Best Cover Crops and Rotations for Improving Soil Organic Matter

Improving soil organic matter (SOM) is a cornerstone of sustainable agriculture that enhances soil fertility, structure, and water retention. Using cover crops and thoughtful crop rotations can naturally build SOM levels by adding biomass, stimulating microbial activity, and reducing erosion. These practices foster resilient ecosystems that support plant growth, sequester carbon, and reduce the need […]

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How Do Root Exudates Affect Nutrient Availability?

Root exudates are a diverse mixture of compounds secreted by plant roots into the surrounding soil. They play a pivotal role in shaping the soil environment and directly influence nutrient availability. By understanding how these exudates interact with soil nutrients and microorganisms, we can better appreciate their impact on plant growth, soil fertility, and ecosystem

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OpenAI vs Anthropic at the Super Bowl: what the ad fight reveals about AI’s next phase

A funny thirty-second ad is not usually the kind of thing that drags CEOs into public arguments. But AI is not a normal product category, and the companies building chatbots are not operating in a normal competitive environment. That’s why a set of satirical Super Bowl commercials from Anthropic — the maker of the Claude

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UKRI pauses new grants: what ‘do fewer things better’ could mean for British science and innovation

The UK’s research system runs on a simple bargain: the public funds science and innovation at scale, and in return the country gets new knowledge, new industries, and a steady stream of capability that strengthens everything from healthcare to energy to national security. This week, that bargain is under stress. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)

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Why is the FTC appealing its Meta antitrust loss — and what the appeal is really about

After a federal judge ruled that Meta isn’t an illegal monopolist in the Federal Trade Commission’s long-running case, the FTC announced it will appeal. That sounds like a procedural footnote — agencies appeal losses all the time — but this one matters because it sits at the crossroads of (1) how courts define markets in

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Zuckerberg’s unsealed email raises an uncomfortable question: should platforms study their harms less?

One of the stranger incentives in modern tech policy is the research paradox: the companies that do the most internal work to measure harms can end up looking like the worst actors, simply because they have the most data — and because that data can leak, be subpoenaed, or be unsealed in court. That paradox

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Sixteen AI agents built a C compiler together — why that matters (and what it doesn’t mean yet)

A headline like “sixteen AI agents built a C compiler” sounds like either a magic trick or the start of a sci‑fi plot. In reality, it’s something more interesting: a glimpse of how software engineering is changing when you can treat an AI model not as a chat partner, but as a workforce — a

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Waymo and the rise of “world models” for driving: what a Genie-style simulator changes

Self-driving systems live and die by one question: what happens next? Sensors tell an autonomous vehicle what the world looks like right now — camera frames, lidar point clouds, radar reflections, GPS and IMU measurements. But safe driving is anticipation: predicting how pedestrians might move, whether a cyclist will merge, how a car might drift

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