Mark Twain famously said, “history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” Andrew Ross Sorkin’s vivid new book, “1929: ...
Sami Khoreibi reflects on the realities behind entrepreneurial mythmaking and why human judgment still matters in an ...
For years, the future was imagined in clean lines and loud machines. Flying cars, metal suits, glowing weapons. None of it ...
Read on to discover the mid-text nugget: honey candles can attract roaches.
Humans have spent centuries shaping the world. But nature wouldn’t hesitate to take over if we suddenly disappeared.
A close look at a viral spider video reveals how web-building spiders use silk to restrain, transport, and consume large prey ...
The most comprehensive dataset of termite genomes to date was created by an international team of scientists, led by ...
In a defense lab in Germany, a small startup is wiring live cockroaches with AI-guided backpacks and turning them into steerable scouts that can slip through cracks no drone or soldier could reach.
Osvaldo Amador's acclaimed memoir, "To Kill a Cockroach," explores his life as a Cuban immigrant, gay man, and artist, turning grief into profound healing.
CEO Stefan Wilhelm told CBS the choice of insect was deliberate. The Madagascar hissing cockroach is large enough to carry small payloads, resilient under extreme conditions, ...
Something about a warm, flickering campfire draws in modern humans. Where did that uniquely human impulse come from? How did our ancestors learn to make fire? How long have they been making it?
Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests. Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England analyzed the proportion of full ...