Novice - Tehnologija (angleščina)

The Ancient Art of Nasal Rinsing Might Protect You From a Cold
07. January 2026 (17:18)
New research has given credence to a 5,000-year-old practice. (Wired)
Moroccan Cave Fossils Yield a Possible Missing Link in Human Evolution
07. January 2026 (17:01)
Jawbones and other remains, similar to specimens found in Europe, were dated to 773,000 years and help close a gap in Africa’s fossil record of human origins. (New York Times)
Venezuela Is the First Big Test for the Pentagon’s Influencer Press Corps—and It's Failing
07. January 2026 (17:00)
Mainstream reporters are out at the Pentagon, and right-wing influencers are in. The results are predictable, and oddly reminiscent of Iraq War–era warblogging. (Wired)
Home Pilates Equipment for Studio-Quality Workouts (2026)
07. January 2026 (13:00)
Here’s everything that you should buy, skip, or splurge on for your at-home Pilates workout. (Wired)
Carbon capture company lands nearly £1m in backing
07. January 2026 (07:10)
The Carbon Removers, based near Dumfries, will use the funding to expand its operations across Europe. (BBC News)
Lenovo’s Legion Pro Rollable Gaming Laptop Goes Ultrawide at the Press of a Key
07. January 2026 (02:00)
Lenovo brought a Legion gaming laptop to CES this year with a rollable OLED display that expands horizontally by six inches. (Wired)
Motorola Razr Fold Book-Style Foldable: Specs, Details, Release Date
07. January 2026 (02:00)
At CES 2026, the company also announced a new smartwatch, stylus, Bluetooth tracker, and even a weird AI pendant. (Wired)
Grok Is Pushing AI ‘Undressing’ Mainstream
06. January 2026 (23:20)
Paid tools that “strip” clothes from photos have been available on the darker corners of the internet for years. Elon Musk’s X is now removing barriers to entry—and making the results public. (Wired)
Elon Musk’s xAI Raises $20 Billion
06. January 2026 (22:43)
 (New York Times)
The Inevitable Rise of the Art TV
06. January 2026 (21:41)
New televisions from Amazon, Hisense, TCL, and others are designed to display fine art and look like a painting when they’re switched off. It’s all thanks to smaller living spaces and new screen tech. (Wired)