23 Feb 2026
Slashdot
Stressful People in Your Life Could Be Adding Months To Your Biological Age
A study published last week in PNAS found that people who regularly cause problems or make life difficult -- whom the researchers call "hasslers" -- are associated with measurably faster biological aging in those around them, at a rate of roughly 1.5% per additional hassler and about nine months of additional biological age relative to same-age peers. The research drew on DNA methylation-based epigenetic clocks and ego-centric network data from a state-representative probability sample of 2,345 adults in Indiana, aged 18 to 103. Nearly 29% of respondents reported at least one hassler in their close network. The biological toll varied by relationship type: hasslers who were family members showed the strongest and most consistent associations with accelerated aging, while spouse hasslers showed no significant effect on either epigenetic measure. The damage also went beyond aging clocks -- each additional hassler was associated with greater depression and anxiety severity, higher BMI, increased inflammation, and higher multimorbidity. When benchmarked against smoking, a major behavioral risk factor for aging, the hassler effect corresponded to roughly 13 to 17% of smoking's estimated impact on the same aging clocks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
23 Feb 2026 3:22pm GMT
Linuxiac
Firefox 148 Now Available for Download, Here’s What’s New

Mozilla Firefox 148 introduces a new AI Controls panel in Settings, letting users manage AI features directly.
23 Feb 2026 2:45pm GMT
Slashdot
Sam Altman Would Like To Remind You That Humans Use a Lot of Energy, Too
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is pushing back on growing concerns about AI's environmental footprint, dismissing claims about ChatGPT's water consumption as "totally fake" and arguing that the fairer way to measure AI's energy use is to compare it against humans. In an interview with Indian Express, Altman acknowledged that evaporative cooling in data centers once made water usage a real concern but said that is no longer the case, calling internet claims of 17 gallons of water per query "completely untrue, totally insane, no connection to reality." On energy, he conceded it is "fair" to worry about total consumption given how heavily the world now relies on AI, and called for a rapid shift toward nuclear, wind and solar power. He took particular issue with comparisons that pit the cost of training a model against a single human inference, noting it "takes like 20 years of life and all of the food you eat" before a person gets smart -- and that on a per-query basis, AI has "probably already caught up on an energy efficiency basis."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
23 Feb 2026 2:40pm GMT
Hacker News
The peculiar case of Japanese web design
23 Feb 2026 2:28pm GMT
The Age Verification Trap, Verifying age undermines everyone's data protection
23 Feb 2026 2:22pm GMT
Slashdot
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley Calculate AI's Contribution To U.S. Growth May Be Basically Zero
The narrative that AI spending has been singlehandedly propping up the U.S. economy -- a claim that captivated Silicon Valley, Wall Street and Washington over the past year -- is facing serious pushback from economists [non-paywalled source] at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase, all of whom now calculate that the AI buildup's direct contribution to growth was dramatically overstated and possibly close to zero. The debate hinges on how GDP accounts for imported components: roughly three-quarters of AI data center costs go toward computer chips and gear largely manufactured in Asia, and that spending gets subtracted from domestic output because it boosts foreign economies. Joseph Politano of the Apricitas Economics newsletter pegs AI's actual contribution at about 0.2 percentage points of the 2.2 percent U.S. growth in 2025, and even Hannah Rubinton at the St. Louis Fed -- whose own analysis attributed 39 percent of growth to AI-related business spending through the first nine months of the year -- acknowledges that figure is probably the ceiling. "It's not like AI is propping up the economy," Rubinton said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
23 Feb 2026 2:00pm GMT
Ars Technica
Review: Knight of the Seven Kingdoms brings back that Westeros magic
Prequel series is just great storytelling, reminding GoT fans why they loved the original so much.
23 Feb 2026 1:51pm GMT
Linuxiac
Ladybird Starts Rewriting Its Browser Engine in Rust with Help from AI

The Ladybird browser project introduces Rust alongside C++, porting its JavaScript engine with identical output and zero regressions.
23 Feb 2026 1:12pm GMT
Hacker News
VTT Test Donut Lab Battery Reaches 80% Charge in Under 10 Minutes [pdf]
23 Feb 2026 1:10pm GMT
Linuxiac
0 A.D. Open-Source RTS Game Drops Alpha Label After 16 Years

After 16 years of alpha releases, the open-source real-time strategy game 0 A.D. ships release 28, Boiorix, as its first non-alpha version.
23 Feb 2026 12:18pm GMT
Ars Technica
The first cars bold enough to drive themselves
Quevedo's telekino of 1904 was the first step on the road to autonomous Waymos.
23 Feb 2026 12:00pm GMT
22 Feb 2026
Ars Technica
Study shows how rocket launches pollute the atmosphere
Is the global atmospheric commons destined to be an industrial waste dumping ground?
22 Feb 2026 11:20am GMT