Saturday, July 12
Headlines
UCG/Getty Images
At A Glance
> Over 7 billion years: The presumed age of an interstellar object discovered last week; astronomers believe it could be the oldest comet ever seen.
> $42,232: How much the world’s most expensive cheese—a Cabrales variety aged in a cave for 10 months—sold for at auction.
Browse
> See racehorses train in the ocean on Barbados' Pebble Beach.
> The best time to shower, based on your priorities.
> Some restaurants are serving vegetables for dessert.
> Best Trader Joe’s wines for every occasion, per a sommelier.
Listen
> What makes one animal a pet and another a pest?
> How a tune went from a lullaby to the "Jeopardy" theme song.
Watch
> Pineapple leather and seaweed fibers could be the fashion of the future.
> This 16th-century painter shaped our understanding of bugs.
> Learn the art of mochi pounding from a master of the trade.
Long Read
> One family's miraculous escape from the Texas floodwaters.
> Meet the 25-year-old leveraging social media to run for Congress.
> The spiritual allure of Washington's Tree of Life.
Most Clicked This Week: What happens when you flush an airplane toilet.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> American Amanda Anisimova upsets No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka to advance to tomorrow's Wimbledon women's final against Iga Swiatek; men's semifinal matches are set for this morning (More)
> "The Office" spinoff "The Paper" sets Sept. 4 premiere on Peacock (More) | "The Young and the Restless" leads all series in nominations for the 52nd Daytime Emmy Awards with 19; see complete list of nominees (More)
> Paul McCartney announces 19-date North American tour beginning Sept. 29 (More) | Screen Actors Guild ends nearly yearlong strike with video game companies over use of AI replicas (More)
Science & Technology
> xAI releases Grok 4, the latest version of its flagship large language model; CEO Elon Musk says model was trained on the company's Colossus supercomputer (More) | Large language models explained (1440 Topics)
> New bionic knee, which integrates directly into bone and muscle tissue, restores natural movement in patients with above-the-knee amputations; users in clinical trial report device feels like a natural extension of the limb (More, w/video)
> DNA analysis of Greenland sled dogs—the world's oldest known breed, known as "Qimmeq"—reveals Inuit communities arrived as early as 1,200 years ago; estimate is hundreds of years earlier than previously thought (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +0.4%, Nasdaq +0.1%); S&P 500, Nasdaq reach new records (More) | Bitcoin notches new all-time high above $113K, up roughly 21% since the start of this year (More)
> Italian candy maker Ferrero, owner of brands including Nutella, Kinder, and Ferrero Rocher, to buy cereal maker WK Kellogg in roughly $3.1B deal; WK Kellogg shares close up nearly 31% on the news (More)
> Tesla to hold annual shareholder meeting Nov. 6 amid investor pressure; comes four months past deadline under Texas law, where Tesla is incorporated (More) | Ford recalls over 850,000 cars in the US due to potential fuel pump failure (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Secret Service suspends six agents without pay for up to 42 days, nearly one year after assassination attempt on then-candidate Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania (More) | Suspect in second assassination attempt on Trump at a Florida golf course seeks to represent himself in his trial, scheduled to begin in September (More)
> Gaza hospital accuses Israeli military of killing at least 15 people, including seven children, waiting in line to receive nutritional supplements; Israel says it targeted militants (More) | Hamas says it will release 10 hostages amid ceasefire negotiations; did not say when release would occur and whether hostages were among 22 living or 28 dead hostages still believed to be held captive (More)
> France and the UK reach deal to address migration, other issues; so-called "one in, one out" agreement will see the UK deport some migrants arriving by boat in exchange for accepting those with UK family connections (More)
Middle Child INTJ
I was the middle child in my family. My sister was almost 4 years older, and my brother was a solid 8 years younger.
Ordinarily, being the middle child would not have been a problem except that I had an unusual personality. Years later, when in my 20's, I discovered that my personality, according to Myers-Briggs, was that of an INTJ.
While it is not the rarest personality type, it is still rare comprising about 2% of the population. And it is unlikely that INTJs are the middle child in a family. Yet, as the middle child, I became very introverted, feeling like I did not belong in the family.
I was heavily criticized by both parents for not living up to their expectations of what they thought I should be like. This pressure on me while not understanding who I was or was supposed to be, caused me to rebel. My rebellion was executed with exaggeration and after entering my teenage years found myself at odds with law enforcement.
My father took the family overseas to live in Cairo, Egypt and it is there that I began and graduated from high school. My unique personality flourished in that environment but was soon deflated when I returned to the USA and entered college, again retreating and becoming introverted.
My 45 year career was a constant battle between my personality and the personalities of those around me, those with whom I worked, and those that supervised me - none of whom seemed to understand or appreciate who I was and why I was so different from them.
Close friends, I could count on one hand and true friends, I could count with two fingers, neither of them living close enough to establish a working relationship - one dying of colon cancer when we were in our 60s. He was my oldest knowing friend as our friendship started in THIRD GRADE.
At 77 almost 78, my personality matters very little to me anymore, although, my second wife and I still struggle at times with my personality. She cannot understand why I am not more like her. I cannot understand why she does not understand that I am different from her and always will be.
Astronomers Stunned by 33-Billion-Light-Year Cosmic Structure That Defies All Known Physics
In a groundbreaking study that challenges current cosmological models, scientists have discovered the Great Wall of Hercules-Corona Borealis, a colossal galactic structure spanning nearly 10 billion light-years, prompting a re-evaluation of our understanding of the universe's large-scale architecture.
The cosmos, vast and mysterious, never ceases to surprise us with its wonders. One of the most fascinating discoveries that continue to intrigue scientists is the Great Wall of Hercules-Corona Borealis, a colossal structure challenging our understanding of the universe.
Recent studies using gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), the most energetic explosions known, have revealed that this structure is even more extensive than previously thought. As we dive deeper into this astronomical marvel, we uncover insights that could reshape our comprehension of cosmic structures.












.jpg)






