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‘Twisters’ movie: Two tornado scientists take us inside the real world of storm chasing
The Conversation via Yahoo News· 5 days agoScientists in a truck outfitted with instruments race toward a storm. National Severe Storms...
Opinion: ‘The big one’ disaster could happen in our lifetime. Can we even be ready?
CNN via Yahoo News· 5 days agoDisasters come in all shapes and sizes: from the extreme society-ending disasters such as the...
Who will pay for the worst IT outage the world has seen?
Sky News via Yahoo News· 5 days agoAfter the chaos of Friday's global IT outage - without doubt the worst the world has seen -...
The science you need to know before seeing 'Twisters'
INSIDER via Yahoo News· 5 days agoPaul Huffman/NOAA Fujiwhara effect: Named for Sakuhei Fujiwhara, who wrote about the effect in 1921,...
Can Hollywood navigate AI, streaming wars and labor struggles? | The Excerpt
USA TODAY via Yahoo News· 5 days agoIt's storytelling across media. It's storytelling where more than one medium weighs in, not in a redundant way that we're playing the film on streaming and in the theater on day of release, ...
Everything you need to know about breaking, the newest Olympic sport
Euronews via Yahoo News· 5 days agoIn a major milestone for the dance form, breaking will make its Olympic debut in Paris, where the...
How California's weather — weird, wonderful, catastrophic — shapes the state and its people
LA Times via Yahoo News· 6 days agoFrom the Los Angeles River to San Francisco baseball, William A. Selby's "The California Sky...
In Defense Of Melissa, The Most Misunderstood Character In 1996's 'Twister'
HuffPost Life via Yahoo News· 6 days ago“I can’t compete with this. I wouldn’t even know where to start,” she says matter-of-factly. “Funny...
US commentators spin baseless conspiracy theory about non-citizen voting
AFP via Yahoo News· 6 days agoAs Congress considers legislation requiring voters to show proof of citizenship when registering to...
Flying Spiders Glide Into New Territories
HowStuffWorks via Yahoo News· 6 days agoThey can travel 16.4 feet (5 meters) horizontally through the air and "steer" themselves in the desired direction. It's not true flying, not even close....