Edinburgh News on MSN
Reduce screen time to protect young eyes, opticians urge as part of National Eye Health Week
Children in Edinburgh and the Lothians have been urged to “ditch the devices” as part of a nationwide screen amnesty to promote good eye health.
I spent the weekend building and improving my home network to get faster, more reliable Wi-Fi speed. Here's what I did.
Robot umpires are coming to the big leagues in 2026 after Major League Baseball’s 11-man competition committee on Tuesday ...
8hon MSN
Google executive to young professionals: There’s no hiding from AI if you are a software engineer
Google's Ryan J. Salva emphasizes AI's central role in software development, with adoption surging to 90% among professionals ...
National Security Journal on MSN
Lockheed’s Vectis Stealth Drone Has a Message for the U.S. Military
Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works is building Vectis, a Group 5 stealth drone aimed at the Collaborative Combat Aircraft role as a loyal wingman for F-22s/F-35s. -Renderings show a tailless, delta/lambda ...
Imagine if you could take bare and redundant everyday videos and turn them into beautiful film clips, cool animated shorts, ...
The Canadian Association of Optometrists recommends a routine eye exam every 2 years for adults between the ages of 20 and 64, and annually for ages 65 and up. This is important for two reasons: 1) it ...
2hon MSN
Rahm Emanuel says Harris was wrong to skip Buttigieg as running mate, failed to 'trust in your gut'
Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel disagreed with former Vice President Kamala Harris’ reasons for not selecting Pete ...
Towing a caravan from Bristol to Land’s End with a Kia EV9: how hard can it be? Eight hours later, I was at my wits’ ...
Today in questionable timing, Disney+ announced that it's raising prices once again, giving subscribers another reason to ...
The feature can automatically translate an existing message into English. Android users can switch on automatic translation ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
MIT demonstrates magnetic transistor with 10x stronger switching and built-in memory
MIT engineers built a magnetic transistor from chromium sulfur bromide, promising smaller, faster electronics with built-in ...
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