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As Trump buyouts shake offshore wind industry, states hope developers stay in the game

President Donald Trump has shown the immense power of the executive branch to stymie offshore wind development, as nearly all projects are in waters where federal agencies operate as the landlord.

Now, as the feds block new permits and dangle billion-dollar buyout offers to convince developers to walk away from their projects, state leaders are...Read more

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Tech review: For your consideration -- several cool new gadgets

I’m lucky that I get to review lots of cool new gadgets, both big and small.

Larger or more complex things usually have enough going on that they take up all the writing space I am assigned, but sometimes I accumulate smaller or simpler gadgets, and I’ve learned to group those together.

This week we are looking at a few smaller gadgets.

...Read more

Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune/TNS

Mild earthquake reported in Lake Michigan off the shore of northern suburbs, officials say

A mild earthquake occurred off the shore of the northern suburbs Wednesday afternoon, officials said.

A 2.9 earthquake was recorded in Lake Michigan near the Illinois-Wisconsin border at around 2:38 p.m., the United States Geological Survey reported.

The earthquake, which stretched about 3.1 miles deep, took place 13.8 miles northeast of ...Read more

Alie Skowronski/Miami Herald/TNS

As sea temperatures rise in the Florida Keys, coral evacuation has begun

The warning bells are ringing for another potentially killer season for Florida’s beleaguered coral reefs, sending reef restoration companies scrambling to protect their brood.

While the atmospheric phenomena of El Niño is linked to a quieter hurricane season this year, it’s also cranking the thermostat on Florida’s waters. That’s bad ...Read more

Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel/TNS

Artemis II astronauts return to Florida for 1st time since historic launch

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last time the four astronauts of Artemis II were together in Florida, they were taking a ride on the most powerful rocket to ever launch humans into space.

The quartet of NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, as well as the Canadian Space Agency’s Jeremy Hansen, returned to the launch site ...Read more

Caleb Townsend/Baltimore Sun/TNS

Baltimore's Inner Harbor sees another wave of dead fish turn up

BALTIMORE — Walking around Fells Point this week, Baltimore residents were greeted by the stench of rotting fish and sulfur as dead fish floated in the Inner Harbor in what has become a yearly trend.

These “fish kills” have been happening with increasing regularity. In a similar event last August, roughly 120,000 fish turned up dead in ...Read more

Henry Payne/The Detroit News/The Detroit News/TNS

Q&A: Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe on how AI will transform autos

PARK CITY, Utah — If the early 20th-century auto revolution was sparked in Detroit by entrepreneurs like Ford, Dodge, and Sloan, the early 21st century has brought a new, digital auto revolution on America’s West Coast right out of a science fiction novel.

At its forefront are entrepreneurs like Sergei Brin of Google, Tesla’s Elon Musk, ...Read more

Darin Oswald/Idaho Statesman/TNS

Semiconductor worker shortfall endangers US chip factory revival

A growing nationwide shortage of high-skilled workers threatens to delay construction of billions of dollars in new semiconductor plants across the US and constrain future chip production unless the industry pools resources and the government keeps up funding, according to a new report.

The deficit is expected to be most acute in states such as...Read more

The activity of tiny microbes in and around the roots of crops such as soybeans are valuable for their growth. Oleh Malshakov/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Fertilizers carry a hidden cost for soil’s crucial microbes – using less as prices rise might pay off for farms in unexpected ways

Across North America, in places such as Illinois, Iowa and Texas, farmers are busy growing the crops the world depends on for food, fuel and fiber.

But as their tractors roll across fields, a pressing concern weighs heavily on many farmers: the rising cost of synthetic fertilizers, widely considered essential for crop production.

...Read more

Does that look tasty? SKashkin/iStock / Getty Images Plus

Beyond birds and mice, free-ranging cats eat a surprising number of insects

It’s pretty commonly known, and not very startling, that free-ranging cats eat birds and small rodents. But the degree to which they eat insects might surprise you.

We are biologists who for many years have been trying to figure out what feral or outdoor-roaming pet cats eat outside.

When domesticated cats – Felis catus �...Read more

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Study examines whether low dopamine levels are tied to teen substance use

PITTSBURGH -- What makes some teenagers more likely to experiment with drugs and alcohol? A new study from Pitt theorizes that one factor may be tied to their levels of dopamine, also known as “the pleasure chemical.”

The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, analyzed a massive data set that followed substance use levels in...Read more

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Gadgets: Smart thermostat

Upgrading from a basic thermostat to a smart thermostat offers many advantages, with the most significant being long-term energy savings. By optimizing your heating and cooling system, a smart thermostat can often pay for itself through lower utility bills. In addition, you can control your thermostat remotely from your smartphone; many models...Read more

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Jim Rossman: Recycling your old PC? I’d keep the hard drive

This week my question comes from my own family. I had a text exchange with my brother-in-law who wrote, “We have at least one laptop that is broken, but we have information on it. What do we do?”

They actually had two old laptops, and they want to take them in for recycling. He was right to ask what to do about the information on the old ...Read more

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The 7 best video games of 2026 so far

Rockstar has started taking preorders for “Grand Theft Auto VI,” but the game is still months away from its Nov. 19 launch. In the meantime, the ridiculously hyped title has warped the video game calendar.

That’s what 13 years between sequels does to an industry and fanbase. The demand has generated its own undeniable gravity, and ...Read more

Joel Angel Juarez/Getty Images North America/TNS

Deadly screwworm's leap into the US mystifies health experts

As the deadly New World screwworm spreads through Texas, posing significant risk to the U.S. cattle herd, experts are still puzzling over the mystery of how it got there.

The parasite fly’s larvae, which feeds within the wounds of warm-blooded animals, was first detected in a calf in Zavala County at the start of last month, marking the first...Read more

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Zoom to buy Seattle AI startup

Zoom, the San Jose, California-based company known for its video conferencing platform, has agreed to purchase a Seattle startup as it tries to position itself as an artificial intelligence-powered workplace.

Four Seattle-area tech workers founded the startup, called Common Room, in 2020. The company offers a sales and marketing platform that ...Read more

Christina House/Los Angeles Times/TNS

Environmental justice group sues California over carbon market overhaul

LOS ANGELES — An environmental justice group is suing California’s top air regulator over its sweeping overhaul of the state’s cap-and-invest carbon market program, claiming it illegally rushed a last-minute incentive for industrial polluters.

The lawsuit from the nonprofit Communities for a Better Environment alleges that the California ...Read more

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Microsoft replaces OpenAI, Anthropic with own AI in some apps

Microsoft Corp., looking to reduce AI costs, is starting to replace OpenAI and Anthropic with its own models in software products like Excel and Outlook.

Tens of thousands of AI prompts in the widely used spreadsheet and email applications are now being completed each week with Microsoft’s internally built MAI models, according to a person ...Read more

Sydney Rohde/NASA/TNS

NASA's Roman Space Telescope gets vertical at Kennedy Space Center

NASA’s $4.3 billion Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope has risen from its horizontal slumber at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, ahead of its planned launch next month.

The planet hunter, which will seek to unravel the mysteries of dark energy in the universe with infrared sensing, had made the trip to KSC in June from NASA’s...Read more

Hidden in the water is a wealth of genetic information. Jenny Whilde, CC BY-ND

Fishing for DNA – how a cup of river water can reveal secrets about human health, pollution and biodiversity

The DNA in a single cup of water can track wildlife, monitor pollution and survey pathogens in waterways and their surroundings, all at the same time.

DNA is contained in each cell of every plant, animal, fungus and microbe. It carries the genetic instructions needed for an organism’s survival, growth and function, and the DNA of ...Read more