What I Am Reading:

Scientists Reconstruct What You're Looking at by Enhancing Reflection in Your Eye

Researchers at the University of Maryland have developed an eerie technique that can reconstruct 3D images from the reflections in your eyes, by building on a neural network model called neural radiance fields (NeRF).

Astronomers detect largest cosmic explosion ever seen

The explosion is more than 10 times brighter than any recorded exploding star - known as a supernova.

The Impact of Stress on the Well-Being of Startup Founders

Startup Snapshot's insightful and provocative research sheds light on the big picture of founder mental health needs and solutions.

What I am Watching:

How Did This Butterfly Get So Old?

A special diet could be the secret to its exceptional longevity.

A Pumped Up Guide to ‘Arnold,’ the Doc About the Man Behind the Muscles

My biggest takeaway: Always be Useful!

What I am Listening To:

Hidden wonders of human anatomy

"It turns out that living beings are less like bags of sloshing water, as I imagined in grade school, and more like a stew. While water makes up most of it, water alone is thin and empty of the organic molecules from which organisms are built—the stew thickeners. Water alone is lifeless. Instead, it is the mucus in our bodies that—so long as it has the correct qualities and consistency—is the key to a healthy life. The 'fact' that our bodies are made mostly of water is misleading. What we are actually made of is mucus."