August 24, 2025
FreshHive.ca

Key Legal - Visit KeyLegal.ca to speak to an Online Lawyer in Ontario

  • Business
  • Cars
  • Entertainment
  • Family
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Health
  • Internet
  • Pets Health
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Work and Careers
HomeAuthorsPhys.org

Articles by Phys.org

Phys.org - Social Sciences

The costs and benefits of angling to be the boss’s favorite: Study

Phys.org

There’s a moment in the American sitcom The Office when Michael Scott, the paper-company branch manager played by Steve Carell, explains how he wants employees to treat him: “I don’t want somebody sucking up to […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

Mindfulness is gaining traction in American schools, but it isn’t clear what students are learning

Phys.org

Writing, reading, math and mindfulness? That last subject is increasingly joining the three classic courses, as more young students in the United States are practicing mindfulness, meaning focusing on paying attention to the present moment […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

How the art of Chinese calligraphy can bring creative freedom in the age of AI

Phys.org

Many of us would struggle to recall the last time we wrote anything substantial by hand. Digital devices often feel more convenient and efficient. But research shows that the intricate motor skills and visual processing […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

Parents reported higher rates of infidelity than non-parents during pandemic, survey finds

Phys.org

In a survey study of more than 1,000 U.S. adults who were in committed, heterosexual relationships during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, parents were more likely than non-parents to report an increased desire […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Back to the basics: Minimal genomes yield viable plants for biotech applications

Phys.org

Ancient events in plant evolution have left behind large, duplicated regions in their genomes. Salk Institute scientists found that deleting these large blocks of DNA can still lead to normal plants. The findings demonstrate that […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

New pesticides provide challenging alternatives to neonicotinoids

Phys.org

New Cornell research offers alternatives to a class of insecticides that has devastating ecological impacts, especially to pollinators, beneficial insects and aquatic invertebrates. A paper published online in Crop Protection on August 5 examines a […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

‘Controlled evolution’ dramatically boosts plasmid DNA production for biomedical manufacturing

Phys.org

Researchers have controlled the evolution of E. coli bacteria in the lab in order to dramatically increase the amount of plasmid DNA (pDNA) these modified bacteria produce. The advance is significant because pDNA is an […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Laser therapy boosts effectiveness of antifungal drugs against resistant Candida

Phys.org

Researchers at the Optics and Photonics Research Center (CePOF) have succeeded in increasing the susceptibility of the fungus Candida albicans to drug treatment through light-activated therapy. The results of the study offer a promising alternative […]

Phys.org - Space

Sunlight-powered floating structures offer a new window into Earth’s upper atmosphere

Phys.org

Between 50 and 100 kilometers (30–60 miles) above the Earth’s surface lies a largely unstudied stretch of the atmosphere, called the mesosphere. It’s too high for airplanes and weather balloons, too low for satellites, and […]

Phys.org - Automotive

What’s the cheapest way to charge your EV?

Phys.org

You’ll pay substantially less to charge an electric vehicle (EV) than if you were refueling a petrol car to go the same distance.This post was originally published on this site

Posts pagination

« 1 … 14 15 16 … 120 »

Fresh Picks:

  • Reusable containers aren’t always better for the environment than disposable ones – new research
  • Junk food and the brain: How modern diets lacking in micronutrients may contribute to angry rhetoric
  • Air filters can scrub out pollutants near highways, reduce blood pressure
  • Swimming gives your brain a boost – but scientists don’t know yet why it’s better than other aerobic activities
  • Canada must eliminate food banks and provide a basic income after COVID-19
  • 4 ways that volunteering can be good for you

Popular Stories:

  • Google to provide Gemini AI tools to US government
  • Tesla is slow in reporting crashes and the feds have launched an investigation to find out why
  • Grandparenting from a distance: What’s lost when families are separated, and how to bridge the gap
  • How NASA’s Artemis II lunar science operations will inform future missions
  • SpaceX to launch secret X-37B space plane Thursday
More Fresh Tech Headlines:
  • AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns
  • AI porn victims see Hong Kong unprepared for threat
  • New Instagram location sharing feature sparks privacy fears
  • OpenAI releases ChatGPT-5 as AI race accelerates
  • Berserkers to bigfoot: Computational folklore explained in 101 seconds
More Fresh Business Headlines:
  • Cisco Systems, Oracle trim 300-plus Bay Area jobs in new layoffs
  • PlayStation prices rise as US tariffs bite
  • Google’s Pixel 10 phones raises the ante on artificial intelligence
  • HydroBoost: Increasing hydropower revenue with realistic forecasting
  • Hype and western values are shaping AI reporting in Africa: What needs to change
Talk To Us:

TERMS OF USE

PRIVACY POLICY

CONTACT US

© 2024 FreshHive.ca - Lifestyle News. Served Fresh.