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Telegraph
19/10/2025 03:30:23 PM
Global Health Security
Letters to the Editor
Best private schools
The Chelsea Magazine Company
Legal battle delays Reeves’s bond market growth push
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon
Putin’s defences are no match for the Tomahawk missile: this has been proved in combat
World War Three is looming as ‘transparent ocean’ technology advances
The endless IOU powering Silicon Valley’s AI boom
Silicon Valley’s wokest billionaire gets on board the Trump train
Netherlands seizes Chinese-owned microchip maker to protect national security
Squeamish Labour can’t defend us against Chinese hackers
We were promised super-intelligence. We got a mountain of AI ‘slop’
Fujitsu forced to pump £80m into UK arm as Horizon scandal hits orders
The Royal Navy will never have full carrier air wings without Vanquish jets
The best music streaming services rated and ranked for value for money
We should all be worried about the great AI bubble
Silicon Valley talent war turns nasty as Musk hounds defectors
The West is waking up to the Russian drone onslaught
Dyson may have lost its magic touch
The 14 best Bluetooth speakers, recommended by experts and tested at home and outdoors
Labour revives ‘backdoor’ data battle with Apple
The crypto bros at risk of losing everything
Passenger blocked from boarding plane after smart ring gets stuck on finger
Apple is falling out of love with Labour’s Britain
Billionaire Revolut founder abandons Britain for UAE
Revolut vows to invest £3bn in UK as it hunts banking licence
Dozens of Klarna staff become millionaires in $15bn stock market debut
Flying taxis are not pie in the sky, says boss eyeing take-off
Vice was the epitome of liberal hypocrisy – working there was like being in prison
Tech founder paralysed in bike accident set for windfall from £1bn sale
ChatGPT to allow AI porn for over-18s
Silicon Valley’s wokest billionaire gets on board the Trump train
Netherlands seizes Chinese-owned microchip maker to protect national security
Saudi Arabia pours $1bn into fallen virtual reality tech company
I listened to a pile of AI-hosted podcasts so you don’t have to
Britons will be poorer than Malaysians, Poles and Turks by 2050 unless we change course
Duty of Care campaign
Our Online Safety Act isn’t the problem, Labour is
Farage is siding with disgusting internet predators
Parents should have more control of children’s phones to keep them safe online, says Science Secretary
The best gaming laptops for 2025: I’ve put them all to the test and there’s a clear winner
Minecraft Experience London, review: You’re better off giving the kids an iPad for an hour
The billionaire free speech warrior who built Minecraft
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Scientific
American
19/10/2025 03:30:10 PM
Public HealthOctober 17, 2025Why Aluminum in Vaccines Is Safe—And Often Essential
Saving Your Sight from Blinding Diabetic Retinopathy
How to Catch a Rare Comet and a Meteor Shower
Flu Cases Surge Early in Japan, Sparking Global Health Concerns
When a Galaxy Erupts, What We See Depends on How We See It
A Solution to the CIA’s Kryptos Code Is Found after 35 Years
July 30, 2025Neurotic Cats, One-Eyed Aliens and Hypnosis for Liars Are among the Historical Gems Reported in Scientific American
Announcing the #SciAmInTheWild Photography Contest Short List
One Year after Scientific American’s First Issue, the Solar System Grew by a Planet
U.S. Science and Scientific American Have Weathered Attacks Before and Won
Mysterious Rocks Could Rewrite Evolution of Complex Life
The Slippery Slope of Ethical Collapse—And How Courage Can Reverse It
Which Anti-Inflammatory Supplements Actually Work?
The Sordid Mystery of a Somalian Meteorite Smuggled into China
Type 1 Diabetes Science Is Having a Moment
Diagnosing Type 1 Diabetes before Symptoms Strike
The Brain Science of Elusive ‘Aha! Moments’
Building Intelligent Machines Helps Us Learn How Our Brain Works
Lifting the Veil on Near-Death Experiences
How the Brain ‘Constructs’ the Outside World
New Treatments Are Rewriting Our Understanding of Schizophrenia
The New Science of Controlling Lucid Dreams
AstronomyOctober 17, 2025How to Catch a Rare Comet and a Meteor Shower
Climate ChangeOctober 16, 2025Can We Bury Enough Wood to Slow Climate Change?
EngineeringOctober 14, 2025A Classic Graphic Reveals Nature’s Most Efficient Traveler
GamingOctober 16, 2025A Solution to the CIA’s Kryptos Code Is Found after 35 Years
Public HealthJuly 18, 2022People in Republican Counties Have Higher Death Rates Than Those in Democratic Counties
HealthOctober 14, 2025Which Anti-Inflammatory Supplements Actually Work?
BBC
19/10/2025 03:30:25 PM
A trail of giant footprints was unearthed in the UK - see how a dinosaur left them
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New
Scientist
19/10/2025 03:30:10 PM
HumansAncient lead exposure may have influenced how our brains evolvedNews
LifeSee the adorable baby numbats offering hope to an endangered speciesNews
LifeDinosaur fossil rewrites the story of how sauropods got long necksNews
HumansEarly hominin had human-like dexterity and gorilla strengthNews
Student & graduate
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Nature
19/10/2025 03:30:12 PM
Explore articles by subject
Is academic research becoming too competitive? Nature examines the data Applications for European research grants increased in 2025. Scientists say they’re feeling the competition.
This gene causes obesity — and shields against heart disease People with certain forms of the MC4R gene have lower cholesterol levels than do other individuals with a high body-mass index.
How emotional memories are engraved on the brain, with surprising helper cells Astrocytes have a more active role in stabilizing memories than once thought.
The US and Europe have cut billions in health aid — can anyone fill the gap? news | 16 Oct 2025
Mysterious cosmic ‘dots’ are baffling astronomers. What are they? news | 15 Oct 2025
The quest to make babies with lab-grown eggs and sperm news feature | 15 Oct 2025
AI bots wrote and reviewed all papers at this conference news | 14 Oct 2025
How journals can break down barriers for Latin American scientists Mariana Viglino world view | 15 Oct 2025
Men’s brains shrink faster than women’s: what that means for Alzheimer’s Women’s brains age more slowly, but that doesn’t seem to protect them from a common form of dementia.
The problem with career planning in science Having too rigid a plan could result in exciting opportunities passing you by, warns Ottoline Leyser.
New bird flu vaccine could tackle multiple variants with one shot NATURE PODCAST | 15 OCT 2025
Scientists lose jobs and grants as US government shutdown takes a toll NEWS | 15 OCT 2025
Faulty mitochondria cause deadly diseases: fixing them is about to get a lot easier NEWS FEATURE | 14 OCT 2025
Japan declares a flu epidemic — what this means for other nations NEWS | 14 OCT 2025
Stop treating code like an afterthought: record, share and value it Scientists, research institutions, funders, libraries and publishers must all improve software practices.
Inside our university’s mission to pivot to research Doreen Ramogola-Masire world view
Carbon credits are failing to help with climate change — here’s why comment
The spectre of malnutrition is back and must be tackled — fast Editorial
UNESCO stands at a crossroads — researchers must back its new leader Editorial
Faulty mitochondria cause deadly diseases: fixing them is about to get a lot easier News Feature
Ion stencils used for synthesis of patchy nanoparticles News & Views
Efficient quantum thermal simulation Article
Integrated lithium niobate photonics for sub-ångström snapshot spectroscopy Article
Do rats double-dip food with their tails? Nature’s pages feature evidence that rodents reach refreshment through wily means, and a review of a book that celebrates everything honey.
Using heat to power up molecular systems research briefings
Ion stencils used for synthesis of patchy nanoparticles news and views
Birds’ intruder alert hints at how sounds took on new meanings news and views
Tracing the ancestry of barley in time and space research briefings
27 things we wish we’d known when we started our PhDs Nature’s survey of PhD candidates reveals hard-won wisdom on choosing supervisors, managing mental health and surviving academic culture.
Time-resolved fluorescent proteins expand the microscopy palette technology feature
Defending Ohuira Bay, Mexico where i work
The race to uncover snow’s many mysteries before it disappears forever Historian brings icy climate warnings and warm personal memories. book review
Violin therapy: Books in brief Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.
Warning signs futures
The year of the Ghost Ant futures
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