, J.A., Bodilsen, C., Soja, A.M.B., Attarzadeh, A.P., Bieder, M.J., Dridi, N.P., Heltberg, A., Gæde, P.H., Reventlow, J.L., Arnfred, S., Bodtger, U., Brønd, J.C., Thygesen, L.C., Møller, S.P., Jäger, M., Bricca, A. Nature Medicine (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-03779-4, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-025-03779-4

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  • Post-surgical Pyoderma Gangrenosum Reveals Celiac Disease in a Pediatric Patient

    Post-surgical Pyoderma Gangrenosum Reveals Celiac Disease in a Pediatric Patient


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  • Qantas confirms cyber-attack exposed records of up to 6 million customers | Qantas

    Qantas confirms cyber-attack exposed records of up to 6 million customers | Qantas

    Qantas has suffered a major cyber-attack, potentially exposing the records of up to 6 million customers.

    The airline said on Wednesday that the affected system had now been contained and its systems were secured. The system in question was a third-party platform used by the airline’s contact centre, which contains the records of 6 million customers.

    The data includes customer names, email addresses, phone numbers, birth dates and frequent flyer numbers. It did not contain credit card details, financial information or passport details.

    Frequent flyer accounts were not compromised, neither were passwords, Pins or login details.

    Qantas said it first detected the unusual activity on Monday and immediately took steps to contain the system.

    Qantas is assessing the portion of data stolen but said it was expected to be “significant”.

    Qantas said it has informed the Australian Cyber Security Centre, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, as well as the Australian federal police.

    The airline’s chief executive, Vanessa Hudson, said the company had recruited independent specialised cybersecurity experts to investigate the matter.

    A dedicated customer support line and a dedicated page on the company’s website will update customers as the investigation progresses.

    “We sincerely apologise to our customers and we recognise the uncertainty this will cause,” Hudson said. “Our customers trust us with their personal information and we take that responsibility seriously.

    “We are contacting our customers today and our focus is on providing them with the necessary support.”

    Cyber-attacks remain on the increase in Australia, after superannuation funds in April suffered hacks on a small handful of customers that resulted in more than $500,000 being taken from their accounts.

    In May, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner said the number of data breaches reported under the mandatory notification scheme had increased by 25% in 2024, compared with 2023.

    According to the report covering 1 July to 31 December 2024, there were 595 data breaches in the latter half of the year, taking the total number of breaches reported that year to 1,113, up 25% from 893 in 2023.

    In the half year, the highest number of reports came from health providers (121) followed by government (100), finance (54), legal and accounting (36), and retail (34).

    The report found 69% of the data breaches occurred due to malicious or criminal attack, with phishing – that is, using compromised credentials to access data – being the most common at 34% of such incidents. It was followed by ransomware at 24%.

    The majority of reported breaches affected fewer than 5,000 people each but two were reported to affect between 500,000 and 1 million people. Most personal information in the breaches comprised contact information, ID information or financial or health information.

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