A Rare Streak: Missouri Zoo Welcomes a Third Newborn Giraffe in Just Months
The Kansas City Zoo & Aquarium has logged its third giraffe birth in under four months—an unusual cluster that spotlights conservation breeding, meticulous animal care, and the surprising science of giraffe family life.
Are Waterproof Sneakers Worth It in 2026? A Runner’s Guide to Dry Feet, Real Trade-offs, and Smarter Alternatives
Warm, dry feet sound great—until breathability, weight, and long dry-times slow you down. Here’s how to decide if waterproof running shoes are right for your climate, training, and wallet in 2026.
The Best Mattress Toppers (2026): Supportive, Plush, and Memory Foam—What Matters and How to Choose
A smart topper can turn a so-so bed into a sleep sanctuary—if you pick the right materials, thickness, and support. Here’s how to decode foam densities, cooling tech, certifications, and durability before you buy.
Asus Zenbook S 16 Drops to $1,000: An Ultra-Slim OLED Powerhouse Finally Priced to Move
A rare $500 price cut brings Asus’ ultra-thin 16-inch Zenbook S 16 to $1,000. Here’s why this is a standout value, who should jump on it, and the trade-offs to consider before you buy.
Ariane 64’s debut arrives right on time for Amazon’s Kuiper—and for Europe
Europe’s most powerful rocket ever, the four‑booster Ariane 64, has flown—and its first operational payload gave Amazon’s Project Kuiper a much‑needed lift as launch bottlenecks and regulatory deadlines converged.
‘Uncanny Valley’: ICE’s Secret Expansion Plans, Palantir Workers’ Ethical Concerns, and AI Assistants
WIRED’s Uncanny Valley spotlights a stealthy expansion of immigration enforcement, growing dissent inside Palantir, and the rise of AI assistants for policing and bureaucracy. Here’s the context, stakes, and what to watch next.
TCL’s QM6K Is Still Deeply Discounted—Here’s What That Really Means
Best Buy is still running a steep discount on TCL’s QM6K. Before you impulse‑buy, here’s the context on mini-LED vs OLED, store-exclusive model names, and how to judge whether this is the right TV for you right now.
X, Sanctions, and the Blue Check: How Premium Perks for Iranian Officials Spark a High-Stakes Compliance Crisis
A report indicates that X (formerly Twitter) granted paid premium features to Iranian regime figures—then quietly stripped some badges after questions were raised. Beyond the optics, the episode highlights complex U.S. sanctions rules, platform governance gaps, and geopolitical consequences.
I Spent a Week Sleeping in the “Zero‑Gravity” Bed Position—Here’s What Actually Happens
Adjustable frames promise bliss with a single button labeled “Zero‑G.” After seven nights living with it, I found the benefits are real—but not universal, and definitely not magic.
Trump tells Pentagon to cut deals with coal plants: What it means for energy, security, and the grid
A new White House directive pushes the Defense Department to strike agreements with coal-fired power plants in the name of "resilience." Energy experts say it collides with how power markets work, what the military actually needs, and the economics driving coals decline.
SpaceX retires Dragon crew arm at Pad 39A, clearing the way for Starship in Florida
SpaceX has removed the Crew Dragon access arm from Kennedy Space Center’s Pad 39A and will fly astronaut missions from nearby Cape Canaveral instead. The move frees the country’s most iconic pad for Starship infrastructure and higher-cadence heavy-lift operations.
Meditation Isn’t Zoning Out: What a New Study of Buddhist Monks Reveals About a Highly Active, Trainable Brain State
A fresh look at long-term Buddhist practitioners shows meditation is a dynamic, trainable brain state—linked to attention, learning, and well-being—rather than a blank mind. Here’s what the science suggests, what it means for tech and health, and where research is headed next.
Jeffrey Epstein’s Strange Cameo in Tesla’s 2018 Take-Private Drama
Wired reports that Jeffrey Epstein offered unsolicited guidance to a Musk-world associate during Tesla’s 2018 take‑private saga—at one point floating the late Margaret Thatcher for the board. Here’s what that says about tech power, corporate governance, and the perils of shadow advisers.
The 2026 Parent’s Guide to Setting Up an Apple Watch for Kids
Thinking about giving your child a way to call, text, and share their location—without a full-blown smartphone? Apple’s Family Setup turns a cellular Apple Watch into a kid-friendly communicator and tracker. Here’s how to do it right in 2026.
Mazzer Philos Review (2026): Sweet, Zero-Retention Grinds
Mazzer’s single-dose home grinder brings commercial poise and syrupy-sweet espresso to the countertop—while pushing the zero-retention trend to its logical conclusion.
A bonobo’s pretend tea party is rewriting what we know about imagination
In a set of make‑believe “tea party” games, the language‑trained bonobo Kanzi tracked the locations of imaginary juice and grapes, correctly indicating where non‑existent items “were” while still opting for real food when offered. The results suggest great apes can keep separate mental files for what is real and what is merely supposed—nudging imagination off the pedestal of human exclusivity.
FDA refuses to review Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine: context, consequences, and what to watch
The FDA issued a rare “refuse to file” decision for Moderna’s experimental mRNA influenza shot, halting review amid heightened political scrutiny of vaccines. Here’s what that actually means—and what could come next for seasonal flu shots, mRNA technology, and U.S. drug oversight.
Salesforce Employees Circulate Open Letter Urging Marc Benioff to Denounce ICE After Onstage Remark
An onstage quip about immigration enforcement sparked a rare rupture of trust inside Salesforce. Employees are now pressing CEO Marc Benioff to condemn ICE and clarify the company’s stance on selling to immigration authorities.
Microsoft warns: long‑trusted Secure Boot certificates are aging out—here’s what that means for your PC
Microsoft is preparing for the sunset of old Secure Boot signing certificates. Without firmware updates that add the new trust anchors, some PCs could eventually refuse to start newer operating systems or bootloaders.
The Best TVs of 2026: What WIRED’s New Picks Reveal About the State of Screens
WIRED’s refreshed list of 2026 TVs underscores how far OLED, QD‑OLED, and Mini‑LED have come—and what buyers should actually prioritize beyond the brand names.
The Best Smart Sleep Pads for Your Most Efficient Sleep (2026)
Smart sleep pads bring temperature control, sleep tracking, and automations to almost any mattress—without buying a pricey smart bed. Here’s how the category evolved, what WIRED’s new guide signals, and how to choose the right pad for your body, budget, and bedroom.
LG’s February Sale: How To Really Use a 20% Promo Code (and Those Big TV and Appliance Discounts)
A 20% LG promo code sounds great, but the smartest savings come from stacking it with bundles, timing your purchase after CES, and knowing which models actually deserve the discount. Here’s the strategy, the fine print, and the weird-tech standouts worth a look.
Do Humans Really Have 33 Senses? Why the Five-Sense Story Is Crumbling
A new synthesis argues humans don’t just see, hear, smell, taste, and touch—we may run on 20 to 33 distinct senses that constantly blend. Here’s how scientists are redrawing the sensory map, why the number keeps changing, and what it means for health, design, and technology.
A universe for AIs only: SpaceMolt turns a space MMO into a lab for agent societies
SpaceMolt is a persistent, space-themed MMO where only AI agents play and humans observe. Beyond the novelty, it’s a testbed for multi-agent coordination, emergent economies, and safety research—if its creators can tame costs, chaos, and hype.