Wednesday, July 2
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Jury deliberations underway in Sean "Diddy" Combs' wide-ranging sex crimes trial, with the jury flagging for the judge that one juror was having difficulty following the judge's instructions (More)
> The US revokes visas of members of British rap punk duo Bob Vylan after the group lead the Glastonbury Festival crowd in "death to IDF" chants (More)
> Three-time NFL All-Pro Jalen Ramsey traded by the Miami Dolphins to the Pittsburgh Steelers for fellow three-time All-Pro Minkah Fitzpatrick (More) | WNBA to expand to 18 teams by 2030, with new franchises in Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia (More)
Science & Technology
> Meta formally announces Superintelligence Labs, focusing on AI models that rival human intelligence (More) | Meta explained (1440 Topics) | Microsoft researchers say new AI tool correctly diagnoses diseases at an 85% rate, four times higher than experienced doctors (More)
> Genetic ancestry linked to risk of contracting severe cases of dengue fever; findings partially explain the wide variability in cases, disease kills around 20,000 people annually (More)
> Researchers discover switching on a single dormant gene enables mice to regrow ear tissue; discovery may lead to treatments for a variety of degenerative diseases (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.5%, Dow +0.6%, Nasdaq +0.5%) (More) | DOJ lets Hewlett Packard Enterprise buy Juniper Networks for $14B, boosting both tech firms’ shares (More) | Home Depot to buy building-products distributor GMS for about $4.3B in bid to attract more home-building professionals (More)
> Joby Aviation shares climb 11.8% after delivering first flying air taxi to the UAE, with plans for 2026 regional launch (More) | Saudi Arabia sovereign wealth fund's annual profits fall 60% due partly to high interest rates and inflation (More)
> Robinhood to offer tokenized US stocks and exchange-traded funds in Europe, sending shares to record high (More) | Oracle shares up 4% after revealing $30B in cloud deals (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Bryan Kohberger to plead guilty to fatally stabbing four University of Idaho students in 2022; hearing scheduled for tomorrow (More) | Police identify 20-year-old suspect in the ambush and killing of two firefighters in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Sunday; police have not publicly identified a motive as of this writing (More)
> Senate debates amendments to President Donald Trump's domestic policy bill in hourslong process known as vote-a-rama (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Department of Health and Human Services finds Harvard University in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act over allegations of antisemitism (More) | Trump signs executive order ending US sanctions on Syria (More) | Justice Department sues Los Angeles over sanctuary city policy (More)
A Teenage Dream
When I was 14, I heard a song off the above album POTENT PERCUSSION, and immediately knew that this is what I wanted to do for the rest of my life... play percussion in a band like this.
Strange signals detected from Antarctic ice seem to defy laws of physics
Scientists are trying to solve a decade-long mystery by determining the identity of anomalous signals detected from below ice in Antarctica.
The strange radio waves emerged during a search for another unusual phenomenon: high-energy cosmic particles known as neutrinos. Arriving at Earth from the far reaches of the cosmos, neutrinos are often called “ghostly” because they are extremely volatile, or vaporous, and can go through any kind of matter without changing.
Over the past decade, researchers have conducted multiple experiments using vast expanses of water and ice that are designed to search for neutrinos, which could shed light on mysterious cosmic rays, the most highly energetic particles in the universe. One of these projects was NASA’s Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna, or ANITA, experiment, which flew balloons carrying instruments above Antarctica between 2006 and 2016.
Tuesday, July 1
The Big THINK
Tolkien’s Middle-earth wasn’t a place. It was a time in (English) history.
The fellowship’s journey through Middle-earth mirrors the modernization of the English countryside.
Headlines
Mikhail Makarov/Getty Images
Robert Reich
The real crisis we are living through
Friends,
During a three-hour interview with the podcaster Joe Rogan some months ago, Elon Musk revealed the core of the ideology animating the richest person in the world.
“The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy,” Musk said, adding that liberals and progressives are “exploiting a bug in Western civilization, which is the empathy response.”
Musk pointed to California’s move to provide medical insurance even to undocumented people who qualify for its low-income Medi-Cal program.
“We’ve got civilizational suicidal empathy going on,” Musk continued. Empathy has been “weaponized.”
Musk is now officially out of Trump world but his DOGE lives on. It has already destroyed almost every empathic part of the U.S. government.
At A Glance
Desert farm, icy spiral among June's best science photos.
The science behind Agatha Christie's poisons.
American pride falls to new low at 58%.
Fireworks: Today's 1440 Science and Technology newsletter unpacks the holiday explosives. Email comes out at 8:30 am ET—sign up here to receive!Explore an interactive world map of 30,000 plant species.
Browse through photos of Wild West mining towns.
Should we ban left turns at intersections?
A quest to learn the origins of tarot cards.
Ranking the 21st century's best feuds.
Clickbait: When coworkers pry, stress levels rise.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Dave Parker, baseball Hall of Famer, former NL MVP, and seven-time MLB All-Star, dies at age 74 (More) | D. Wayne Lukas, horse trainer who won 15 Triple Crown races, dies at age 89 (More)
> Brad Pitt's "F1" pulls in $55.6M in its opening weekend, the best-ever opening for an Apple-produced film (More) | Final installment of "Fast & Furious" franchise to feature the late Paul Walker's character, sets April 2027 release date (More)
> The 2025 NHL Draft wraps; see tracker of all 224 picks (More) | LeBron James picks up $52.6M player option to remain with Los Angeles Lakers next year; James will play an NBA record 23rd season (More)
Science & Technology
> Tesla provides first demonstration of a fully self-driving car leaving the factory and driving to the new owner's home without human assistance; Tesla Model Y traveled 30 miles in Austin (More, w/video) | Tesla explained (1440 Topics)
> Engineers develop smart pill that can monitor glucose, temperature, serotonin levels, and more after ingestion; approach may provide a cheap method for real-time monitoring of gut health (More)
> Chemists discover new spontaneous reaction that produces urea, a highly reactive molecule, from carbon dioxide and ammonia; researchers theorize process may have been involved in the origin of life on Earth (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close higher Friday (S&P 500 +0.5%, Dow +1.0%, Nasdaq +0.5%), with S&P 500, Nasdaq closing at record highs (More)
> US-Canada trade talks resume after Canada rescinds digital services tax the day before first payment was due; tax was set to impact high-earning tech companies including Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon (More)
> President Donald Trump says a group of wealthy buyers is prepared to purchase TikTok's US operations from parent company ByteDance, will unveil buyers in two weeks (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Former President Joe Biden, former VP Kamala Harris attend funeral for Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman, killed weeks ago (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Serbian police clash with protesters calling for early elections and end to 12-year rule of President Aleksandar Vucic (More) | Thailand protesters call for end of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra's rule over border dispute with Cambodia (More)
> Russia launches over 500 drones and missiles in largest aerial attack since start of its three-year war with Ukraine, downing F-16 (More)
July 2025
For many of us, July of any year, represents the middle of summer... cool spells disappear, summer rains are here, humidity starts to worsen, air conditioners are in full swing, out of school children have become either more demanding or more independent, and we are planning our FOURTH OF JULY celebrations.
I remember the follow slogan:
Of course, for those who did not drink alcohol ignored it.
But this celebration is not just about alcohol... it is about family and friends, picnics, parades, remembrances, our freedoms, and fireworks.
For me, JULY IS SUMMER...
By the time this month rolls around each year, I am usually spending more and more time inside rather than outside. I am beginning to grow weary of mowing and weed eating, the mosquitos force me to wear long clothes or repellant, humidity makes it difficult to breathe, smoke from grilling constantly flows through the air, and there is absolutely nothing new on cable to occupy your time.
Being retired, I do not have to worry about all the additional traffic on the highways and around town because school is not in session. Colleges are on summer schedules so most of the students have returned home, if you live in a college/university town which I do.
What is most intriguing to me is how light it still is at 9:00 pm or if you are on military time at twenty-one hundred hours. During the non-summer months, I am usually in bed by 9:00/9:30, now it it 10:00/10:30 because of this light. Our circadian rhythms change during the summer months, especially during the month of July.
However, July also means, if you have backyard gardens, that you are now eating your fill of tomatoes, cucumbers, corn, bell peppers, squash, zucchini, lettuce, cabbage, potatoes, and whatever else you might have planted like melons. There has been plenty of rain for melons of all kinds and varieties.
Astronomers discover a tiny star with a giant planet that should not exist

Astronomers have spotted a giant exoplanet, named TOI-6894b, that’s bigger than Saturn and circling a red dwarf star only one-fifth the mass of the Sun.
This finding rewrites expectations about where massive planets can form and hints that such worlds may be common around the smallest stars. The discovery emerged from a survey of Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) data.
TOI-6894 is a cool red dwarf that shines with far less light than the Sun. Yet its companion, TOI-6894b, is a puffed-up gas world whose radius exceeds Saturn’s while its mass is only half as large.


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