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Review: Wobkey Crush 80 Reboot Pro is a perfect enthusiast keyboard
The beauty about customizable keyboards is that if you don’t like it, you can change it up. If the touch feels off, you can switch out the keycaps. If typing on it is too loud, users can replace the switches. Crafting the experience so that the mechanical keyboard fits a desired aesthetic is one of the joys of the hobby.
The problem with ...Read more

Review: ‘Onimusha 2: Samurai’s Destiny’ remaster an uneven trip down memory lane
To see how far gaming has come, it’s important to know where it has been. Over 20 years, visual fidelity has improved so much that it’s harder to tell video games from live-action movies. The voice work has taken an enormous leap as the actors behind digital characters become stars in their own right, and the gameplay has been refined to ...Read more

Trump administration nominates official to oversee Colorado River negotiations
As Nevada and its neighbors argue and a deadline looms, the Trump administration has chosen the official who will oversee contentious Colorado River negotiations if approved by the U.S. Senate.
Ted Cooke, who managed the Central Arizona Project from 2015 to 2023, would be the leader of the federal agency that manages water and dams in the West,...Read more

Trump administration nominates official to oversee Colorado River negotiations
As Nevada and its neighbors argue while a deadline looms, the Trump administration has chosen the official who will oversee contentious Colorado River negotiations if approved by the U.S. Senate.
Ted Cooke, who managed the Central Arizona Project from 2015 to 2023, would be the leader of the federal agency that manages both water and dams in ...Read more

Natural disasters may be shaping babies' brains
NEW YORK — Climate disasters are known for damaging homes, disrupting power and displacing residents. But even after the lights come back on and people return to their homes, their effects can linger — including in the brains of children born afterward, a new study suggests.
Climate stressors, and the effect they have on pregnant people, ...Read more

Lake Tahoe mystery: Why aren't the lake's famous waters getting more clear?
The clarity of Lake Tahoe — the famed alpine lake on California’s border with Nevada, whose spectacular scenery draws millions of visitors a year and has spawned countless bumper stickers to “Keep Tahoe Blue” — is in the middle of a curious trend.
It isn’t really getting much better. Or much worse, despite relentless efforts to ...Read more

Gov. McMaster opposes offshore drilling along South Carolina coast as feds seek more energy
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Gov. Henry McMaster announced his opposition Monday to drilling for oil and gas off the South Carolina coast, saying the practice could hurt beaches, wildlife and the state’s lucrative, multibillion-dollar tourism industry.
In a news release Monday afternoon, Republican McMaster said he and North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein, a...Read more

ULA scrubs attempt at 2nd launch of year helping Amazon catch up to SpaceX
United Launch Alliance scrubbed Monday an attempt for what would have been its second launch of the year, another mission for Amazon’s effort to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink internet constellation.
ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno said a possible issue with the gaseous nitrogen purge line was the culprit.
“We will need to stand down ...Read more
ULA lines up 2nd launch of year helping Amazon catch up to SpaceX
United Launch Alliance is prepped for its second launch of the year on another mission amid Amazon’s effort to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink internet constellation.
An Atlas V rocket is targeting 1:25 p.m. Monday for liftoff with 27 of Amazon’s Project Kuiper satellites from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 41....Read more

Butterflies are disappearing. Here's how Colorado community scientists are working to save them
A butterfly flits past the window at the Castlewood Canyon Visitor Center, where dozens of volunteers have gathered to learn about Colorado’s declining butterfly population and how they can do their part to save it.
Shiran Hershcovich, a lepidopterist at the Westminster-based Butterfly Pavilion who’s leading the Saturday morning training, ...Read more

mRNA vaccine technology makes headway via Pitt, Penn State research
A new kind of mRNA vaccine developed by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh and Penn State University could be cheaper to produce and offer a greater level of immunity across multiple variants of the virus.
The news comes as mRNA vaccines have been targeted by the Trump administration's recent funding cuts, and Health Secretary Robert F...Read more

A Lake Mead's worth of water has vanished from the ground. Could Las Vegas suffer?
The water beneath our feet that we use to bathe, drink and water crops is vanishing faster than ever in the Colorado River Basin, according to a new study.
From Arizona State University researchers, the study of satellite images has found that an amount of water comparable to Lake Mead has been lost from the ground in the period studied from ...Read more
After a century of logging, lands along California's Klamath River returned to tribe
LOS ANGELES — Along the Klamath River in Northern California, where logging companies once cut ancient redwood trees, vast tracts of land have been returned to the Yurok Tribe in a years-long effort that tribal leaders say will enable the restoration of forests and the protection of a watershed that is vital for salmon.
The effort, which ...Read more

Axiom Space back on track for possible Space Coast launch next week
ORLANDO, Fla. — A leak in space and a leak on Earth have both been taken care of clearing the way for the next human spaceflight from the Space Coast.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket topped with a new Crew Dragon spacecraft looks to bring the four private astronauts on the Axiom Space Ax-4 mission on a trip to the International Space Station as ...Read more

Water flea population soared in South Side stretch of Chicago River after 2023 sewage release
CHICAGO — In the summer of 2023, strange things happened to the tiny creatures that swim and float in the Chicago River.
One type of water flea, Chydoridae, basically disappeared from the South Side stretch known as Bubbly Creek, while another, Moinidae, experienced a dramatic population surge.
“You could see them with your eyes — clouds...Read more
Offshore drilling threat resurfaces along Georgia's coast
SAVANNAH, Ga. ― Opening the Georgia coast to offshore drilling is again under consideration, and the public has until Monday to comment.
The federal agency that manages energy resources along the Outer Continental Shelf, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, is in the early stages of developing a schedule for offshore oil and gas leases that...Read more

Amid NASA cuts, popular social accounts for Mars rovers, Voyager going dark
President Donald Trump’s NASA budget plans look to cut its public relations funding by half, but already the agency is shuttering social media accounts that include those dedicated to popular missions including Mars Curiosity, Mars Perseverance and Voyager.
Those three in particular have quite the fanbase on X with Curiosity’s account ...Read more

SpaceX sends up Space Coast's 50th launch of the year
Florida’s 50th launch of 2025 had been planned to be a human spaceflight, but instead it ended up being another batch of Starlink satellites.
SpaceX and Axiom Space remain on hold for any attempt to launch the Ax-4 mission from Kennedy Space Center, which had several options to fly this week, but were stymied by weather and then a liquid ...Read more
Morning SpaceX launch would be Space Coast's 50th of the year
The 50th launch of 2025 was gearing up to be a human spaceflight, but instead it’s likely to be another batch of Starlink satellites.
SpaceX and Axiom Space are holding back on any attempt to launch the Ax-4 mission from Kennedy Space Center while NASA and Roscosmos check out repairs to an ongoing leak on the Russian side of the International...Read more

In unlikely relationship, endangered herons seek out Chicago zoo's red wolves for protection
CHICAGO — Small and stocky birds perch, hunched over, on the treetops and branches of Lake Okeechobee on the edge of Florida’s swampy Everglades for the better part of winter. The alligators swarming the murky waters below don’t faze the black-crowned night herons — in fact, the birds count on them for protection. And when some fly away ...Read more
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