New Photos Allow Us To Figure Out How Solar Wind Works
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New Photos Allow Us To Figure Out How Solar Wind Works

Heard of solar wind? It’s a constant stream of ionized gas ejecting from the sun, becoming more turbulent and destructive the further away from the sun they get. It was discovered in 1958 and we still know very little about it. Thankfully, NASA’s at it again with the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) proving once and for all that silly abbreviations don’t just exist in fiction.

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Doctors Soundly Thrashed At Their Own Jobs By A Bit Of Software
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Doctors Soundly Thrashed At Their Own Jobs By A Bit Of Software

The medical profession is a beautiful thing. Medical professionals on the other hand are as fallible, nasty and downright pathetic as any other human being can be, and don’t let them pretend otherwise. On a related note, a machine learning algorithm developed by researchers at Stanford University has absolutely thrashed epidemiologists when it comes to diagnosing cancer.

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It is Now Hopelessness - Not Denial - That Keeps Climate Change Strong
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It is Now Hopelessness - Not Denial - That Keeps Climate Change Strong

Climate change is a big deal. And it’s not always comfortable to think about. In fact, this lack of willingness to touch such a scary topic is now possibly one of the biggest threats to positive change. A panel of researchers suggest that “neoskepticism” – believing climate change is real but not believing anything can be done about it – is now a huge problem that needs addressing.

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Incredible Breakthrough is Helping Paralyzed Patients Walk Again
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Incredible Breakthrough is Helping Paralyzed Patients Walk Again

The Walk Again Project in Sao Paula, Brazil, has met with even greater success than it ever imagined. Using a pioneering new technique in which they use a computer chip to link a patient’s brain with that of a metal exoskeleton, the scientists were hoping to train patients to walk the aid of the exoskeleton. Instead, their own nerves began to recover.

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Study: Why is Pokémon Go The Most Widespread Phenomenon Since The Bubonic Plague?
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Study: Why is Pokémon Go The Most Widespread Phenomenon Since The Bubonic Plague?

Pokémon Go has taken the world by storm, with now over 100 million downloads onto Android devices alone. It’s safe to say the Pokémania of the 90’s is seeing something of a revival, but why is that? Especially when Pokémon Go is, if we’re being honest with ourselves, a buggy, barebones mess? Prof. Dr. Claus-Peter H. Ernst of the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences may have the answer.

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Neanderthals died out because they didn't wear parkas
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Neanderthals died out because they didn't wear parkas

Neanderthals were our evolutionary cousins, so to speak. In prehistoric times, we lived together side by side, before the Neanderthals disappeared and only Homo sapiens (that’s us) remained. But why? Researchers at the Simon Fraser University in Canada may have found the answer. Neanderthals may have died out due to a failure to wear parkas.

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NASA to launch a probe to study an asteroid on a direct collision course with Earth
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NASA to launch a probe to study an asteroid on a direct collision course with Earth

The asteroid Bennu is on a direct collision course for Earth! Luckily, it’s not due to strike for another century or so, but that’s still a problem that’ll be upon us all too soon. You know how time flies. Realizing this, NASA are all set to launch a probe at the incoming asteroid so we at least know a bit more about the thing that will eventually kill us.

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"Uber" and other ridesharing services do nothing to curb drunk driving deaths
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"Uber" and other ridesharing services do nothing to curb drunk driving deaths

You’ve probably heard of Uber by now. It’s like a taxi service except it’s way more expensive and it’s all over America. Despite their claims that their ubiquitous service is helping to reduce drunk driving deaths, all evidence indicates otherwise. Like most things in life, Uber looks to be a big overpriced load of nothing.

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