Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧

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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧

Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧

@RoryJGalloway

Senior producer of TheIntelligence @TheEconomist 🎧 || AAAS Kavli Gold Prize winner 🥇 || Zoology 🦜 || Sci-Fi 📚 || 👬 🏳️‍🌈 || Past @BBC

London Katılım Şubat 2009
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧 retweetledi
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
A newborn sperm whale can’t swim. It starts sinking the second it’s born. If nobody pushes it to the surface, it drowns in mile-deep water. On July 8, 2023, a sperm whale named Rounder went into labor off the coast of Dominica. Researchers from Project CETI, a $33 million AI initiative out of MIT, Harvard, and Northeastern that’s trying to decode whale language, happened to be there doing routine fieldwork. They had drones in the air and underwater microphones running. What they captured over the next six hours just got published in two papers, one in Science and one in Scientific Reports. Eleven whales gathered at the surface before Rounder even started delivering. Her mother, Lady Oracle, was there. So was her daughter Accra. Three generations in the water. But the wild part: half those whales belonged to a completely separate bloodline that normally keeps its distance from Rounder’s family. On a typical day, these two family lines split off to hunt in different areas and rarely cluster together. For the birth, they all converged before labor started. The unrelated family somehow knew it was coming. The delivery took 34 minutes. Sperm whale calves come out tail-first with their flukes still folded from the womb. They haven’t developed the oil-filled organ in their heads that helps adult whales float, so the moment they’re born, they’re dead weight in the ocean. Every adult whale in the group, related and unrelated, started taking turns pushing the calf up to breathe. They kept this rotation going for three hours. When a pod of pilot whales (known to be aggressive toward sperm whales) and a large group of Fraser’s dolphins showed up during delivery, the adults formed a wall around the newborn until the threat passed. The underwater audio is where it gets interesting. CETI’s microphones picked up the whales changing their vocal patterns during the birth. The click-based sounds they use to talk to each other shifted at specific moments, and vowel-like structures appeared in the recordings. This builds on what CETI found in 2024 when they ran machine learning on over 8,700 recorded whale calls and discovered sperm whale communication isn’t a basic 21-sound code. It’s a system of about 300 distinct sound combinations, with the whales adjusting rhythm and timing in real time, speeding up and slowing down the way a musician does mid-performance. A 2025 follow-up from UC Berkeley found these clicks also contain vowel patterns, something scientists had assumed only humans could produce. Sperm whales carry the largest brain of any animal on the planet. About 9 kg. Roughly six times heavier than yours. The evolutionary analysis in the new Science paper suggests this kind of cooperative birthing goes back over 36 million years, to the common ancestor of all toothed whales. The calf was spotted a year later, swimming with its family.
The Associated Press@AP

Rare footage of a sperm whale giving birth has offered scientists a window into the behavior of these large, elusive mammals.

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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The US government spent $25 million over a decade trying to prove your cell phone gives you cancer. The study accidentally produced one of the strongest pieces of evidence for radiation hormesis ever recorded. The NTP study was nominated by the FDA in 1999 specifically because they expected to find harm. They built 21 custom reverberation chambers in Switzerland. Exposed 1,679 mice and 859 rats to cell phone frequencies for 9 hours a day, every day, for 2 years. The whole operation was designed as the definitive “cell phones cause cancer” study. The cancer results were mixed at best. Male rats got more heart schwannomas. Mice showed nothing significant. But the survival data was so unexpected that the researchers didn’t even know how to explain it in their own report. Look at the survival curve. Every single radiation group outlived the control. The 2.5 W/kg group hit p=0.0020, the only statistically significant result in the entire longevity analysis. By day 700, the control group’s survival probability had dropped to ~0.65. The lowest dose group was still above 0.80. That’s the hormesis signature. The smallest dose produced the largest benefit. The same pattern shows up in exercise, fasting, and cold exposure. A mild biological stressor activates repair mechanisms that wouldn’t otherwise turn on. Over 3,000 published papers have documented this across microbes, plants, insects, and mammals. The French Academy of Sciences formally accepted it in 2005. The US still builds its entire radiation safety framework on the opposite assumption: that all radiation, at any dose, causes proportional harm. The FCC limit for cell phones is 1.6 W/kg. Your AirPods operate at a fraction of that. The dose that produced the strongest longevity signal in this study was 2.5 W/kg. Barely above the regulatory ceiling. The entire regulatory framework for wireless device safety assumes a dose-response curve that this $25 million study failed to find.
Aakash Gupta tweet media
Zane Koch@zanehkoch

for a while i've had a slight fear that the bluetooth from my airpods could be frying my brain this weekend i pulled the raw data from a $30m government study of 1,679 mice blasted with cell phone radiation and reanalyzed it what i found was...not what I expected? 🧵

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David Perell
David Perell@david_perell·
"In a fantasy or science fiction story, you can get away with one big lie. You can include one thing that's convenient for the author in order to make the plot work. In Children of Time, the question is 'what if a species of a spider developed a society, civilization, and technology. But the big lie is literally that there is a nanovirus is assisting the uplift of the spiders, and the lie is the amount of time that'll take. Because of the nanovirus, that happens in tens of thousands of years rather than hundreds of millions of years, which you would need by evolution. People need to read a book and think 'that's a thing that could happen.' It gives your book a weight and gravity that it would not have if it was magic talking spiders. So in order to support your One Big Lie, everything else needs to be true." — Adrian Tchaikovsky
David Perell@david_perell

Adrian Tchaikovsky is one of the best fantasy & science fiction writers alive today. What's crazy is that he's kept quality so high while writing ~5 books per year, and this interview is about how he does it. One guy on Reddit said: “Probably the best Sci-Fi/Fantasy author interview I’ve ever seen. Gives great insight into how Adrian Tchaikovsky approaches his novels." Timestamps: 0:35 How to plan a novel 2:27 The two types of outlining 7:07 What makes for a good idea? 8:09 Dragons 14:07 Building good characters 20:02 World building 25:09 A guide to science fiction 33:46 Fantasy vs. science fiction 36:38 How magic works in Sci-Fi 42:04 Writing good fight scenes 50:15 Avoiding writing ruts 59:07 How to improve your writing 1:03:07 Writing a good ending I've shared the full conversation with Adrian Tchaikovsky below. If you'd rather watch it on YouTube, or listen on Apple / Spotify, check out the reply tweets.

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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧 retweetledi
The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
“When the conversations start, we’re naturally argumentative.” On “The Intelligence” @zannymb launches “Economist Insider”, our new video show where top editors debate the most important stories. Listen now bit.ly/4nKtfFP
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧
Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧@RoryJGalloway·
@FrommyFunnys @statto There’s a trade off between fast reproduction and long life. Elephants have very few calves over their very long lives, mice have a lot of pups over a short life. The mouse could ‘invest’ in longer life, but is more likely to be predated than an elephant, so it would be a waste
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🙂@FalconFan7tl·
@statto I just finished your book here's the concept I don't get ~ you state that any animal that can live much longer (200 years ex) would reproduce more; which is what natural selection wants (reproduction). So why wouldnt traits that induce long life be selected more for <reproductio
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧 retweetledi
Andrew Steele
Andrew Steele@statto·
“85% of children with cancer are going to beat it, but it’s a win at a cost: at 30, they have physiological frailty that resembles people in their 80s.” Now, Armstrong is leading a trial of 50-60 childhood cancer survivors [who will receive anti-ageing senolytic treatments].
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Sue-Lin Wong 黄淑琳
Sue-Lin Wong 黄淑琳@suelinwong·
My year-long investigation into the multibillion dollar world of online scams is out today — on the cover of The Economist and in my new 8-part podcast series, Scam Inc Read the article: bit.ly/scam-inc Listen to the podcast: econ.st/3CFzGaL
The Economist@TheEconomist

Online scamming is a vast, sophisticated and fast-growing global enterprise that compares in size and scope to the illegal drug industry. Except that in many ways it is worse. As our investigation finds, nobody is safe from Scam Inc econ.st/4hD0CHi

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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧
Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧@RoryJGalloway·
@natashaloder @bryan_johnson I disagree I don’t strive for knowledge because I’ll die, but despite it I don’t gain meaning from success only when set against the backdrop of death… Striving not to die is surely natural, meaningful in itself, even laudable?
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
If you're going through a life crisis right now, questioning why you exist and why life is worth living, a new meaning of life game is here: we're going to conquer death.
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧
Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧@RoryJGalloway·
@AndrewLuckBaker @bbcworldservice Madness News won’t pick up those stories because they’ll lose the professionals who curate them and understand what’s happening in science SinA is one of the best things on the world service and it’s inexpensive to make
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marnie chesterton
marnie chesterton@amsterdammed·
The BBC World Service has had to make £6million of cuts and it's hit one of the most consistently brilliant sources of science news: Science in Action. It's coverage of Covid-19 was award-winning, and 2 steps ahead, dropping stories to be picked up by general news. a gutting loss
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧 retweetledi
Mark Russell
Mark Russell@markrusselluk·
Thanks to Mr Musk I’m seeing so many comments that the Bishop shouldn’t be allowed back into the cathedral. Just to clarify, she’s the Bishop of Washington; it’s her cathedral news.sky.com/video/share-13…
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Rory Galloway 🏳️‍🌈 🎧 retweetledi
Ben Goldsmith
Ben Goldsmith@BenGoldsmith·
‘Sweden begins wolf hunt as it aims to halve endangered animal’s population’ [to a pitiful 170 individuals] Imagine if the outcry if this were Sri Lanka killing leopards, or Botswana lions, both much trickier animals to live with. Shame, shame on Sweden. theguardian.com/environment/20…
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Oliver Morton
Oliver Morton@Eaterofsun·
There's a piece by Sarah Smith being used in BBC Radio 4's Jimmy #Carter coverage in which she says that "he was the first US president to embrace environmental policies". This is not true.
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The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
What books should you read to forecast the future? On “The Intelligence” @Eaterofsun and @shashj offer their recommendations. Listen now econ.st/3Du2T8B
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Chris Stringer
Chris Stringer@ChrisStringer65·
My summary of the new papers about Neanderthal interbreeding
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Gareth Browne
Gareth Browne@BrowneGareth·
I visited the mausoleum of Hafez Al Assad in the family’s ancestral village of Qardaha, Lattakia today. It is firmly under the control of fighters from Hayat Tahrir Al Sham. Assad senior’s casket has been torched. #Syria
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