Tuesday April 14, 2026


April 14, 1954


Bruce Sterling Science Fiction Author - Videos


I used to think that cyberspace was fifty years away. What I thought was fifty years away, was only ten years away. And what I thought was ten years away... was already here I just wasn't aware of it yet.


More Birthdays and News




April 14, 1828


Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language was first published.


Today we use technology for spelling, grammar, and more ...




April 14, 2026


World Quantum Day 2026 ~ Wikipedia


Crystalinks : Physics News ~ Technology ~ Artificial Intelligence


World Quantum Day is celebrated annually on April 14th (4/14) to promote global awareness and understanding of quantum science and technology. Initiated by scientists from over 65 countries, this day spotlights how quantum mechanics, from computing to basic natural laws, impacts modern technologies like GPS and semiconductors.


World Quantum Day started on April 14, 2021, as an initiative by an international group of scientists. The initiative was joined by engineers, educators, science communicators, organizations and others to celebrate the first World Quantum day on April 14, 2022.


The date April 14 was chosen because "4.14" represents the rounded first 3 digits of the Planck constant - a key number in quantum mechanics. The US Senate passed a resolution on May 2, 2023, commemorating and supporting World Quantum Day.




April 14, 2026


National Look Up at the Sky Day


Lenticular Clouds




April 14, 1935 - January 10, 2026


Erich von Daniken Author, Ancient Alien Theory - Videos






Ancient people interpreted advanced alien technology as magic or the work of the gods.




Astronomy in the News


Astronomy Index


Black hole wakes after 100 million years and erupts like a cosmic volcano


Giant New Moon Scar Is a Once-in-a-Century Crater, Scientists Discover


After Decades of Searching, Astronomers Finally Track Down the Universe’s Missing Hydrogen


The Universe's Most Pristine Ancient Star Is Surprisingly Close


Life on Mars? Tiny cells just survived shock waves and toxic soil


The Universe is expanding too fast and scientists still can't explain it





Physics in the News


Physics


Scientists Capture Hidden Electron Patterns Inside Quantum Materials


Physicists just witnessed pinpricks of darkness moving faster than the speed of light - without breaking the laws of relativity


Scientists Discover Liquids Can Snap Like Solids





Chemistry in the News


Chemistry ~ ~ Metallurgy ~ ~ Minerals


This Metal Melts in Your Hand – and Scientists Just Discovered Something Strange


A New Chapter in Chemistry? Scientists Uncover New Way Metals Bind Oxygen


Scientists Finally Crack the Mystery of Water's Strangest Behavior After Decades of Research





Technology in the News


Artificial Intelligence ~ ~ Technology


Quantum Computers Could Break Encryption Far Sooner Than We Realized


Quantum computers are coming to break our codes faster than anyone expected. Last month, Google and others released results suggesting a new kind of compute - a quantum computer


Musk's Grok AI chatbot is still making sexual deepfakes, despite X's promise to stop it


AI for breakup texts? How 'sycophantic' chatbots are messing with our ability to handle difficult social situations.


This robot sees danger, decides its route and powers over obstacles while carrying loads


Revealing the hidden logic behind AI's judgments of people


Scientists Discover Liquids Can Snap Like Solids


Scientists Capture Hidden Electron Patterns Inside Quantum Materials





DNA in the News


DNA Files


Scientists were wrong about lifespan. Your genes matter way more than we thought


Scientists Uncover Hidden Clues to the Origin of the Genetic Code





Health in the News


Health Files ~ Alternative Healing


Forget daily pills. This twice-yearly injection shot works when blood pressure meds fail


Why Losing Too Much Fat Can Be Just As Dangerous as Obesity


Beef vs. Chicken: Surprising Results From New Prediabetes Study


Stanford scientists discover 'natural Ozempic' without side effects


Scientists discover why bread can cause weight gain without extra calories


Study Links Eating More Meat to Lower Dementia Risk, But Only in One Group


Sibling Stem Cell Transplant Leads to Rare HIV Remission in 'Oslo Patient'


New toothpaste stops gum disease without killing good bacteria


What's The Difference Between Anxiety And OCD? Psychologists Explain


Lonely people have worse memory but don’t decline faster, study finds





Brain in the News


Brain Index


Scientists Uncover Brain Changes That Link Pain to Depression


What If Consciousness Exists Beyond Your Brain





Planet Earth In the News


Planet Earth Index


Scientists Uncover Hidden Force Powering Yellowstone's Supervolcano


Scientists finally know where the Colorado River's missing water is going


Why the Persian Gulf has more oil and gas than anywhere else on Earth


Scientists finally know where the Colorado River's missing water is going


s Back-to-back Amazon droughts trigger record forest stress


Why warmer Caribbean waters could mean slower hurricanes and worse flooding


Unlocking Earth's 4.5-billion-year secret: The case of the missing lead





Archaeology in the News


Archaeology


Homo erectus' tools include stunning geodes and fossils, possibly as a way to connect with the cosmos, study finds


Lost seal of Edward the Confessor resurfaces after going missing for 40 years


In The Greek Islands, Divers Have Discovered More Than 50 Remarkably Preserved Artifacts from a Shipwreck Beneath the Seafloor


Revived Nubian royal robes shed light on prestige and authority in a lost Christian kingdom


Ancient Landscape Reveals Bones of Humans Who Lived 100,000 Years Ago


In The Greek Islands, Divers Have Discovered More Than 50 Remarkably Preserved Artifacts from a Shipwreck Beneath the Seafloor





Paleontology in the News


Paleontology Index


A matter of taste: Did Neanderthals really like sapiens women?


110,000-year-old discovery rewrites human history: Neanderthals and Homo sapiens worked together


A 250-million-year-old fossil egg just revealed how an ancient survivor beat Earth's deadliest extinction.












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