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Thousands of squid just washed on a Cape Cod beach — but scientists say not to worry

Thousands of squid just washed on a Cape Cod beach — but scientists say not to worry It may get a little smelly - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments Thousands of wriggling brown-tinged squid have recently washed up on a stretch of beach along Cape Cod, Massachusetts, officials said Saturday. But, there’s nothing to worry about, Provincetown’s Harbormaster's Office assured in a Facebook post. The stranding event is “completely natural,” they wrote.

The Independent World 1d ago

Chippies turn to new species amid 'massive' cod price rise

Experts say cod has turned into "white gold" as the prices keeps going up.

BBC Business 5d ago

Chippies turn to new species amid 'massive' cod price rise

Experts say cod has turned into "white gold" as the prices keeps going up.

BBC England 5d ago

Chippies turn to new species amid 'massive' cod price rise

Experts say cod has turned into "white gold" as the prices keeps going up.

BBC England 5d ago

Buy British to save Britain's chippies, families have been urged

Buy British to save Britain's chippies, families have been urged Fish and chip lovers are being encouraged to try UK-caught species to protect takeaways from soaring cost of supper staples as the rocketing cost of cod is up 200% in the past two years Families are being urged to buy British to help save the nation’s chippies. The soaring cost of cod and haddock - the two overwhelming fish supper staples - is piling pressure on shop owners. Around 1,500 fish and chips shops have closed in the...

Daily Mirror 5d ago

CL-CLIP: CLIP-Based Continual Learning Framework with Cost-Volume Category Decoupling for Object Detection

arXiv:2606.06978v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Continual Object Detection (COD) requires a detector to acquire new categories over time while preserving previously learned ones. This goal is closely related to open-vocabulary detection, since both settings require reasoning over categories that are not fully covered by the annotations available at the current training stage. Recent CLIP-based open-vocabulary detectors have shown strong zero-shot generalization, and frameworks such as F-ViT...

arXiv CS 2d ago

Massive boom over northeastern US was a meteor explosion as powerful as 300 tons of TNT, NASA confirms

Massive boom over northeastern US was a meteor explosion as powerful as 300 tons of TNT, NASA confirms Unfortunately for meteorite-hunters, it appears that pieces of the space rock all fell into the middle of Cape Cod Bay. A sonic boom heard throughout the northeastern United States last week was caused by a meteor, NASA confirmed after consulting satellite imagery. The meteor's boom, heard widely on Saturday (May 30) at 2:06 p.m. EDT (local time), was audible over the northeastern U.S. NASA...

Space.com 8d ago

NASA confirms exploding meteor caused the sonic boom over Boston

Meteor caught by the GOES-19 weather satellite breaking up 40 miles above the ground. On Saturday, at around 2:06 pm ET, a meteor streaked over the northeastern US and exploded north of Cape Cod Bay. The fireball was caught on camera by several people, shook houses, and can even be seen clearly in satellite imagery, lighting up the sky.

The Verge 10d ago

Call of controversy? Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 imagines a revived Korean war

Infinity Ward’s new game in the storied shooter genre embraces change with a potentially controversial real-world settingThere was a time when Call of Duty (CoD) regularly courted controversy. In 2009, Modern Warfare 2’s infamous “No Russian” mission saw players (optionally) shooting screaming civilians in a Moscow airport. In 2022’s entry, a drone strike mission that drew chilling parallels to the real-world US assassination of Iranian general Qassem Suleimani two years earlier was featured.

The Guardian Culture 13d ago

AI brews a caffeine-powered safety switch for future cell therapies

AI brews a caffeine-powered safety switch for future cell therapies Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For many of us, a warm cup of coffee is how we start our day. For Texas A&M Health researchers, it may also offer a new way to control engineered cells in future medicines. A team at the Texas A&M Health Institute of Biosciences and Technology has developed an artificial intelligence-designed molecular switch that uses caffeine to rapidly separate engineered proteins...

Phys.org 4d ago