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Новости за 16.01.2025

Report: Jaguars interview Bucs OC Liam Coen for head coach

BigNewsNetwork.com (sports) 

(Photo credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images) The Jacksonville Jaguars are interviewing Tampa Bay offensive coordinator Liam Coen for their head coaching vacancy on Wednesday, the NFL Network reported. The team is searching for a replacement for Doug Pederson, who was fired on Jan. 6 after the Jaguars finished 4-13 in his third season with the club. Coen, 39, just completed his first season with the Buccaneers, who w

Report: Will Friend set to be offensive line coach at North Carolina

BigNewsNetwork.com (sports) 

(Photo credit: Jake Crandall / USA TODAY NETWORK) Veteran SEC assistant coach Will Friend is finalizing a deal to join Bill Belicheck's staff at North Carolina as offensive line coach, ESPN's Pete Thamel reported Wednesday. Friend, 48, is coming off a year as offensive coordinator at Western Kentucky, where the Hilltoppers finished 26th nationally in passing yards per game (264.6). Friend has worked as the offensive lin

Gaza ceasefire deal – What we know

France24.com (en) 

A ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas has been reportedly agreed on, after a devastating 15 months of war in Gaza. The deal is divided into three different phases – we explain in this edition of Truth or Fake.

Pesticide impacts on bees more complex than expected

Sciencedaily.com 

A new study shows distinct effects of neonicotinoid pesticide exposure in different bumble bee body parts, explaining why pesticides have diverse harmful effects and highlighting the need for more sensitive safety testing. The study shows pervasive effects 'akin to aging or cancer',

Fresh, direct evidence for tiny drops of quark-gluon plasma

Sciencedaily.com 

A new analysis of data from the PHENIX experiment at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) reveals fresh evidence that collisions of even very small nuclei with large ones might create tiny specks of a quark-gluon plasma (QGP). Scientists believe such a substance of free quarks and gluons, the building blocks of protons and neutrons, permeated the universe a fraction of a second after the Big Bang.

A new optical memory platform for super fast calculations

Sciencedaily.com 

For decades there has been near constant progress in reducing the size, and increasing the performance, of the circuits that power computers and smartphones. But Moore's Law is ending as physical limitations -- such as the number of transistors that can fit on a chip and the heat that results from packing them ever more densely -- are slowing the rate of performance increases. Computing capacity is gradually plateauing, even as artificial intelligence, machine learning and other data-intensive applications... Читать дальше...

Pop-Up Coffee Stand Coming To Te Ngaengae Pool + Fitness

Scoop 

Lower Hutt Mayor Campbell Barry says Council and the Community Advisory Group for the project worked tirelessly to ensure Naenae got the best possible benefit from the large financial investment made in the pool and fitness centre.

Cilia's secrets revealed using connectome data

Sciencedaily.com 

By reexamining 3D images used to map the connections between brain cells, researchers are uncovering new information about a small, elusive, and often overlooked cellular appendage.

How improving education could close maternal heart health gaps

Sciencedaily.com 

Research has established a clear link between racial and ethnic disparities in maternal heart health and higher risks of preterm birth, preeclampsia and cardiovascular issues for Black and Hispanic mothers and their babies.

New research helps eliminate dead zones in desalination technology and beyond

Sciencedaily.com 

Engineers have found a way to eliminate the fluid flow 'dead zones' that plague the types of electrodes used for battery-based seawater desalination. The new technique uses a physics-based tapered flow channel design within electrodes that moves fluids quickly and efficiently, potentially requiring less energy than reverse osmosis techniques currently require.

Mosquitoes can be extra-bitey in droughts

Sciencedaily.com 

Mosquitoes can survive prolonged droughts by drinking blood, which helps to explain why rates of mosquito-borne illness don't always decline in dry periods.