LIN

May 29 2026BUSINESS

AI in Finance: Why Smart Teams Use It Wisely

Smart finance teams aren't rushing to rely solely on AI because the hype doesn’t match reality. While AI excels at spotting trends and crunching numbers, it struggles with the deeper work of building financial models—the kind that explain why a business actually works. Most AI tools today can foreca

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026SCIENCE

Phages Turn Bacteria Into Better Movers

Bacteria move thanks to tiny whip‑like structures called flagella, and those whips also catch the eye of the host’s immune system. Scientists found that certain viruses that live inside bacteria can tweak how these flagella are built by using special RNA‑controlled proteins called TldR. A human‑d

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026HEALTH

AVF Survival in Japanese Dialysis Patients: What Matters Most

The health of the blood vessels that connect arteries and veins—called arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs)—is a key factor in how well people on hemodialysis can stay on treatment. A recent look at a single hospital’s records in Japan tried to uncover which patient traits help these AVFs keep working over

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026HEALTH

Fluoride in water: Legal fight turns on old science, not safety

In early 2025, a federal appeals court sent a major fluoride case back to the lower court—not because fluoride was proven safe, but because the judge broke a rule on how evidence should be handled. The dispute started in 2016 when health advocacy groups sued the EPA, claiming fluoride in drinking wa

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026EDUCATION

How adult learning helped one NYPD officer design better training programs

Jason Mazeski worked as a training instructor for the NYPD when he decided to advance his education. He chose a master’s program focused on teaching adults because his job involved helping colleagues learn new skills. The program at Buffalo State offered flexible online classes, letting him balance

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026CRYPTO

XRP’s Price Drop: Why the Market Is Feeling Unsteady

The digital asset XRP has slipped more than five percent in the last month, and experts point to two main culprits: thinner liquidity and a shift in trader mood. Liquidity, the amount of XRP available for trading on exchanges like Binance, has fallen sharply to about 0. 043 in the past 30 days. T

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026BUSINESS

A New Chef Takes the Spotlight

By the time Byron was thirteen, his father Wolfgang had already turned a small kitchen into a culinary empire. After saying the words at his bar mitzvah, Byron promised that someday he would run the restaurants while Wolfgang relaxed on a beach. The joke sparked a real conversation the next day: “

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026SCIENCE

The Hidden Time‑Warp of Looping Videos

Many people spend hours scrolling through short clips that repeat endlessly on platforms like TikTok and Instagram. A recent study looked at how this habit affects the way people feel about time, as well as their emotions and excitement. Researchers followed 151 young adults over two weeks, asking t

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026SCIENCE

Learning from Struggle: How Math Helps Us Understand Tough Choices

When life gets hard, our brains figure out ways to handle it. For years, scientists have watched how tough situations change the way people think. Most studies just check how fast folks answer questions or if their answers are right or wrong. Those numbers tell part of the story, but they don’t show

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026HEALTH

How food and health habits shape muscle loss

Muscles don’t just disappear. They shrink when cells stop responding to insulin, a condition that also fuels weight gain. Researchers studied how this double problem—called insulin resistance and sarcopenia—connects in adults. They wondered if gender, age, diabetes, body size, or daily protein intak

reading time less than a minute