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AIAIAI unveils portable wireless studio monitors with low-latency tech

Sep 28, 2023

AIAIAI, which is best known for its headphones, is moving into new territory with a set of wireless speakers. The Unit-4 Wireless+ studio monitors use the same low-latency tech as the Danish brand's headphones. AIAIAI suggests that they will enable folks "to create and mix music with accurate sound representation and powerful performance" wherever they might happen to be.

Warwick graduate shares student survival tips on TikTok

Sep 25, 2023

A graduate banker who struggled financially while growing up is sharing tips online to help other students succeed.

Rishi Sunak considers radical shake-up of A-levels

Sep 25, 2023

Rishi Sunak is considering a major reform of A-levels in England which could see the introduction of a new "British baccalaureate".

Musk start-up Neuralink seeks people for brain-implant trial

Sep 25, 2023

Elon Musk's brain-computer interface (BCI) start-up Neuralink has begun recruiting people for its first human trial.

Microsoft's new Call of Duty deal set for UK approval

Sep 25, 2023

The UK's competition watchdog has said Microsoft's revised offer to buy the Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard "opens the door" to the deal being cleared.

Amazon Prime Video content to start including ads next year

Sep 25, 2023

Amazon is set to introduce adverts to its Prime Video streaming service in 2024 as it seeks to put more cash into creating TV shows and films.

How the fall of the 'King of Crypto' cost one British man millions

Sep 25, 2023

With the so-called "King of Crypto" about to go on trial for multiple fraud charges, one British man tells how the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried's company lost him a fortune.

50 years ago, scientists thought they had found Earth’s oldest rocks

Sep 18, 2023

Until recently, Greenland possessed the oldest known rocks in the world. They date back 3.7 billion years (SN: 12/9/72, p. 374). Now granite and crystalline schist specimens … suggest that the Antarctic Continent is older. These specimens date back 4 billion years.

Science explains why shouting into the wind seems futile

Sep 18, 2023

People upwind can hear you hollering into a breeze, but it’s hard to hear yourself

'Crossings’ explores the science of road ecology

Sep 18, 2023

Nearly 65 million kilometers of roadway crisscross the Earth — enough to encircle the planet more than 1,600 times — and that number will likely double by 2050.

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