Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
The Silent Shield: How Antimicrobial Additives Are Changing Everyday Life?
You touch your phone hundreds of times a day. You rest your hands on desks, door handles, kitchen counters—rarely thinking twice about what lingers beneath your fingertips. But what if those surfaces could quietly defend you, every second, without you even noticing?
By efingutthomasabout 10 hours ago in Journal
Chimpanzees cure their own wounds and aid their friends by using medicinal herbs found in woodlands.
In Uganda’s Budongo Forest, chimpanzees are doing more than just surviving. They’re treating their wounds with plants, cleaning each other’s injuries, and pulling snares off their companions’ limbs. These behaviors, documented in a new study, hint at something profound. Perhaps the roots of human medicine run deeper than we thought.
By Francis Damiabout 10 hours ago in Journal
Scientists warn of a concerning "Day Zero Drought" timetable in the United States.
For the majority of countries on Earth, including some areas of the United States, water security is rapidly turning into an existential threat. According to a thorough worldwide research, many areas are on the verge of a "Day Zero Drought," which could cause taps to run dry for months or even years rather than just a few days.
By Francis Damiabout 11 hours ago in Journal
Possession of nukes is Ukraine's best shortcut to NATO and peace
When Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukraine learned a devastating lesson about the value of promises. The Budapest Memorandum (1994) saw Ukraine voluntarily surrender the world's third-largest nuclear arsenal in exchange for security assurances from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Russia.
By Aurel Stratanabout 11 hours ago in Journal
Why Plastics are Quietly Rebuilding Cities?
At first glance, the building looked like any other rising structure—steel beams stretching skyward, workers moving in rhythm, the hum of machinery filling the air. But beneath the concrete and behind the walls, something unexpected was shaping its future.
By efingutthomasabout 12 hours ago in Journal
The Future Market of Hypertonic Drinks. AI-Generated.
Why I’m Finally Swapping My Water Bottle for High-Carb Fuel? I remember the first time I "bonked" during a long-distance trail run. One minute I was gliding through the trees, and the next, my legs felt like lead, and my brain was a fog. I had a bottle of standard sports drink in my hand, but it wasn't doing anything. It felt like I was drinking flavored water that just sat in my stomach, sloshing around without actually giving me the "go" I needed.
By Harvey Specterabout 13 hours ago in Journal
Web 3.0: The $56B Shift Reshaping the Internet. AI-Generated.
At 2:17 a.m., a developer in Bangalore deploys a smart contract that no bank approves, no government signs, and no corporation owns—yet within minutes, it’s live, global, and unstoppable. Somewhere else, an artist sells a digital collectible directly to a fan without a middleman. A gamer earns real money from a virtual world that exists beyond any single company’s control.
By Andrew Hamiltonabout 13 hours ago in Journal
$8.48B Surge: Expense Software Is Transforming Work. AI-Generated.
The receipt was crumpled at the bottom of her bag. Not because it didn’t matter—but because there were too many of them. Flights, meals, cabs, subscriptions… a daily flood of small decisions turning into a monthly nightmare. When she finally opened her laptop to file expenses, it felt less like accounting and more like archaeology.
By Andrew Hamiltonabout 13 hours ago in Journal
Machines That Warn Before Failure. AI-Generated.
The machine didn’t break. It almost did. A faint vibration, barely noticeable to the human ear, triggered an alert. A technician checked the system, paused operations, and replaced a worn-out component. Hours later, everything was running smoothly again—no shutdown, no losses, no chaos.
By Andrew Hamiltonabout 13 hours ago in Journal









