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Researchers at the University of Adelaide have performed the first imaging of embryos using cameras designed for quantum measurements.

The University’s Center of Light for Life academics investigated how to best use ultrasensitive technology, including the latest generation of cameras that can count individual packets of light energy at each pixel, for life sciences.

Center director Professor Kishan Dholakia said the sensitive detection of these packets of light energy, termed photons, is vitally important for capturing in their natural state—allowing researchers to illuminate with gentle doses of light.

A breakthrough in heavy-element chemistry shatters long-held assumptions about transuranium elements. Researchers have discovered “berkelocene,” the first organometallic molecule to be characterized containing the heavy element berkelium. The molecule was synthesized using just 0.3 milligram.

For decades, scientists believed that lead-208, a “doubly magic” and highly stable atomic nucleus, was perfectly spherical. However, groundbreaking new research has shattered this assumption, revealing that its nucleus is actually elongated, much like a rugby ball.

By using an advanced gamma-ray spectrometer and high-speed particle collisions, researchers uncovered unexpected quantum behavior that contradicts long-standing nuclear theory. This revelation forces physicists to rethink fundamental principles of nuclear structure, potentially reshaping our understanding of heavy elements and their formation in the universe.

Lead-208: A Surprising Discovery

A new technique in detector fabrication could change high-energy physics forever.

By using additive manufacturing, researchers have developed a novel way to construct plastic scintillator detectors, drastically cutting costs and build time. Their first prototype, the SuperCube, has proven capable of tracking cosmic particles, marking a milestone for 3D-printed particle physics technology.

Next-Generation Neutrino Detection

A major breakthrough in organic semiconductors.

Semiconductors are materials with electrical conductivity that falls between conductors and insulators, making them essential for modern electronics. They are typically crystalline solids, the most common of which is silicon, used extensively in the production of electronic components such as transistors and diodes. Semiconductors are unique because their conductivity can be altered and controlled through doping—adding impurities to the material to change its electrical properties. This property allows them to serve as the foundation for integrated circuits and microchips, powering everything from computers and smartphones to advanced medical devices and renewable energy technologies. The behavior of semiconductors is also crucial in the development of various electronic, photonic, and quantum devices.

Threat intelligence company GreyNoise warns that a critical PHP remote code execution vulnerability that impacts Windows systems is now under mass exploitation.

Tracked as CVE-2024–4577, this PHP-CGI argument injection flaw was patched in June 2024 and affects Windows PHP installations with PHP running in CGI mode. Successful exploitation enables unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code and leads to complete system compromise following successful exploitation.

A day after PHP maintainers released CVE-2024–4577 patches on June 7, 2024, WatchTowr Labs released proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit code, and the Shadowserver Foundation reported observing exploitation attempts.

A new ransomware operator named ‘Mora_001’ is exploiting two Fortinet vulnerabilities to gain unauthorized access to firewall appliances and deploy a custom ransomware strain dubbed SuperBlack.

The two vulnerabilities, both authentication bypasses, are CVE-2024–55591 and CVE-2025–24472, which Fortinet disclosed in January and February, respectively.

When Fortinet first disclosed CVE-2024–55591 on January 14, they confirmed it had been exploited as a zero-day, with Arctic Wolf stating it had been used in attacks since November 2024 to breach FortiGate firewalls.

Microsoft has reinstated the ‘Material Theme – Free’ and ‘Material Theme Icons – Free’ extensions on the Visual Studio Marketplace after finding that the obfuscated code they contained wasn’t actually malicious.

The two VSCode extensions, which count over 9 million installs, were pulled from the VSCode Marketplace in late February over security risks, and their publisher, Mattia Astorino (aka ‘equinusocio’) was banned from the platform.

“A member of the community did a deep security analysis of the extension and found multiple red flags that indicate malicious intent and reported this to us,” stated a Microsoft employee at the time.

Watch the latest space experiment developed by the Fighting Illini!🚀🤖


Step into the future of space construction! Watch as University of Illinois researchers revolutionize how we build in space using advanced robotics and innovative composite materials. In this episode of Robots In Space, aerospace engineer Mike DiVerde breaks down the groundbreaking DARPA NOM4D program that’s sending experimental manufacturing technology to the International Space Station. Discover how the Fighting Illini are pioneering techniques that could transform space infrastructure construction, making it faster, cheaper, and more efficient than ever before. From Cygnus spacecraft operations to microgravity experiments, this video showcases cutting-edge aerospace engineering that’s pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in space.

#SpaceManufacturing #DARPANOM4D #SpaceRobotics #FightingIllini #AerospaceEngineering

In today’s AI news, ChatGPT just added 100 million users in two months, the fastest cohort adoption in two years, they said. As a result, we have increased our forecast for AI adoption in both consumer and enterprise, they added. OpenAI didn’t respond to a request for comment about what’s been driving this growth spurt. The Barclays analysts studying their growth suggested several reasons, though.

And, tech companies have been betting on virtual assistants for more than a decade, to little avail. But this new generation of AI was going to change things. But, the tech still doesn’t work. Chatbots may be fun to talk to and an occasionally useful replacement for Google, but truly game-changing virtual assistants are nowhere close to ready. And without them, the gadget revolution we were promised has utterly failed to materialize.

Meanwhile, AI company Sesame has released the base model that powers Maya, the impressively realistic voice assistant. The model, which is 1 billion parameters in size (“parameters” referring to individual components of the model), is under an Apache 2.0 license, meaning it can be used commercially with few restrictions. Called CSM-1B, the model generates “RVQ audio codes” from text and audio inputs.

S official forum, after producing approximately 750 to 800 lines of code, the AI assistant halted work and delivered a refusal message: “I cannot generate code for you, as that would be completing your work.” ‘ + In videos, can mislabeled dog paws ruin an AI model? IBM Fellow, Martin Keen explains how ground truth data ensures accurate AI predictions by powering supervised learning and training. Explore challenges like ambiguity and skewed data, and learn strategies to improve data labeling for better AI performance.

And, Harvey CEO Winston Weinberg explains why success in legal AI requires more than just model capabilities—it demands deep process expertise that doesn’t exist online. He shares how Harvey balances rapid product development with earning trust from law firms through hyper-personalized demos and deep industry expertise. He covers Harvey’s approach to product development—expanding specialized capabilities then collapsing them …

In further experimentation, Alex Ziskind compared running DeepSeek locally — various model sizes and quantizations on Apple Silicon M1, M2, M3, M4 Max MacBooks. Alex puts them all to the test and explains all the steps.

We close out with, Eric Simons is the founder and CEO of StackBlitz, the company behind Bolt—the #1 web-based AI coding agent and one of the fastest-growing products in history. After nearly shutting down, StackBlitz launched Bolt on Twitter and exploded from zero to $40 million ARR and 1 million monthly active users in about five months.