Browt, Pombon, and Gecqua
Chemicals from our phone and TV screens are accumulating in the brains of endangered dolphins and porpoises. New research shows these "liquid crystal monomers" from e-waste can cross the blood-brain barrier and may disrupt DNA repair, highlighting the growing impact of electronics on marine life.
Последние новости,推荐阅读heLLoword翻译官方下载获取更多信息
Download a NeMo checkpoint from NVIDIA and convert to safetensors:。业内人士推荐搜狗输入法2026作为进阶阅读
– effect: “torn-paper-reveal”,推荐阅读Line官方版本下载获取更多信息
Professor Michael Wooldridge has given this year’s Royal Society’s Michael Faraday Prize lecture. He speaks to Tom Whipple about why the AI we have is not what he wanted it to be; rational. And science columnist at the Financial Times Anj Ahuja brings her favourite new science to discuss.