Russia’s state-backed “super app” Max has officially launched business services, allowing companies to create chatbots and mini apps, open channels, and use the platform’s digital ID function to ...
Identifying weeds, checking out the pollen map, or discovering new plant life-forms are among the promising wealth of data available to users of PlantNet—a "Shazam!" for plants. Pierre Bonnet and ...
Despite the growing interest surrounding fiber and gut health, only about 5% of Americans consume the recommended daily amount of fiber. One of the most recent social-media trends regarding fiber has ...
The owner of a longtime local movie theater that recently announced plans to shut down is speaking out about the challenges faced by the industry. Car fire in garage at Freetown home displaces 4 A ...
Language apps tend to fall into two camps: either overly gamified with little substance, or structured but hard to stick with. Qlango finds a middle ground by combining game mechanics with a learning ...
Step onto the most extreme exoplanet ever discovered—WASP 121b. Temperatures reach 5,432°F as scorching winds tear apart water molecules, forming showers of liquid rubies and sapphires. Discover how ...
WARSAW: Russia is pushing its Max messenger — a social media platform without encryption — onto its citizens with a massive promotion campaign and the simultaneous blocking of Whatsapp and Telegram, ...
"Any data that passes through this application can be considered to be in the hands of its owner, and in this case, the hands of the Russian state," cybersecurity researcher Baptiste Robert, CEO of ...
WhatsApp is throttled. Telegram is about to be blocked. Soldiers are angry. Max, a state-backed messenger app, is being forced on everyone. Commanders warn Max is unsafe. Average Russians are trying ...