- Get ready for Fedcoin and the e-euro
- Teens, tech and mental health: Oxford study finds no link
- Apple puts more adverts in App Store after ad-tracking ban
- ‘World first’ 30-year hydrogen battery set to be made in Queensland
- The Use of Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare Accelerated During the Pandemic. It’s Here to Stay.
- Alternative to Conventional Fertilizers: Fungi Could Manipulate Bacteria to Enrich Soil With Nutrients
- GM expects to offer personal self-driving vehicles to consumers this decade
- Apple is Holding the Web Back with ‘Uniquely Underpowered’ iOS Browsers, Reveals Google Engineer
- Uber’s First Quarter Shows Food Delivery’s Continuing Strength (WSJ)
- Starlink can serve 500,000 users easily, several million “more of a challenge”
- In A Post-Covid World Customers Will Be Revenge Shopping
- World’s largest compressed air grid “batteries” will store up to 10GWh
- Scientists Discover That the Shape of Light Changes Our Vision
- EBay says open to accepting to cryptocurrencies in future, exploring NFTs
- The rise of Japan’s loyalty point influencers
Listen closely?
— NASA JPL (@NASAJPL) May 7, 2021
The microphone on @NASAPersevere's SuperCam caught sound during #MarsHelicopter’s 4th flight. The rumbling is Martian wind, but those rhythmic hums come from Ingenuity. Scientists made it easier to hear by isolating the 84 Hz blade sound. https://t.co/uua5h40BPL pic.twitter.com/fGWlMRpVji