🎯 Success 💼 Business Growth 🧠 Brain Health
💸 Money & Finance 🏠 Spaces & Living 🌍 Travel Stories 🛳️ Travel Deals
Mad Mad News Logo LIVE ABOVE THE MADNESS
Videos Podcasts
🛒 MadMad Marketplace ▾
Big Hauls Next Car on Amazon
Mindset Shifts. New Wealth Paths. Limitless Discovery.

✈️ OGGHY JET SET

First-class travel insights, mind-expanding luxury & unapologetic freedom — delivered straight to your inbox.

Latest Issue:
“The Passport Playbook – How to Cruise, Fly, and Never Get Stuck Abroad”
by William “Ogghy” Liles · Apr 24, 2025

Subscribe for Free
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Mad Mad News

Live Above The Madness

SCI-TECH

Uploads from National Geographic

Uploads from CNET

TikTok Fined $600M Over Europe’s Fears of China Surveilling People’s Data

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

TikTok disputes the claim it hasn’t adequately protected people’s personal data, and has said it plans to appeal.

Disney Plus and Roku Team Up for Special ‘Andor’ Experience

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

Dedicated to fans for May the Fourth.

How Animals Tell Time Is Still a Mystery, But We Do Know They Measure It

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: Discover, SCI-TECH

Animals don’t wear watches, but they may be able to keep track of time. Learn how they do it.

This little trick fixes everything you hate about office scanners

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: PopSci, SCI-TECH

You’ve begged the scanner to connect. You’ve reinstalled the driver. You’ve turned it off and on again (twice). Still nothing. There’s a reason people are ditching old-school scanners for this document-scanner app that’s faster, smarter, and doesn’t scream when it feeds in paper crooked.

The iScanner app doesn’t have any of the usual nonsense and only takes up as much space as your iOS device. You can dodge the app’s subscription fees with our lifetime offering: Use code SCAN at checkout to get it for $24.99 this week only (reg. $39.99).

No more rage-filled days

If you can take a photo, you can scan documents with iScanner. Heck, if you somehow have a dinosaur physical scanner to work for you, this mobile scanner app will be a dream to use!

iScanner makes digitizing forms, contracts, receipts, and handwritten notes way less painful than usual:

  1. Hold your iPhone or iPad above the document you want to digitize.
  2. iScanner grabs the snapshot and automatically detects and adjusts borders.
  3. AI-powered tools also straighten pages and remove curves.

iScanner also gives you access to a full mobile PDF editor. Have you ever needed to sign a contract or fill out a form, only to realize that every online PDF editor wants you to pay? Now, you’ll have lifetime access to a simple tool right on your phone.

Use code SCAN at checkout to get an iScanner lifetime subscription for $24.99 (reg. $39.99) this week only.

StackSocial prices subject to change.

The post This little trick fixes everything you hate about office scanners appeared first on Popular Science.

Bad News, Gamers: GTA 6 Delayed to 2026

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

The much-anticipated Rockstar Games sequel won’t hit consoles until next year, later than the fall 2025 release fans were expecting.

DOCSIS 3.0 vs. 3.1 vs. 4.0: Comparing the Differences

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

If you have cable internet, you’ve likely heard about this technology that powers your modem. Here’s what you need to know.

Airbnb is quietly rolling out an AI customer service bot in the US

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: SCI-TECH, Tech Crunch

Airbnb started rolling out an AI-powered customer service bot in the U.S. last month, CEO Brian Chesky said during the firm’s first-quarter conference call on Thursday. Chesky said 50% of Airbnb’s U.S. users are already using the AI bot for customer service, adding that the company plans to roll out the feature to all its […]

What would a world without mosquitoes look like?

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: PopSci, SCI-TECH

In 1958, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) made a milestone announcement: they had exterminated the mosquito Aedes aegypti–a transmitter of the deadly diseases dengue, chikungunya, and yellow fever–from Brazil. This represented the culmination of decades of work. In the 1930s, an ambitious inspection regime removed any sources of stagnant water–key mosquito breeding grounds–in areas where A. aegypti had been detected. Authorities eased this onerous system in the years after World War II as they found success in wiping out mosquitoes with a new weapon: the insecticide DDT.

Beachgoers are sprayed with DDT as a new machine for distributing the insecticide is tested for the first time.
American beachgoers are sprayed with DDT as a new machine for distributing the insecticide is tested for the first time. Image: Bettmann / Getty Images Bettmann

PAHO didn’t stop at the Brazilian border; by the mid-1970s, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Paraguay were among nine South and Central American countries to have eradicated A. aegypti. This had significant epidemiological impacts: dengue and other conditions virtually disappeared from the DDT-soaked countries, and the specter of these conditions retreated from the continent.

Unfortunately, the story was far from over.

The mosquito strikes back

Mosquito control efforts failed to account for how persistent A. aegypti could be. It was never eradicated from Columbia or Guyuna. Within just a few decades of PAHO’s declaration, dengue re-emerged. Worse still, DDT, PAHO’s bug spray of choice, was revealed to have horrific effects on biodiversity in sprayed environments. Public sentiment turned against this indiscriminate tool after the publication of books like Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring.

Fast-forward to today. Last year was one of the worst on record for dengue in South America in the face of a resurgent A. aegypti. New mosquito-borne diseases like Zika have emerged. The dream of a pest-free South America is further away than ever. However, the goal of squashing mosquito-borne diseases is still paramount for Scott O’Neill, CEO of the World Mosquito Program, a network of companies spun out of Monash University.

A nurse pushes the wheelchair of a dengue fever patient
A nurse pushes the wheelchair of a dengue fever patient at the Sergio Bernales National Hospital in the outskirts of Lima on April 17, 2024. Image: Juan Carlos CISNEROS / AFP JUAN CARLOS CISNEROS

Helping Wolbachia win

O’Neill explains that his program aims not to suppress mosquitoes but to help them fight the viruses that infect them and turn them into disease vectors. The WMP’s approach involves the symbiotic bacterium Wolbachia.

“Around 50 percent of all insects naturally have Wolbachia,” explains O’Neill. The bacterium cannot survive outside hosts’ bodies and infects many organs in A. aegypti. The WMP breeds huge populations of mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia and releases them into the environment. Inside A. aegypti mosquitoes, disease-causing viruses also exploit their hosts’ cells to reproduce. O’Neill aims to create a population of mosquitoes in which these viruses have to compete with Wolbachia.

Fighting Wolbachia inside an insect is like trying to arm wrestle a polar bear in a Siberian snowstorm. The bacterium has developed various ingenious tools to make itself the dominant symbiote. O’Neill explains that it alters the lipid profile inside mosquitoes’ cells, making it harder for them to reproduce. It even boosts the antiviral responses of the A. aegypti immune system, helping the mosquito fight off its competitors.

[Related: How to build a mosquito kill bucket]

No further intervention is needed after the initial injection of Wolbachia-infected insects. Over time, Wolbachia will naturally spread through the mosquito population and the number of bugs that can become infected with viruses declines. WMP say this approach has slashed rates of dengue in Australia and Columbia. In a controlled trial in Indonesia, the technique reduced virologically confirmed dengue by 77 percent.

So what would happen if all mosquito species disappeared?

If A. aegypti was somehow wiped from existence, it wouldn’t significantly harm the ecosystems it lives in, says O’Neill. That’s because it largely ignores environments where other animals live, unlike other species of mosquitoes that are food sources for frogs and fish. “It lives in cities, and it’s exquisitely adapted to biting humans,” says O’Neill.

Some scientists suggest that if every mosquito species were to disappear, there would be significant impacts on bird populations. However, this is contested by other researchers who say they aren’t an irreplaceable part of these birds’ diet. Some mosquitoes are pollinators, although very few plant species are only pollinated by mosquitoes. In short, the loss of all mosquito species would be felt by ecosystems, but to a much lesser extent than the loss of vital pollinators like the honey bee. 

Our efforts to remove even one ecologically unimportant mosquito species have fallen short for now. O’Neill says that entomologists call A. aegypti the “cockroach of the mosquito world” for good reason, and its tenacity and widespread range mean that we are unlikely to see a world without this buzzing pest any time soon.

This story is part of Popular Science’s Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something you’ve always wanted to know? Ask us.

The post What would a world without mosquitoes look like? appeared first on Popular Science.

Best Video Doorbells of 2025: Eyes on Your Front Door

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

Our CNET experts tested the latest video doorbell cameras from Arlo, Ring, Nest and others: Here are the top performers.

Is Your Rented Router the Secret to Better Wi-Fi? This Study Says Yes

May 2, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: CNET, SCI-TECH

Opensignal’s newest study suggests that internet users who rent routers from ISPs report a healthier home network.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Page 42
  • Page 43
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 512
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Latest Posts

  • Texas pushes back against foreign land grab with ‘strongest bill in the nation’ against China, Iran, Russia
  • Where The Money Went: USG Funding To Counter-Mis/Disinformation Initiatives
  • Miley Cyrus reunites with estranged dad Billy Ray after mom Tish ‘unfollowed’ her on Instagram
  • Massachusetts suspect charged with attempting to assassinate a Cabinet nominee
  • Four homers back Clay Holmes in Mets’ convincing win over Cubs
  • Here’s What The World’s Paying For Eggs
  • Dems Want to Abolish ICE After Newark Mayor Arrested for Trespassing at Illegal Alien Detention Facility
  • Arian Smith ready to put drops issue behind him and add new dimension to Jets
  • Heartbreak as popular tattoo artist Stacey Nightingale dies after giving birth to third child
  • Pete Hegseth directs military academies that all future admissions will be based solely on merit
  • 2 of the Best Retirement Calculators
  • What Is Series Funding A, B, and C?
  • Bill O’Reilly Slams the Ladies of ‘The View’ Over Joe Biden Interview: ‘They Live in a Delusional World’ (VIDEO)
  • Denise Alexander, ‘General Hospital’ and ‘Days of Our Lives’ Actress, Dies at 85
  • 11 Percent of Columbia Library Arrestees Identify as They/Them—Nearly 7 Times America’s Trans Population
  • Connecticut Sun have rough hill to climb during franchise ‘reset’
  • New breed of cheating on the rise — and women are fighting back
  • The best electric commuter bikes for 2025, tested and reviewed
  • PinkPantheress Returns With New Mixtape ‘Fancy That’
  • Controversial Aid Plan For Gaza Revealed In New Document, Includes American CEOs & Banks

🛩️ Fly Smarter with OGGHY Jet Set
🎟️ Hot Tickets Now
🌴 Explore Tours & Experiences
© 2025 William Liles (dba OGGHYmedia). All rights reserved.