Updated : 07/01/2026
 
Science

Daily Telegraph
07/01/2026 10:50:49 PM
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Musk’s Grok AI undresses women without their consent
The best Android smartphones of 2026, tested by a tech expert
Octopus tech arm valued at $9bn ahead of spin off
Trump’s ‘Golden Fleet’ battleship plan is bold, but looks like a disaster waiting to happen
The Silent Service are out there somewhere, and that’s why we can enjoy Christmas in peace
Man now worships the machine
The West has woken up to China’s threat far too late
AI is a bubble fit to burst, but it will still change the world
Facebook to charge people to post links
The world is in the grip of AI mania. The consequences could be devastating
Finding your iPhone buggier than ever? You’re not the only one
Britain in danger of outsourcing its intellect, warns AI pioneer
Beware the debt bomb waiting to bring down AI’s house of cards
The best MacBooks, tested by an Apple expert
The 6 best sat navs and navigation systems for getting from A to B
The 14 best Bluetooth speakers, recommended by experts and tested at home and outdoors
The best gaming monitors, tried and tested for PC and PS5
If I had a teenager, I’d rather they were addicted to smoking than scrolling
China’s Nvidia rival jumps 500pc on stock market debut
Apple AI chief to step down in wake of Siri failure
Britain’s fintech crown is slipping
Billionaire Revolut founder abandons Britain for UAE
Revolut vows to invest £3bn in UK as it hunts banking licence
The tech bro plan to cut the price of Britain’s electricity
Entrepreneurs rush to sell in race to beat Labour’s tax raid
Revolut boss backs energy start-up in $70m deal
Slower, fatter and sadder: computing has an obesity crisis
AI bubble fears drive foreign cash into UK stock market
British tech company considers China split
Teenager died of overdose ‘after ChatGPT coached him on drug-taking’
Vote Leave-linked AI firm sold in £740m deal
Labour tells Musk to stop Grok making ‘appalling’ deepfakes
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 7 best gaming chairs of 2026, tried and tested
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
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Scientific American
07/01/2026 10:50:31 PM
Public HealthJanuary 6, 2026This Year’s Flu Season Just Surpassed a Grim New Record
Astronomers May Have Unlocked the Reason for Betelgeuse’s Bizarre Dimming
Scientists Just Moved the South Pole. Here’s Why
U.S. Axes Number of Recommended Childhood Vaccines in Blow to Public Health
Wegovy Weight-Loss Pills Are Now Available in the U.S.—Here’s What That Means
Starless ‘Failed Galaxy’ Is First of Its Kind Ever Seen
At CES 2026, AI Leaves the Screen and Enters the Real World
Congress Proposes Strong Science Funding for 2026
These Orcas Are on the Brink—And So Is the Science That Could Save Them
Mysterious Bright Flashes in the Night Sky Baffle Astronomers
Meet Your Future Robot Servants, Caregivers and Explorers
A Distorted Mind-Body Connection May Explain Common Mental Illnesses
Rising Temperatures Could Trigger a Reptile Sexpocalypse
Heart and Kidney Diseases and Type 2 Diabetes May Be One Ailment
Mathematicians Discover a New Kind of Shape That’s All over Nature
Mathematicians’ Favorite Shapes Hold the Key to Big Mathematical Mysteries
How Squishy Math Is Revealing Doughnuts in the Brain
Babies Are Born with an Innate Number Sense
Citizens’ Assemblies Are Upgrading Democracy: Fair Algorithms Are Part of the Program
Inside Mathematicians’ Search for the Mysterious ‘Einstein Tile’
PharmaceuticalsJanuary 5, 2026Wegovy Weight-Loss Pills Are Now Available in the U.S.—Here’s What That Means
Science in ImagesJanuary 5, 2026Why Does Life Keep Evolving These Geometric Patterns?
Public HealthDecember 16, 2025Harsh Flu Season May Be Driven by New Variant K
VaccinesJanuary 5, 2026U.S. Axes Number of Recommended Childhood Vaccines in Blow to Public Health
PaleontologyJanuary 2, 2026Earliest Human Ancestor May Have Walked on Two Legs
ChemistryAugust 1, 2019How to Make Elephant Toothpaste

BBC
08/11/2025 05:50:14 AM
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Buried treasures threatened by climate change
Toxic 'forever chemicals' found in British otters
'Fragile win' at COP26 climate summit under threat
False banana offers hope for warming world
'Megaberg' dumped huge volume of fresh water
Musk's SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon
James Webb telescope reaches final position
Radar satellite's stunning map of UK and Ireland
Nasa fixes megarocket equipment glitch
Satellites key to understanding Pacific volcano
What is the quantum apocalypse?
US lab takes further step towards fusion goal
Should bad science be censored on social media?
How zoo vets are battling a deadly elephant virus
The illegal Brazilian gold you may be wearing
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Power restored to all but 700 homes after storms
Insulate Britain activists jailed over M25 protest
Rats to be removed from Round Island in Scilly
EU moves to label nuclear and gas as sustainable
New Jurassic fossil find on 'Dinosaur Coast' beach
Walking and cycling face losing out in TfL cuts
Search for survivors after deadly Ecuador landslide
Climate group protests in Royal Courts of Justice
'I'm not afraid of a big pile of waste'
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s

New Scientist

07/01/2026 10:50:30 PM
TechnologyA strange kind of quantumness may be key to quantum computers' successNews
PhysicsGhostly particles might just break our understanding of the universeNews
HumansWas our earliest ancestor a knuckle-dragger, or did it walk upright?News
SpaceGargantuan black hole may be a remnant from the dawn of the universeNews
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Nature
07/01/2026 10:50:35 PM
Explore articles by subject
Jellyfish sleep like humans — even though they don’t have brains Studying ancient sea creatures’ snoozing habits could shed light on the origins of sleep. news | 06 Jan 2026
Why cancer can come back years later — and how to stop it Researchers are targeting dormant tumour cells that might explain why some cancers reappear long after successful treatment.
Some of your cells are not genetically yours — what can they tell us about life and death? book review | 31 Dec 2025
Are we living in a parallel universe? The strange physics of Stranger Things news | 19 Dec 2025
Why academics should do more consulting — and how to make it work comment | 29 Dec 2025
The Nature Podcast highlights of 2025 nature podcast | 24 Dec 2025
Put pressure on publishers to follow best practice — external regulation is the answer Jennifer A. Byrne world view | 30 Dec 2025
Audio long read: Will blockbuster obesity drugs revolutionize addiction treatment? Researchers are investigating whether GLP-1 drugs can help blunt cravings for nicotine, alcohol and opioids.
The best science images of 2025 — Nature’s picks The Sun’s fiery surface, a tattooed tardigrade, rare red lightning and more.
Nature's News & Views roundup of 2025 NATURE PODCAST | 19 DEC 2025
AI and quantum science take centre stage under Trump — but with little new proposed funding NEWS | 19 DEC 2025
Science in 2026: the events to watch for in the coming year NEWS | 18 DEC 2025
The Nature Podcast festive spectacular 2025 NATURE PODCAST | 17 DEC 2025
Defossilize our chemical world Achieving net zero means eliminating fossil fuels, not carbon — the chemical element has a crucial part to play in powering the modern world. editorial
Let 2026 be the year the world comes together for AI safety AI technologies need to be safe and transparent. There are few, if any, benefits from being outside efforts to achieve this.
Why academics should do more consulting — and how to make it work Encouraging academics to act as advisers to outside organizations is the most effective way to serve society’s needs.
US–Africa bilateral health deals won’t help against diseases that ignore borders Paul Adepoju world view
How my institution strengthened research despite chronic underfunding Anil Shanker world view
Let 2026 be the year the world comes together for AI safety Editorial
Science in 2050: the future breakthroughs that will shape our world — and beyond News Feature
How to reduce the environmental impact of wearable health-care devices News & Views
A fault-tolerant neutral-atom architecture for universal quantum computation Article
A chiral fermionic valve driven by quantum geometry Article
The poetic life and death of a glow-worm news and views
Artificial skin mimics the octopus’s art of disguise news and views
Can boomerangs bounce? news and views
Dogma-defying signalling through G proteins could lead to better pain relief news and views
I see Mozambique’s baboons as windows into hominid evolution In Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique, Rassina Farassi studies how humans came to walk on two legs.
Seeding opportunities for Black atmospheric scientists career q&a
Point of no returns: researchers are crossing a threshold in the fight for funding career column
These women helped to shape quantum mechanics — it’s time to recognize them An astute book redresses our collective perception of a field that became known as ‘boys’ physics’. book review
Mummies give up their secrets — but not their mystery A challenging exhibition asks why we are so fascinated with the preserved bodies of our ancestors, and how we should treat them.
Safe as houses futures
Living water and whispering rocks: Books in brief book review