“When massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake shook Japan on March 11, 2011, the ground also made a more lasting move. About 15 minutes after the event began at 2:46 p.m. local time, nearly the entire country shifted eastward, according to GPS station measurements. The lurch was small — 5 to 6 millimeters, or 0.20 to 0.24 inches — but permanent and at the time went largely unnoticed or was passed off as a data glitch. However, University of Chicago geophysicist Sunyoung Park felt the recorded signals that indicated a shift pointed to something tangible. In fact, the ground movement reflected an ‘extraordinary’ and previously undocumented seismic phenomenon, according to a new study.” | | You’re already paying subscriptions for your music, your movies, your cloud storage, your meditation app you opened twice, and approximately four things you forgot to cancel. Microsoft Office doesn’t need to be on that list. Office 2021 Professional gives you Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, Publisher, Access, and more — installed on your PC or Mac, licensed for life, with nothing due next month or ever. [Ad] | | “Consulting giant Accenture is trying to figure out how to stop non-technical workers from blowing through companies’ AI token budget on trivial tasks like converting PDFs to presentation slides, according to leaked audio obtained by 404 Media. Across the industry Accenture is seeing ‘soaring token spend,’ according to the audio. The news highlights a major shift in the tech industry and other companies that use AI: the wave of uninhibited AI growth is over. Some AI providers like GitHub are now charging customers per token rather than a flat subscription fee, leading some companies to burn through their tokens. Uber recently capped employees’ use of AI tools like Claude Code and Cursor; that came after Uber told employees to use AI as much as possible, and Uber’s CTO said the company had blown its entire AI budget in four months. And Accenture itself reportedly started requiring senior staff to start using AI or risk losing out on promotions. It also undercuts the narrative that superpowered engineers generating mountains of code are behind the AI boom. In many cases, it is non-technical staff burning through tokens for non-specialized tasks.” | | “Around 300,000 years ago, a cave in South Africa became the final resting place of at least 20 human cousins from the ancient species Homo naledi. Today, researchers have determined that all of those individuals appear to be missing a Y chromosome — the telltale genetic marker for males — and are likely female. Using a new method for sampling ancient teeth, the team was able to collect chemical clues about the sex of each skeleton without destroying it. The technique has the potential to ‘transform paleontology for several decades…’” P.S. — Share your email when prompted to read this article. | | Koofr stores your files without tracking you — a concept that feels almost radical in 2026. Everything is encrypted at rest and in transit, there are no ads, no data mining, and absolutely no algorithm quietly cataloging your folder named “taxes_maybe_final.” You get a full 1TB for a one-time payment of $130, unlimited device access, and the ability to connect your existing Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive accounts so all your stuff lives in one place that actually respects your privacy. It’s European-built, independently run, and not interested in monetizing your file names. Use code KOOFR to save. [Ad] | | “I’ve had screen-time limits on my iPhone for years, allowing me 30 minutes on social media each day. How many times have I dismissed the limit notification and continued watching mindless Reels? I’d be horrified to find out. It turns out that all along, what I needed was a $59 hunk of grey plastic (self-discipline would have been more affordable, but it was out of stock). The Brick (now $49 for Prime Day) — a magnetic, matchbox-sized gadget — has accomplished what no screen-time app has ever achieved. It actually got me to use my phone less and improve my sleep habits.” | |
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