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Apple Drops iPhone Bombshell On Already Reeling Stock Market
Apple acknowledged that demand for iPhones is waning, confirming investor fears that the company's most profitable product has lost some of its luster. -
Facebook Is Trying To Become A Suicide Prevention Tool
Medical Ethicist Art Caplan talked to Boston Public Radio about why Facebook's suicide prevention programs are not quite up to snuff. -
American Man Becomes First Person To Cross Antarctica Alone And Unaided
In late December, American Colin O'Brady became the first person to cross Antarctica alone and unaided, lugging all his supplies behind him on a 400-pound sled. -
NASA Spacecraft Opens New Year At Tiny, Icy World Past Pluto
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has survived the most distant exploration of another world. -
Could Exercising In Frigid Temperatures Make Us Healthier?
As a freezing winter drives many of us indoors, some extreme athletes embrace the cold as a great way to burn calories and retrain the immune system while working out. Not so fast, physiologists say. -
Way Beyond Pluto, An Icy World Is Ready For Its Close-Up
Minutes after the turn of the new year, NASA's New Horizons probe will fly by a minor planet in the most distant exploration of a world ever attempted. -
When Too Cute Is Too Much, The Brain Can Get Aggressive
Adorable babies and cute puppies can make us happy. But researchers say their cuteness can be so overwhelming that it unleashes some ugly thoughts. -
2018 Was A Milestone Year For Climate Science (If Not Politics)
2018 saw a string of more precise — and dire — assessments that a warming climate is affecting the weather. That didn't keep President Trump and others from questioning those scientific conclusions. -
Researchers Show Parachutes Don't Work, But There's A Catch
A study found parachutes were no more effective than backpacks in preventing harm to people jumping from aircraft. The researchers' tongue-in-cheek experiment makes a deeper point about science. -
The World Has A New Largest-Known Prime Number
The Mersenne prime was discovered by a computer in Ocala, Fla., on Dec. 7. Mathematicians have spent the past two weeks verifying the calculations.