Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Legislation recently enacted in California will make it easier for consumers nationwide to protect their data.
  • A 23-million-year-old rhinoceros fossil is reshaping scientists' understanding of mammal evolution.
  • The number of new international students enrolling in college in the U.S. is dropping. Their losses will be felt beyond classrooms, as foreign students in particular drive scientific research and advancement. As the state with the most international students, California will likely feel the biggest impact.
  • A lot of companies use cybersecurity training to prevent phishing attacks. A UC San Diego study says they should find a better way to protect their digital assets.
  • Vulnicura VR Remastered revisits a project the Icelandic pop artist debuted a decade ago, now reimagined with advanced technology.
  • Scientists have extracted the oldest RNA molecules out of a woolly mammoth, gaining a snapshot into the processes at work in the extinct mammal's body just before it died.
  • No one knows exactly when Gramma was born. But if the estimated birth year of 1884 is accurate, Chester Arthur occupied the Oval Office and there were only 39 states at the time.
  • Halloween Fun at The Garden Goes Batty! Join us at The Water Conservation Garden on Saturday, October 18 from 5–7:30 p.m. for a spooktacular evening of family fun! Enjoy Ms. Smarty-Plants’ Halloween show, live music from local youth band Epidural, and hands-on exhibits with Herpetological Society (Snakes), Lions, Tigers and Bears, The Nat, Solana Center, and more. Kids can explore themed Trick-or-Treat Stations throughout The Garden trails—visit the Mad Scientist Lab, Dracula’s Crypt, and Mother Nature’s Den for treats and surprises! Enjoy pizza, free parking, and Halloween magic under the stars at The Garden’s Plaza. A perfect night of spooky fun, music, and science for the whole family! The Water Conservation Garden on Facebook / Instagram
  • The sun has burped out bursts of energy called coronal mass ejections that could reach Earth Tuesday night. Forecasters said the vibrant displays could be visible across much of the northern U.S.
  • Berlin-based sound artist Eric Wong transforms Bread & Salt into an immersive, decentralized sonic environment using dozens of Bluetooth speakers scattered throughout the space and among the audience. Harmonic and inharmonic tones shift and interfere depending on where you stand, creating a constantly changing, interactive experience. Sharing the bill is Seattle-based composer RM Francis with a haunting “depopulated opera” built from simulated human voices—an uncanny chorus of digital timbres that blurs the line between the organic and the synthetic. Together, Wong and Francis offer a night of spatial listening and technological experimentation that invites audiences into a sonic world of exploration, meditation, and imagination. Eric Wong’s performance made possible by a grant from the Goethe Institut. Project [BLANK]: Website / Facebook / Instagram
17 of 3,044