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Visiting the kraken at home
Do dogs dream? The answer might make you appreciate your pup even more.
Snoozing dogs twitch, woof, and flop in their sleep. But what’s going on inside their brains?
Video
Kevin Lieber
Popular Science on YouTube is a laboratory of stories from the future, past, and present. It’s like a time travel learning machine—in video form.
For 150 years, we’ve documented humans launching themselves head-first into an unknown tomorrow and that’s where the inspiration for our videos originates.
Tag along as Kevin dusts off vintage technology, unravels the most compelling tales in science history, and dives deep on topics that’ll have you in jaw-on-the-floor disbelief.
Tune in, subscribe, and reignite your enthusiasm for our incredible, complicated world.
See you in the future…
In 1967, Walter Cronkite tried to predict the year 2000. Here’s what he got right (and very wrong).
Cronkite completely blew it—not by being wrong, but by being right way too slowly.
Podcast
More EpisodesHow scientists accidentally found out that some bees can hibernate underwater
Plus other weird things we learned this week.
Rachel Feltman
At Popular Science, we report and write dozens of science and tech stories every week. And while a lot of the fun facts we stumble across make it into our articles, there are lots of other weird facts that we just keep around the office. So we figured, why not share those with you?
Welcome to The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week.
Latest
What would you do with a robotic third thumb?
Testers can already open bottles, crack eggs, and even play guitar.
How Adobe Lightroom’s new AI tools can transform your photos
It's getting easier and easier to fix your photos in a couple of clicks.
Help Dad store their pet and vacation photos with this 512GB SSD
Order by June 5 to get it in time for Father’s Day and save 47 percent.
JWST discovers earliest galaxy ever observed
Spotting JADES-GS-z-14-10, which dates to 300 million years after the Big Bang, breaks telescope’s own record.
What Britain’s famed Roman Baths could teach us about microbes
Our Roman Empire is antibiotic resistance.
This lens is just three atoms thick and works like a quantum lighthouse
The tiniest Fresnel lens may be perfect for augmented reality glasses.
AI is cracking a hard problem–giving computers a sense of smell
Machine olfaction needs machine learning.
June skygazing: Nevermind the viral ‘planet parade,’ check out the Strawberry/Solstice moon
Summer's first meteor shower will also light up the night sky.