Across the globe, a race is under way to crack some of the last mysterious forms of writing that have never been translated.
Opinion
The Walrus on MSNOpinion
If chatbots can replace writers, it’s because we made writing replaceable
A good deal of what gets published already reads like a photocopy of a photocopy The post If Chatbots Can Replace Writers, It’s Because We Made Writing Replaceable first appeared on The Walrus.
The Pasadena Public Library’s Teen Advisory Board is calling on young creatives to share their voices in The Rose: A Journal ...
Springer Nature is a signatory of the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA). Because small numbers of highly cited articles can have outsized influence on certain citation measures ...
Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, a defendant at the courthouse facing domestic battery charges, left Judge Dugan’s courtroom through a ...
Traces of opium found inside an ancient alabaster vase suggest drug use was common in ancient Egypt, not rare or accidental.
Live Science on MSN
Detectorists find Anglo-Saxon treasure hoard that may have been part of a 'ritual killing'
These Anglo-Saxon accessories were recovered from the side of a hill in England and may be from a hoard, a ritual deposit or ...
Live Science on MSN
Diarrhea and stomachaches plagued Roman soldiers stationed at Hadrian's Wall, discovery of ...
Analysis of latrine sediments at the Roman fort of Vindolanda has revealed that at least three parasites were widespread among Roman soldiers.
Hours after the FBI and police said they detained a man in connection with the deadly attack at Brown University, he was ...
Source Media Managing Editor Larry Phillips has a new book out. It's called "The Spirit of a Team," a concept he lives every ...
Live Science on MSN
5 genetic 'signatures' underpin a range of psychiatric conditions
A study suggests psychiatric disorders can share the same genetic signatures and that they may stem from shared biological ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Archaeologists Unearth Cache of Aboriginal Stone Tools Buried in Australia 170 Years Ago
Known as "tulas," the 60 artifacts are only the second discovery of this size to be found in Australia. Researchers think they may have been created for trade ...
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