May 1, 2026
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 - Business

Tech companies are blaming massive layoffs on AI. What’s really going on?

Phys.org

In the past few months, a wave of tech corporations have announced significant staff cuts and attributed them to efficiency gains driven by artificial intelligence (AI).This post was originally published on this site

Phys.org - Business

Why harmful content keeps reaching children online, and what advertising has to do with it

Phys.org

Children today can encounter harmful material online with alarming ease, including violent, sexual and self-harm content. While this is often treated as a moderation failure, the deeper cause is economic.This post was originally published on […]

Phys.org - Automotive

Formula 1’s 2026 rules: New sustainability rules are changing the way races are won

Phys.org

The first races under Formula 1’s new regulations delivered exactly what the sport’s rule-makers had hoped for: more overtaking. At the recent Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne, passes on track nearly tripled compared with the […]

No Picture
Phys.org - Space

The first modern rocket launched 100 years ago, beginning a century of both innovations and challenges for spaceflight

Phys.org

Apollo 11 first landed astronauts on the moon in 1969, but the journey to the lunar surface actually began 43 years before, in snowy Massachusetts.This post was originally published on this site

Phys.org - Space

ISS study identifies thresholds for muscle atrophy and fiber changes in reduced gravity

Phys.org

It’s well known that spaceflight causes muscle atrophy and other biological changes in reduced gravity, and especially in near-zero gravity (microgravity) environments. However, the gravity threshold needed to maintain sufficient muscle health in space is […]

Phys.org - Automotive

Cargo ships willing to travel farther reach greater efficiency, tanker tracking shows

Phys.org

In shipping, efficiency is everything. Take the shortest (safe) route between two points. Offload cargo as quickly as possible to the person who will pay you the most. Pick up your next load as fast […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Turning mosquitoes into flying vaccine carriers to protect against bat-borne viruses

Phys.org

Bats are reservoirs for several zoonotic viruses, such as Ebola and coronaviruses. These pathogens can spread to humans through direct contact with the flying mammals or their bodily fluids, or indirectly through contaminated food and […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Computational model predicts telomere length from routine biopsy slide images

Phys.org

A new computational tool infers changes occurring at the ends of the chromosomes housing our DNA. It does so by detecting structural alterations in cells and tissues captured in images taken of routine medical biopsies, […]

Phys.org - Space

SpaceX and Reflect Orbital plans would ‘permanently scar’ night sky, researchers warn

Phys.org

The Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) is alarmed by the threat to ground-based astronomy posed by proposals put forward by Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Reflect Orbital. SpaceX has applied to launch one million satellites to act […]

Phys.org - Space

Planning Titan entry? New lab tests flag nitrogen-driven heat shield debris risks

Phys.org

Heat shields are designed to protect the surface and cargo of a spacecraft as it enters an atmosphere. Aerospace engineers in The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign recently observed a […]

Posts pagination

« 1 … 62 63 64 … 120 »

Fresh Picks:

  • Canada must eliminate food banks and provide a basic income after COVID-19
  • Taking the circus to school: How kids benefit from learning trapeze, juggling and unicycle in gym class
  • Going back to the gym: how to avoid injuries after lockdown
  • Gluten-free diet is expensive, socially challenging for those with celiac disease and wheat allergy
  • Junk food and the brain: How modern diets lacking in micronutrients may contribute to angry rhetoric
  • When men started to obsess over six-packs

Popular Stories:

  • AI can simulate the dead—but should it?
  • NASA’s Artemis II moonship returns home to its launch site after historic voyage
  • You’d better start paying attention to the manosphere. You’re living in it
  • Wingbeat radar signatures let AI sort bees, wasps and other insects
  • Having a religious affiliation doesn’t prevent betting on sports
More Fresh Tech Headlines:
  • How AI bias can creep into online content moderation
  • Yelp introduces an AI chatbot to help users sift local recommendations
  • Study suggests strategic Wikipedia engagement enhances scientific visibility
  • EU says age-check app ‘ready’ in push to protect children online
  • From ‘BuddhaBot’ to $1.99 chats with AI Jesus, the faith-based tech boom is here
More Fresh Business Headlines:
  • Agentic AI threatens research funding system
  • You probably wouldn’t notice if an AI chatbot slipped ads into its responses
  • US Supreme Court hears privacy case involving smartphone location data
  • Taylor Swift files to trademark her voice amid AI clone boom
  • Microsoft cuts OpenAI revenue share in a fresh step to loosen their AI alliance
Talk To Us:

TERMS OF USE

PRIVACY POLICY

CONTACT US

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