Diljit Dosanjh's 'Morni' and the gender bias of cultural memoryIndian singer Diljit Dosanjh's music highlights the peahen, challenging traditional animal symbolism. Historically, animals embodying stren...
Psychology says people who dream every night aren’t weird but they may be under a lot of stress and have unhinged emotionsPsychology does not consider frequent dreaming to be unusual. On the contrary, dreaming is widely regarded as a natural and important aspec...
South Korea's SK Hynix to opt for Nasdaq for planned US listing, sources saySK Hynix, a leading memory chip maker, plans a US listing on Nasdaq as early as August. This move aims to boost its global investor profile...
Poetic line of the day from On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous: 'I miss you more than I remember you.' Life lessons on love, regret and memories that refuse to fadePoetic line of the day: Ocean Vuong's novel On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous offers a profound insight into love, loss and memory. The line,...
Psychology says reading old chats hurts after a breakup because your brain keeps returning to the version of love that once felt safePsychology does not suggest that people revisit old conversations because they are emotionally weak or incapable of moving forward. Human e...
Bosch CEO notes rising memory chip prices but says bottlenecks not an issue"In the coming years, we will likely have to expect significantly higher memory chip prices, and that will affect all of us," CEO Stefan ...
South Korea's SK Hynix eyes US listing as soon as August, sources sayThe US Securities and Exchange Commission is likely to approve SK Hynix's American depositary receipt listing application during the week...
ChatGPT gets smarter memory as OpenAI launches Dreaming architectureOpenAI has introduced Dreaming, a new memory architecture for ChatGPT that continuously updates and refines what the AI remembers about use...
AI demand to keep memory tight through 2027, chipflation to squeeze consumer hardware and cloud costsMemory storage is set to remain a structural bottleneck through 2027 as AI demand continues to absorb Dynamic Random-Access Memory (DRAM), ...
Apple's AI Siri will be held back by aging devices, Morgan Stanley saysApple's new AI Siri faces limitations on many older iPhones. Over 850 million iPhones cannot run basic queries. More than 1.3 billion iPhon...
Psychology suggests people who keep a paper calendar on the fridge aren’t old-fashioned: They’re turning memory into something the room can help holdIn a world dominated by screens, paper calendars on refrigerators still hold their ground. Experts in psychology highlight the power of tan...
Psychology says people who still reread old group chats from years ago share these 3 emotional reflection patternsDiving into old group chats is like flipping through a scrapbook of memories, revealing pieces of the person we used to be. These digital i...
Nvidia clinches deals with South Korean giants include SK Group to advance AI boomSpeaking to reporters in Seoul, Huang's remarks underscored Nvidia's continued cooperation with SK Hynix, a leading supplier of high-bandwi...
‘This is something only village life can give’: Corporate woman shares a tradition that has internet feeling nostalgicA village photograph of family sleeping outdoors has gone viral. It shows togetherness and a connection to nature. This image evokes memori...
China's chipmakers emerge as rising force in AI memory market: ReportThe report highlighted that China's leading NAND flash maker, Yangtze Memory Technologies Corp (YMTC), and top DRAM producer, ChangXin Memo...
Psychology suggests people who keep learning into their 60s and 70s aren't just filling time; they may be feeding curiosity in a way that helps memory stay engagedNew research reveals older adults remain curious and learn for psychological reasons. Curiosity boosts memory and learning across all ages....
Psychology says people in their 40s and 50s who make lists for tiny tasks aren't becoming forgetful - they're building external memory supports that free the mind to focus elsewhere, because intentions stick better when cues are concreteForget memory loss; making lists, especially for those over 40, is a smart psychological adaptation. These 'external memory aids' like stic...