エピソード

  • The Final Episode
    2025/09/08

    An announcement explaining why I'm cancelling the podcast. If you want more information about it, I wrote a public blog post over on the Patreon page. Check it out.


    https://www.patreon.com/c/DailyScienceBrief



    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    7 分
  • Penguin Spears, Ocean Currents, and a Gladiator Bear
    2025/09/05

    Penguins with dagger-like beaks, a collapsing Atlantic current, a brain map of 600,000 cells, and a bear skull that proves gladiators fought wild animals.


    SOURCES

    • Early penguins may have used dagger-like beaks to skewer prey | New Scientist
    • Key Atlantic current could start collapsing as early as 2055, new study finds | Live Science
    • Map of 600,000 brain cells rewrites the textbook on how the brain makes decisions | Live Science
    • Skull of bear held captive to fight Roman gladiators discovered near ancient amphitheater in Serbia | Live Science

    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • How to Sweet-Talk an AI
    2025/09/04

    Why scrolling on the toilet could be bad for your health, why we may have way less carbon storage underground than we thought, whether plant-based dog food really works, and how humans and AIs fall for the same persuasion tricks.


    SOURCES

    • Smartphone scrolling on the toilet could increase risk of haemorrhoids | New Scientist
    • We may have 10 times less carbon storage capacity than we thought | New Scientist
    • Plant-based dog foods provide almost all the nutrients pets need | New Scientist
    • These psychological tricks can get LLMs to respond to “forbidden” prompts | Ars Technica

    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • Can We Recycle Every Car?
    2025/09/03

    Blobs from failed planets hiding in Mars, a possible anti-aging drug, a surprising benefit of the hepatitis B vaccine, and recycling old cars into new ones.


    SOURCES

    Dozens of mysterious blobs discovered inside Mars may be the remnants of 'failed planets' | Live Science

    Rapamycin may extend lifespans by protecting against DNA damage | New Scientist

    Hepatitis B vaccine linked with a lower risk of developing diabetes | New Scientist

    Can we finally recycle all of the metal in scrap cars? | New Scientist

    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • Red Onion, Green Energy
    2025/09/02

    Volcanoes can lead to revolutions, onions powering solar panels, a spacecraft predicting solar storms, and computers you can throw in the wash.


    SOURCES

    • Volcanic eruptions may have helped spark the French Revolution | New Scientist
    • Scientists turned to a red onion to improve solar cells — and it could make solar power more sustainable | Live Science
    • Spacecraft used to forecast solar storm 15 hours before it hit Earth | New Scientist
    • Scientists cram an entire computer into a single fiber of clothing — and you can even put it through your washing machine | Live Science
    • Fibre computer enables more accurate recognition of human activity | EurekAlert! - AAAS


    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • Spiders Throw Nature's Creepiest Rave
    2025/08/29

    Stress in pregnancy may prime babies for eczema. Pee tests could help eliminate cervical cancer. Spiders use fireflies as glowing bait. China builds a macaque-sized brain supercomputer.

    SOURCES

    • The foundations of eczema may start to be laid down in the womb | New Scientist
    • Stress-Related Maternal Factors During Pregnancy in Relation to Childhood Eczema: Results From the LISA Study | JIACI
    • Urine tests detect high-risk HPV as effectively as DIY vaginal swabs | New Scientist
    • Spiders seen keeping fireflies as glowing prisoners that draw more prey to their webs | Live Science
    • China's 'Darwin Monkey' is the world's largest brain-inspired supercomputer | Live Science


    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • Shocking New Eye Treatment
    2025/08/28

    A brain-inspired AI outsmarts ChatGPT, a new zap for your eyeballs could replace LASIK, middle age isn’t the low point it used to be, and CPR in space gets a boost from machines.


    SOURCES

    Scientists just developed a new AI modeled on the human brain — it's outperforming LLMs like ChatGPT at reasoning tasks | Live Science

    Early test of new laser-free eye treatment shows promise | Live Science

    We're no longer at our unhappiest during middle age | New Scientist

    CPR in space could be made easier by chest compression machines | New Scientist

    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分
  • Foam Sweet Foam
    2025/08/27

    Screwworms have invaded the US, AI is predicting hurricanes, U.S. power is slowly shifting to solar, and scientists crack the mystery of beer foam.


    SOURCES

    • US reports its first New World parasitic screwworm infection in decades | Live Science
    • Google’s AI model just nailed the forecast for the strongest Atlantic storm this year | Ars Technica
    • US‘s spike in electricity use is slowing down a bit | Ars Technica
    • Electric Power Monthly | U.S. Energy Information Administration
    • Scientists unlock secret to thick, stable beer foams | Ars Technica

    Please SUBSCRIBE HERE to get the show delivered straight to you.


    Special thanks to our supporters who help make this show possible.

    Enjoy the show? You can support us too on Patreon. Help keep the show going. Thank you!


    Send us email to dailysciencebrief@gmail.com


    Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

    Cover Art: Scott Johnson

    Outro Music: Stravyn

    Brought to you by the DTNS Family of podcasts.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分