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boem@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Exclusive: Apple to pause advertising on X after Musk backs antisemitic postEnglish71·2 years agoAbout bloody time.
boem@lemmy.worldOPto World News@lemmy.world•Japan says one in 10 residents are aged 80 or above as nation turns grayEnglish34·2 years agoJapan’s proportion of elderly people is the highest in the world.
boem@lemmy.worldOPto World News@lemmy.world•Why the 2024 Olympic Games may drive out Paris’ beloved booksellersEnglish38·2 years agoA battle is brewing between the city and its booksellers, who have been warned that the kiosks will have to be taken down for the Paris Olympics – an unprecedented move since the book stalls took up full-time residence along the Seine more than 160 years ago.
boem@lemmy.worldOPto science@lemmy.world•New Player in Human Aging: Neural activity emerges as a factor in longevity.16·2 years agoA new character has stepped onstage in the story of human aging: neural excitation.
The brain’s neural activity, long implicated in disorders ranging from dementia to epilepsy, plays a role in human aging and life span, according to research led by scientists in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School.
The study, published on 16 Oct. in Nature, is based on findings from human brains, mice and worms and suggests that excessive activity in the brain is linked to shorter life spans, while suppressing such overactivity extends life.
boem@lemmy.worldOPto World News@lemmy.world•Japan records steepest population decline while number of foreign residents hits new highEnglish30·2 years agoJapan’s population declined in all of its 47 prefectures for the first time in a record drop, while its number of foreign residents hit a new high, reaching almost 3 million people, according to government data released Wednesday, highlighting the increasing role that non-Japanese people play in the shrinking and aging country.
The population of Japanese nationals fell by about 800,000 people, or 0.65%, to 122.4 million in 2022 from the previous year, falling for a 14th straight year.
boem@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Opinions: What is a movie you genuinely like, that is rated below 60% on rotten tomatoes?14·2 years agoThe 1998 Godzilla.
boem@lemmy.worldOPto World News@lemmy.world•What countries will heat up the most in a 2°-warmer world: the need for air conditioning will skyrocket, with Africa and Europe hit hardest.English491·2 years agoOne of the more threatening aspects of climate change is its potential to unleash feedbacks, or situations where warming induces changes that drive even more warming. Most of those are natural, such as a warmer ocean being able to hold less carbon dioxide, resulting in even more of the greenhouse gas in the atmosphere.
But at least one potential feedback has a very human element: air conditioning.
A lot of the carbon dioxide we emit comes from the production of electricity. The heat those emissions generate causes people to run air conditioning more often, which drives more electricity use, which drives further emissions. It’s a feedback that will remain a threat until we manage to green the electrical grid.
Nothing Phone (2) Review - GSM Arena
Meanwhile YouTube tries to copy TikTok by pushing Shorts.