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News Image We owe it to future generations to shape a safer tomorrow, UN chief says on International Day

The UN Secretary-General has stressed the vital role of education in protecting children and empowering them to build a disaster-resilient future.

Education Read on UN News
News Image Now we can all wake up like Mario

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 56, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, so psyched you found us, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) This week, I’ve been reading about Bill Lawrence’s TV shows and the massively powerful crypto lobby and the wild world of plankton, listening to Ed Helms narrate the excellent Snafu podcast, playing an alarming amount of both Balatro and Retro Goal, trying to get back in the habit of making overnight oats, and taking every single one of my phone calls with the excellent mic on the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. I also have for you the coolest alarm clock I can remember, a splashy new Bitcoin documentary, a new...

Entertainment Read on The Verge Tech
How a medtech market opportunity is shaping up for wearable neurotech

When you think of brain stimulating medtech, startups building wearables as therapeutics probably aren’t the first thing that springs to mind. Such tech is still flying fairly under the radar — perhaps, in part, because these sorts of companies have raised a fraction of the investment that’s been ploughed into invasive technologies for targeting treatments […]

Health Read on TechCrunch
News Image UN chief calls for safety of peacekeepers after IDF breaches UN position in Lebanon

The UN Secretary-General on Sunday reiterated that the safety and security of UN personnel and property must be guaranteed, following the deliberate breach of a UN peacekeeping position by Israel Defense Forces (IDF) armored vehicles in southern Lebanon.

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image The Galaxy Z Fold 6 is Priced at $399 Instead Of $1,899: How to Save 80% on Samsung’s Foldable Phone

Just four months post-launch, the outstanding Galaxy Z Fold 6 is now available at an unbelievable price.

Business Possible ad Read on Gizmodo
News Image 'Piece by Piece' Director Morgan Neville Will Never Use AI Again

Back in 2021, Morgan Neville thought using AI to recreate the late Anthony Bourdain’s voice would be an interesting Easter egg in his documentary. He ended up being a canary in Hollywood’s AI coal mine.

Entertainment Read on WIRED Culture
News Image Four Days After Prime Day, Amazon Slashes The Price Of AirPods Max To A Record Low

At less than $400, this Apple headset is an excellent bargain.

Business Possible ad Read on Gizmodo
Can walls of oysters protect shores against hurricanes? Darpa wants to know.

On October 10, 2018, Tyndall Air Force Base on the Gulf of Mexico—a pillar of American air superiority—found itself under aerial attack. Hurricane Michael, first spotted as a Category 2 storm off the Florida coast, unexpectedly hulked up to a Category 5. Sustained winds of 155 miles per hour whipped into the base, flinging power poles, flipping F-22s, and totaling more than 200 buildings. The sole saving grace: Despite sitting on a peninsula, Tyndall avoided flood damage. Michael’s 9- to 14-foot storm surge swamped other parts of Florida. Tyndall’s main defense was luck. That $5 billion disaster at Tyndall was just one of a mounting number of extreme-weather events that convinced the US Department of Defense that it needed new ideas to protect the 1,700 coastal bases it’s responsible for globally. As hurricanes Helene and Milton have just shown, beachfront residents face compounding threats from climate change, and the Pentagon is no exception. Rising oceans are chewing away the shore. Stronger storms are more capable of flooding land. In response, Tyndall will later this month test a new way to protect shorelines from intensified waves and storm surges: a prototype artificial reef, designed by a team led by Rutgers University scientists. The 50-meter-wide array, made up of three chevron-shaped structures each weighing about 46,000 pounds, can take 70 percent of the oomph out of waves, according to tests. But this isn’t your grandaddy’s seawall. It’s specifically designed to be colonized by oysters, some of nature’s most effective wave-killers. Read full article

Environment Read on Ars Technica
News Image SpaceX’s Dragon Capsule Can Now Land Like a Rocket in Case of an Emergency

The crew capsule was always designed to land propulsively, but NASA felt more comfortable using parachutes for its astronauts.

Politics Read on Gizmodo
Man found dead with multiple injuries in alley in Maassluis

On Saturday morning, a dead man was found in an alley near Asserdreef and Tinbergendreef in Maassluis.

Crime and Courts Read on NL Times
News Image Cells From Different Species Can Exchange ‘Text Messages’ Using RNA

Long known as a messenger within cells, RNA is increasingly seen as life’s molecular communication system—even between organisms widely separated by evolution.

Environment Read on WIRED Science
Supermarkets out of water bottles in Limburg due to fecal bacteria in water pipes

Bottled water is sold out in several stores in the north of Limburg. An ANP reporter in Horst aan de Maas, a municipality not far from Venlo, found empty shelves. E.

Environment Read on NL Times