Tech
- NewsAssociated Press
Blind people can hear and feel April's total solar eclipse with new technology
While eclipse watchers look to the skies, people who are blind or visually impaired will be able to hear and feel the celestial event. “Eclipses are very beautiful things, and everyone should be able to experience it once in their lifetime,” said Yuki Hatch, a high school senior in Austin, Texas. Hatch is a visually impaired student and a space enthusiast who hopes to one day become a computer scientist for NASA.
3-min read - NewsThe Conversation
What is Volt Typhoon? A cybersecurity expert explains the Chinese hackers targeting US critical infrastructure
Chinese state-sponsored hackers are targeting critical infrastructure. Here’s what they’re doing, how the US government is responding and how you can help.
4-min read - BusinessBBC
Temu U-turns on terms of cash 'giveaway' offer
The retailer changes what it can do with customer data after privacy concerns were raised.
6-min read - NewsBBC
Cambridgeshire rewilding charity doubles original planting target
Creating Nature's Corridors will plant 3,400 trees and hedges at Huntingdon Racecourse over Easter.
2-min read - ScienceCover Media
VideoAstronomers May Have Solved the Mystery Surrounding Blue Supergiant Stars
'Newsweek' reports that astronomers now believe that some of the brightest and hottest stars in existence may be the result of collisions between two other stars. Scientists have long sought to determine how these intensely bright stars, known as blue supergiants, are formed.
- TechnologyEuronews
‘Reggaeton Be Gone’: This homemade machine silences neighbours' music using AI
Fed up with his neighbour playing reggaeton loudly, this Argentinian programmer decided to remedy the situation with an invention that has gone viral.
2-min read - SciencePA Media: Science
Scientists in breakthrough that could uncover hidden planets
They say it could also improve understanding of how the universe naturally expands.
2-min read