The Explosive Diarrhea Outbreak Is About to Get Much Bigger
Official case counts likely capture only a fraction of US cyclosporiasis infections, and the outbreak is likely to get worse before it gets better.
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Official case counts likely capture only a fraction of US cyclosporiasis infections, and the outbreak is likely to get worse before it gets better.
The funding discussions point to investor interest in applying AI to make breakthroughs in life sciences.
Citizens must now spend 21 days in a third country before they are allowed to come home.
Health officials have not confirmed a source yet—and there may be multiple sources.
New research overturns assumption that abstinent younger drinkers are behind weak demand.
It’s not the upgrade Ring 4 owners have been waiting for, but it’s easily the best smart ring Oura has ever made.
The man is said to be doing well in a Frankfurt hospital.
We all hear about "Not comparing yourself to others" and that "comparing yourself is the thief of joy". To be honest, I agree and it's strange that I am contradicting myself because I compare myself A LOT. The more I looked into it, the more I realized that we have a natural tendency to compare ourselves. It's a human thing to do. The issue is that we tend to be very excessive over comparing ourselves to others to the point where it takes a toll on us. For example, we are demotivated to see someone's success because we believe we can't reach the goal they are in. We all have jealousy. Big or small. Even where I am at right now, I am still jealous that many people I know that got into big tech companies like Microsoft. To get more context, I want to share a story with you. Story Time Back in the day, I remember it was the year of the ACT. For those who don't know: It's a Standardized test that is needed for the college admissions to determine if you are admitted to their program. I remember I got a national average of 21 as my composite score and I was proud of the score I got since it's the national average during that time. However, I remember the day where my friends talked about the ACT. The most common thing I heard was: "Oh I got a 30" "I got a 32" "Man I got a 35, it was sooo easy" Hearing that makes me feel not only bummed out, but felt left out. I was feeling that I wasn't smart enough to be in the group. What's worse is that they got accepted into colleges and programs that are well known. Then they start boasting about their accomplishments. I felt like I am the odd-one-out because of my scores and their accomplishments I could not match. Why am I Talking about this? Looking back and knowing where they are at now, I am proud of who I become today. It's not that they have fallen downhill (they are still successful), but the route they have taken that I definitely could not follow. For example, on GitHub, many people fill up their contribution graphs to the
There is a kind of loneliness that does not always announce itself. It can be quiet. Heavy. Hidden behind a smile. It can make someone feel as though no one truly understands what they are carrying. Dear Stranger was created for those moments. It is a place where someone can pause. Breathe. Read. Feel less alone. And maybe, just maybe, carry a little more hope than they came with. This is not just a project to me. It is a quiet promise. A small place I built with my heart. A space where words can travel gently across distance and still carry comfort. I built Dear Stranger because I believe that even the smallest page can hold something powerful: hope, clarity, warmth, and the feeling of being understood. What I Built Dear Stranger is a web experience designed to feel intimate, human, and deeply personal. It is a space where someone can open a page written by a stranger, read something honest, and feel, even for a moment, that they are not alone. The project is built like a book made of feelings. It invites the visitor to step into a calm, reflective experience where words matter more than noise. They can read pages that speak to comfort, strength, peace, and hope. They can save what touches them. They can leave behind their own words for someone else to find one day. It was never meant to be just another website. It was meant to feel like a page that was waiting for you. Demo The experience is best felt by opening it and letting it meet you where you are. It is meant to be soft, reflective, and quietly powerful. Dear Stranger - this is for you. Code The project is built with Next.js and designed as a personal, story-like interface where emotion is part of the experience. The structure allows users to move through a reading journey, interact with meaningful content, and leave behind something sincere. Konarksharma13 / Dear-Stranger Dear Stranger — A Page for You This website was never meant to be just another page on the internet. It is a quiet place made for the hea
If you're reading an Oura Ring 5 review at The Verge, you likely fall into one of two camps: newcomers looking for a smartwatch alternative, or Oura users pondering an upgrade. In the case of the former, this is a great casual health tracker and the best smart ring on the market - but not […]
When we last sat down with Jobs at TechCrunch Disrupt nearly three years ago, his firm Yosemite was brand new and biotech was still reeling from its post-pandemic crash. Now, the venture outfit has a team of 17; a cluster of blockbuster drugs are all losing patent protection in roughly the same window, creating all kinds of new opportunities; and AI has gone from a curiosity to, in Jobs's words, a huge part of what Yosemite does. "I didn't expect Yosemite to be moving this fast," he said.
The children who get a combination shot are some of the most vulnerable.
A recent study tracked hundreds of soccer fans until their favorite team reached the final of a tournament. Their stress levels skyrocketed, and their heart rates jumped too.
This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song that dissects and discusses the latest gizmos and potions that swear they're going to change your life. Opt in for Optimizer here. Bryan Johnson, best known as the man who wants to live forever, has an incurable autoimmune disease. The internet's most […]
English and Norwegian players will face off under extreme and dangerous levels of heat stress, scientists say, thanks to a Wet Bulb Index over over 90°F.
Ties van der Meer doesn’t know how many siblings he has. The 47-year-old was conceived at a private fertility clinic in the Netherlands using sperm provided by an anonymous donor. After the Netherlands banned anonymous donation in 2004, the doctor who ran the clinic destroyed records that might have identified those donors, he says. He…
New parents obsess over percentile numbers. I get it. I built a tool that plots your baby measurements against official WHO and CDC growth standards. What it does: Weight, height, and head circumference percentiles for ages 0-36 months Visual growth chart showing where your baby falls on the curve Uses WHO Child Growth Standards (0-24 months) and CDC reference data (24-36 months) 35 pages, all pre-rendered for fast loading The hard part: Parsing the WHO growth standard tables into usable JSON. Those tables are dense and not designed for programmatic use. That took more time than building the actual calculator UI. ?? Try it: babypercent.com Built with Next.js, no database, no tracking. Just a calculator that respects your privacy.
Oddly, it wasn't the first time this had happened to the man.
“EMF straws” and similar products are being sold as a way to block electromagnetic frequencies that come from common electronic devices, even without scientific evidence that they work.
We just opened the waitlist for Something, and the part that surprised me most while building it wasn't the multi-agent orchestration — it was how hard it is to make an AI actually disagree. Every model we tested defaults to being helpful, which in practice means agreeable. Even when explicitly prompted to "find flaws," the outputs would soften into "here are some considerations" instead of a real critique. We had to engineer around this specifically: Separate system prompts with opposing reward framing — one agent optimizes for identifying growth potential, the other is explicitly told its only success metric is surfacing a disqualifying flaw Structured output forcing a verdict, not a summary — the skeptic agent (Nothing) has to commit to a specific weakness category (unit economics, timing, technical feasibility) rather than hedging across all of them A reconciliation step where both outputs get merged into one conviction score, so the founder isn't just reading two contradictory paragraphs If anyone's built adversarial agent setups and hit the same "it just wants to agree with me" problem, curious how you solved it. [Everyone who has a brain is a founder here] something-waitlist.vercel.app