Common Sense
In honor of Thomas Paine and other Founders & Immigrants. In memory of my daddy Horst Bingel and my mom Irma Bingel
Monday, April 06, 2026
Lifestyle, Zeit, Geld, Karriere: Hund statt Kind
13-jähriger Irakischer Jugendlicher prügelt 62 Jahre alten Busfahrer in Leipzig ins Koma plus Schlaganfall
Across the social sciences, half of research doesn’t replicate | Science | AAAS
Dendritic cells power down inside tumors—re-energizing them could help treat cancer
Global human population is pushing Earth past its breaking point. Really!
Thirty previously unpublished verses by Empedocles discovered on a papyrus from Cairo
Why solid-state batteries keep short-circuiting
The foreign gig workers who are training humanoid robots in the US
Amazing stuff! $15 per hour is not so bad!
"The gig workers who are training humanoid robots at home
Zeus, a medical student living in Nigeria, has a bizarre side gig: He straps an iPhone to his forehead and films himself doing chores, like making the bed, and then sends this footage to a Silicon Valley company called Micro1. If the footage is good, the company will pay him an average of $15 an hour.
Zeus is one of thousands of gig workers—particularly in India, Nigeria, and Argentina—who are now building a massive training data set for humanoid robots to learn from. While large language models can get better by learning from the whole internet, robots need more particular videos to train on. Micro1, among other companies, is setting up a gig economy to supply just that. " (Source)
Physics - How Hair Cells in the Ear Actively Respond to Sound
Scientists Map Aging Across the Body of a Short-Lived Fish
Neue Kampfdrohne für Deutschland? Was die Ghost Bat wirklich kann
Scientists capture how cells trigger inflammation
- SLAC researchers observed a key master regulator of inflammation inside living cells, revealing a dense, gel-like structure that is much less organized than expected.
- The findings suggest this inflammation-triggering system forms a flexible cluster of proteins, which could influence the design of treatments for inflammatory diseases.
- The study also revealed a link between inflammation and the machinery that controls cell division, suggesting a possible explanation for why cells usually stop dividing while mounting an inflammatory response.
The Justice Department declared the Presidential Records Act unconstitutional
Putin Confronts Pashinyan Over Election Rules and Armenia’s Westward Drift
Disclaimer
I am currently blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.
My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.
President Trump became the first sitting president to attend Supreme Court oral arguments
U.S. forces rescued the second crew member from an F-15E shot down over Iran
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
AI completes the formal proof of higher-dimensional sphere packing
AI turns electron microscopy into materials insights in minutes
Italy turns away Middle East-bound US military aircraft from Sicily stopover
Paper tiger NATO didn’t show up — now Trump’s asking why we stay
No helium, no chips: why Australia needs to make the gas again
Recommendable!
"No helium, no chips: why Australia needs to make the gas again
Australia should restart domestic helium production. Government action will be needed for it to do so.
Iranian strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas complex have knocked out roughly a third of the world’s helium supply" (Source, I can not access aspistrategist website from China)
Scientists claim to have found evidence of a liquid-liquid critical point in supercooled water
AI system learns to keep warehouse multiple robots traffic running smoothly
Donald Trump says US strongly considering NATO exit, Telegraph newspaper says
Trump EPA Ends Exorbitant Pay-Outs to Litigious Environmental Nonprofits
Good news! Bravo!
"Since 2013, millions of dollars in attorneys’ fees have been awarded to entities, usually nonprofits, to resolve environmental law litigation against the federal government. New data collected via Freedom of Information Act shows that in the first year of the Trump administration, environmental attorney fee pay outs have seen record lows.
As Open the Books has reported in the past, these fees are often part of “sue-and-settle” schemes where environmental nonprofits friendly to a presidential administration (typically Democratic) will sue the federal government to initiate a back-door rule making process that can exclude Congress and the public. ...
While Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin hasn’t made many public statements about sue-and-settle practices since taking office at the head of the agency, a spokesperson told Open the Books last year:
“Outside activist groups should not dictate EPA’s agenda or federal environmental policy. The Trump Administration is keenly aware of concerns with sue-and-settle practices and commits to not engage in them. The Trump EPA will respect the rule of law and the will of the American people in setting policy based on its statutory mandates and Gold Standard Science, not based on side deals with outside activist groups dead-set on driving up costs to Americans or advancing the interests of our foreign adversaries.”
New data indicates Zeldin has kept his word, as attorney fee payouts in 2025 for litigation under the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and Endangered Species Act (three of the most important laws under which most environmental litigation is filed) have been at their lowest level since 2013, when our records begin, at a little more than $510,000. ..."
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Why does the body deem some foods safe and others unsafe?
- Scientists identify three new proteins, one each from soybean, corn, and wheat, that the body uses to determine oral tolerance—the opposite of food allergy
- They found that specialized immune cells called regulatory T cells interact with these proteins in the gut
- By understanding tolerance, researchers can better understand food allergies and begin to imagine future immunotherapies that promote tolerance rather than allergic reactions
Tiny implantable, high density ‘cell factories’ produce drugs inside the body
What changes happen in the aging brain? A comprehensive single-cell atlas to date of epigenetic changes in the aging mouse brain
- Salk researchers create epigenetic atlas of cell type-specific changes in the aging mouse brain
- The atlas represents eight different brain regions and 36 different cell types, and shows clear epigenetic differences associated with different ages
- The new resource—available publicly on Amazon Web services—can be used to unravel age-related contributions to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS