Mars May Have Had a Northern Ocean—and a Weird Mineral “Ring” Just Gave It a Timeline

A new Nature Communications study spots a mineral “ring” and manganese signature in Mars’ Utopia Planitia—clues that could finally pin down the timeline of a lost northern ocean.

Trump’s “AI compromise” has Washington buzzing — but the details are basically vapor

Trump allegedly cut an AI regulation deal that pleases MAGA and Big Tech—but the “article” provided has no facts, names, or terms.

China Just Logged a 7‑Month Spaceflight—and the Hard Part Wasn’t the Launch

China’s crew just came home after nearly seven months in orbit—a national record that signals serious operational maturity, not just PR.

Amazfit’s New Balance 3 and Ultra Get Smarter—and 15% More Expensive

Amazfit’s Balance 3 and Ultra bring better health sensors and long battery life—but a 15% price bump risks alienating the brand’s value crowd.

Apple Might Ditch USB‑C on Some iPhones—But This “Article” Has No Actual Reporting

Apple ditching USB‑C on two iPhones would be a big deal—too bad the “article” provided contains zero reporting to rewrite.

YouTube Recap 2025 is here—and yes, Google has been quietly keeping score

YouTube Recap 2025 turns your year of watching into swipeable Stories—part fun highlight reel, part unnerving mirror of your habits.

Samsung’s Galaxy S26 could get pricier—because Samsung’s own teams are at war

Samsung’s Galaxy S26 is being pitched as an AI powerhouse—but a nasty internal fight over pricey memory could push Plus/Ultra prices up.

Pixel’s dirty little secret: Google’s software rules, but the hardware still sweats

Pixel software is top-tier, but at ~$1,080 the hardware—Tensor performance, heat, and battery—can’t always hang with premium rivals.

Buying a Used Plug-In Hybrid? The Battery Can Trick You Worse Than an EV’s

Used plug-in hybrids can hide battery decline behind the gas engine—so test drives and charging behavior matter more than you think.

Penn’s new “light-matter” particles could crunch data 1,000× faster than electrons—on the bench

Penn researchers are testing hybrid light-matter particles that can do some lab calculations up to 1,000× faster than electrons—hinting at a post-silicon path.

BYD Says Its Cars Can Limp on Three Wheels After a Blowout—Here’s the Catch

BYD is touting a “three-wheel mode” meant to keep its cars moving after a blowout or on rough roads—but the fine print is still missing.