Pestizide

Bug Love vs. Bugs: How Synthetic Pheromones Are Quietly Replacing Pesticides in Your Food—What You Need to Know in 2025

Käferliebe vs. Schädlinge: Wie synthetische Pheromone im Jahr 2025 still und leise Pestizide in unseren Lebensmitteln ersetzen – Was Sie wissen müssen

1) Zuerst das Wichtigste: Pheromone sind keine „Hormone“ Hormone wirken im Inneren eines Organismus. Pheromone sind chemische Botschaften, die abgegeben werden, um andere Mitglieder derselben Art zu beeinflussen (bei Schädlingen: „Finde mich und paar dich mit mir“). Im Pflanzenschutz verabreichen wir Insekten
August 17, 2025

Technology News

  • Electrek Podcast: Electricity as Base Currency, Tesla Robotaxi Crashes, Porsche Cayenne EV, and More
    November 23, 2025, 1:24 AM EST. In the Electrek Podcast, we cover the latest in sustainable transport and energy. This episode highlights how electricity is becoming the base currency for the grid, discusses Tesla Robotaxi incidents, and reviews the new Porsche Cayenne EV among other headlines. Tune in to learn what's driving these trends, what to expect from Friday's live stream, and where to find the accompanying post with an embedded link to the YouTube live show. The episode also notes a Patreon option, upcoming topics, and how the video is archived after the stream for easy access across podcast apps.
  • Save $350 on the Google Pixel 9 Pro This Black Friday
    November 23, 2025, 1:22 AM EST. Black Friday deals alert: the Google Pixel 9 Pro is $350 off, bringing the price to $649. The Pixel 9 Pro stands out among Android phones for its clean, skin-free Android experience, with no manufacturer overlays or duplicate apps. By contrast, rivals like Samsung add their own browsers, email clients, and calendars, which can feel cluttered. The Pixel's AI features are built into the core experience, without needing third-party sign-ins, and its camera app stays streamlined. Other brands add AI tools such as Gemini Advanced or Circle to Search, but Google keeps things simple. This makes the Pixel feel fast, intuitive, and easy to customize without overwhelming menus. If you want a flagship Android with pure software and long-term updates, the Pixel 9 Pro is a strong Black Friday pick.
  • Xbox Full Screen Experience Expands to PC, Desktops, and Tablets in Windows Insider Builds
    November 23, 2025, 1:20 AM EST. Microsoft is expanding the Xbox Full Screen Experience (FSE) beyond its handhelds to laptops, desktops, and tablets. The feature, which adds a console-like UI to your game library, originally launched with the Xbox Ally and is now rolling out via Windows Insider Preview builds on the Dev and Beta channels. To enable it, hover over the Task View icon and choose Xbox full screen experience, open it in Game Bar > Settings, or press Win + F11. Availability is gradual, and you'll need the Xbox app from the Microsoft Store and enrollment in the Xbox Insider Program. As of now, FSE is expanding to all Windows handhelds as part of Microsoft's push to unify the Xbox experience across devices.
  • Quantum Stocks Have Cratered: How I'd Play Them Now (IBM, D-Wave, Nvidia)
    November 23, 2025, 1:16 AM EST. Quantum stocks have been hammered during this tech pullback, with speculative names giving back big gains after a blistering rally. While the AI trade has cooled, there may still be entry points for risk-tolerant investors. Nvidia's blowout helped spark the moment, and its NVQLink could offer exposure to quantum gains without the deepest plunge. For pure-play quantum names, D-Wave QBTS could test support around $18-20, but a break below could signal further downside. For those seeking less volatility, IBM offers a more mature path with a clear quantum roadmap and recent launches like Quantum Nighthawk and Quantum Loom, appealing to investors seeking a quantum advantage with steadier exposure. Overall, expect 50%+ drawdowns in this space; size risk accordingly.
  • Gmail users urged to opt out of new AI training data feature
    November 23, 2025, 1:14 AM EST. Gmail's latest update brings AI-powered tools to the inbox, but users are being warned to opt out of data collection that could train AI models. A viral post on X claimed users are automatically opted in to allow Gmail to access private messages and attachments for training, with a two-step opt-out in Settings. Google has not publicly commented, but reports note that features like Smart Compose, Smart Reply, enhanced search, and stronger spam detection rely on analyzing inbox content and metadata. Users can decline the update, though doing so may reduce functionality. The controversy highlights the ongoing privacy debate as tech firms balance convenience against data usage for AI training.