共找到 20 条结果
A cave in New Zealand has yielded fossils from a lost ecosystem that existed about 1 million years ago, including a possible flying ancestor of the kākāpō。 The discovery reveals that volcanoes and climate upheaval were reshaping the country’s wildlife and driving extinctions long before humans arrived
The company warned about dangers of advanced AI far more than rival OpenAI
An eminently binge-able series that honors classic horror tropes while reinventing them in surprising ways
The global cobalt supply chain is more interconnected—and more vulnerable—than previously thought, with disruptions capable of triggering far-reaching cascades across multiple countries and industries。 Researchers warn that protecting battery supply chains will require system-wide coordination because critical bottlenecks can turn local shocks into
WhatsApp's leadership shake-up comes as Meta looks to strengthen its app's already booming presence in India
Everything is expensive。 Treat yourself to one of these WIRED-tested and -approved Prime Day picks under $30
A supercomputer in Shenzhen was declared the world’s fastest。 It uses only standard microprocessors and not the special-purpose chips called graphics processing units
Apple rejected the suggestion its practices are anti-competitive, saying many customers rely on third-party alternatives
The high-altitude race is a unique test of car and driver
A distant galaxy nicknamed Shadow Blaster may have revealed a surprising source of cosmic neutrinos: extreme star formation instead of a supermassive black hole。 The discovery suggests that hidden, dust-filled starburst galaxies could account for a significant fraction of the Universe’s high-energy neutrinos
As newborn neurons make their way through the developing brain, they must squeeze through incredibly tight spaces to reach their final destinations。 Researchers discovered that this physical journey routinely causes some of the most severe forms of DNA damage—double-strand breaks—yet the young brain has evolved an impressive ability to repair the d
Scientists have discovered that a gene normally considered a DNA-protecting "good guy" can become dangerous when cells make too much of it。 The gene, EXO1, acts like molecular scissors that help repair DNA, but when overproduced it starts cutting DNA it shouldn't, creating damage linked to cancer
Scientists have uncovered a surprising connection between quantum gravity and an exotic quantum state of matter that could explain why the universe isn’t expanding wildly fast。 The study suggests that the very shape of space-time may protect the cosmological constant from disruptive quantum effects
The driver told investigators he was using the vehicle’s automated-driver system when the vehicle left the roadway and crashed into a house in Harris County, Texas
SpaceX exercised its option to acquire Cursor in an all-stock deal, bolstering Elon Musk’s ambitions in artificial intelligence
Coherence Neuro has started testing a brain-computer interface that could one day use electrical stimulation to prevent tumors from growing
Tests of age-verification technology show the risks of life-altering errors
A colossal ancient collision may have left some of the Moon’s deepest secrets surprisingly close to future Artemis landing sites。 By recreating the impact that formed the giant South Pole-Aitken basin—the Moon’s largest and oldest crater—scientists found that a low-angle strike from a large, iron-cored object blasted material from deep inside the M