In 2001, the Bush Administration killed a program that gave security-cleared scientists access to highly detailed satellite images and other information gathered by the intelligence community. Now scientists and spies are re-starting the collaboration, mostly using the data for environmental and climate research. Naturally, this infuriates the sort of senators who dislike science and like to find things to be infuriated about.
Spy satellites for science
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A satellite has been jamming GPS over Europe
For years, GPS receivers scattered across Europe — from Svalbard to Spain — kept registering the same brief, total signal blackout at the exact same instant, in bursts of three… READ THE REST
New solar-power desalination device leaves no brine
University of Rochester researchers have built a solar-powered desalination device that doesn't leave behind brine — the concentrated saltwater that conventional plants dump back into the ocean, where it raises… READ THE REST
Why autism symptoms can ease during a fever — and how to mimic it
Parents and caregivers have long reported that when some autistic people run a fever from an infection, their autism-related symptoms ease for a while. MIT and Harvard Medical School researchers,… READ THE REST
Save time on crafting prompts with your expert AI assistant, Prompting Systems at just $48 for life
Disclosure: Boing Boing earns a commission on purchases made through links in this post. TL;DR: Make your ideas come to life faster with a lifetime subscription to the Prompting Systems Silver Plan,… READ THE REST
ChatGPT Plus is $20/month—ChatOn packs in GPT, Claude & Gemini for 5 years for just $90.99
Disclosure: Boing Boing earns a commission on purchases made through links in this post. TL;DR: ChatOn bundles GPT, Claude, Gemini, Sonar, image generation, web search, and more into one app for $90.90… READ THE REST
Replace doomscrolling with smartscrolling—Headway lifetime subscriptions now just $70
Disclosure: Boing Boing earns a commission on purchases made through links in this post. TL;DR: Learn in your free time with a Headway lifetime subscription, now $69.99 (reg. $299.95). Books are long… READ THE REST