Friday, February 13

Science

Apple to Hide Selfie Camera Under Display of 20th Anniversary iPhone
Science

Apple to Hide Selfie Camera Under Display of 20th Anniversary iPhone

Apple will conceal the front-facing camera under the screen of its 2027 iPhone, a Chinese leaker said today, corroborating reports that Apple's 20th anniversary iPhone will have no visible cutouts in the display. Weibo-based account Digital Chat Station said Apple's development of under-screen camera technology was progressing as planned for adoption in 2027, one year after it will reportedly debut under-screen Face ID technology on iPhone 18 Pro models. Several Android phones already feature under-display selfie cameras, but image quality typically suffers due to the lens being behind display layers. Apple has likely resisted adoption for this reason, but the company has reportedly been working on its own solution for some time, and we could see it debut as soon as next year in Apple's fi...
Latest science news: Mysterious Andean holes | Superbug breakthrough | COP30 updates
Science

Latest science news: Mysterious Andean holes | Superbug breakthrough | COP30 updates

Refresh 2025-11-10T12:59:20.365Z Monkey business is closed A rhesus macaque phographed in India. (Image credit: McDonald Wildlife Photography Inc. via Getty Images) Two weeks ago, Patrick covered news of several lab monkeys that escaped from an overturned truck in Mississippi that were allegedly diseased and dangerous. On Friday night, we finally got news that the last of these monkeys has been tracked down, following a report from a resident whose dog alerted her to its presence.Five of the escaped rhesus macaques were sadly killed by police, yet authorities say that this monkey was "successfully recovered." 2025-11-10T12:58:23.653Z Good COP, bad COP Brazil's COP30 summit gets underway this week. It's efficacy is more uncertain than ever. (Image credit: Shutterstock)Good morn...
Latest Samsung Galaxy S26 series report brings all good news on two different fronts
Science

Latest Samsung Galaxy S26 series report brings all good news on two different fronts

Perhaps more than any of their forerunners, the Galaxy S26, S26 Plus, and S26 Ultra remain covered in secrecy from numerous key standpoints with just a few months ahead of their official announcement. But at least according to a new Korean media report (translated here), Samsung may have finally clarified some of the last uncertainties surrounding the company's "next big things"... in all the best ways.Expect Unpacked movement "as early as late January"Yes, it appears all those rumors of a March 2026 launch for the Galaxy S26 trio were greatly exaggerated, as a "late January" unveiling is now purportedly on the table, followed by a commercial debut (presumably, around the world) in "mid-February." The S2...
Arc Raiders adds new map conditions to mix things up, including a mysterious bunker with an unsolved puzzle
Science

Arc Raiders adds new map conditions to mix things up, including a mysterious bunker with an unsolved puzzle

Arc Raiders has received a selection of new map conditions that are mixing up the typical experience significantly for players. As part of these new conditions, an underground bunker on Spaceport has been introduced, with a mysterious puzzle that still appears unsolved. First introduced over the weekend the three major map condition additions are night raids for Blue Gate, Electromagnetic Storms (across Dam Battleground, Spaceport, and Blue Gate), plus the Hidden Bunker on Spaceport. You can also now see the Harvester event on the Blue Gate map, which previously was locked to Dam Battlegrounds. Now, all of these are cool, but the Hidden Bunker is the particularly intriguing one. This event requires several antennas to be turned on across the map by players, which in turn opens doors in the...
Aja Gabel’s new novel, ‘Lightbreakers,’ explores the intersection of art and science
Science

Aja Gabel’s new novel, ‘Lightbreakers,’ explores the intersection of art and science

Aja Gabel’s 2018 debut novel, The Ensemble, chronicled four young orchestra performers navigating the cutthroat world of classical music. Her new novel returns to the realm of fine arts, but this time fuses art and science in a fantastical story that explores time travel and the mysteries of the universe. Lightbreakers opens with a young couple who find each other in the wake of devastating loss. Noah is a quantum ...
Windows 11 26H1 Focuses on New Silicon Support, Not New Features
Science

Windows 11 26H1 Focuses on New Silicon Support, Not New Features

Microsoft has released a new Windows 11 26H1 preview build for Windows Insiders, named Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 28000. Contrary to expectations of significant UI and functionality changes, the upcoming Windows 26H1 update is primarily focused on supporting the latest silicon, likely from Qualcomm and NVIDIA. According to Microsoft on its Windows Blog, "26H1 is not a feature update for version 25H2 and only includes platform changes to support specific silicon. There is no action required from customers." This means that future 26H1 users will receive minor OS improvements and general bug fixes, with no major changes to the system's core.Microsoft is focusing on providing full support for the new Windows-on-Arm platforms, which are expected to be released soon. These platforms inclu...
The strange science behind cat cuteness
Science

The strange science behind cat cuteness

Cuteness, it would seem, is one of life’s most endearing evolutionary strategies – and one that felines have hijacked to remarkable levels. For cat lovers, our furry feline friends are akin to our closest companions, and this is reflected in our neurobiology: being close to them triggers activity in the same emotion-processing region of the brain. Even when we’re not sharing precious moments in real life, we merely have to turn to our phones to get our fix. Cats, after all, do the funniest things. But what is it about them that we find so adorable? Topics: Source link
Scientists Discover “Gyromorphs” for Light-Based Computing
Science

Scientists Discover “Gyromorphs” for Light-Based Computing

In the Physical Review Letters work, the NYU researchers created “metamaterials,” which are engineered materials with properties stemming from their structure rather than their chemical nature. However, a challenge in creating metamaterials is first understanding how their structure gives rise to physical properties of interest.To address these challenges, the scientists developed an algorithm to design disordered structures that were functional. In doing so, they discovered a novel form of “correlated disorder”—materials that are neither fully disordered nor fully ordered.“Think of trees in a forest—they grow at random positions, but not completely random because they’re usually a certain distance from one another,” explains Martiniani. “This new pattern, gyromorphs, combines properties t...
Have They Found A Complete UNIX V4?
Science

Have They Found A Complete UNIX V4?

If you’ve ever combed boxes of old tech detritus in search of a nugget of pure gold, we know you’ll appreciate the excitement of discovering, in a dusty University of Utah storeroom, a tape labelled “UNIX Original from Bell Labs V4 (See manual for format)”. If the tape contains what’s promised on the label, this is a missing piece of computer history, because no complete copies of this version are known to exist. The tape will be delivered by hand to the Computer History Museum, where we hope its contents will be safely retrieved for archive and analysis. The reporter of the find, research professor [Rob Ricci], identifies the handwriting as that of Jay Lepreau, someone whose word on which UNIX version it contained could, we hope, be trusted. So if you happen to have a handy PDP-11 in you...