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Today In Ai

1  Your office building could soon detect airborne viruses before you get sick.

Scientists backed by $150M in federal funding are building sensors that can identify floating pathogens in near real time, then automatically clean the air before infection spreads. The program aims to give buildings the same automatic response to airborne disease that sprinkler systems give to fire, with prototype systems targeting schools, hospitals, and day care centers by 2028.

2  Midjourney stuns the industry by pivoting into full-body medical scanning hardware.

The image generation company just made its strangest move yet, revealing a scanner that submerges you in water and uses 500,000 grain-of-sand-sized ultrasonic sensors to produce a detailed 3D body map in under 60 seconds. That compares to 60-90 minutes for a standard MRI. The first Midjourney Spa opens in San Francisco next year. Watch how the viral technology works.

3  Surgeons complete the world's first HIV-to-HIV lung and liver transplant in the same operation.

Doctors at NYU Langone Health performed a double organ transplant from an HIV-positive donor to an HIV-positive recipient in a single surgery. Patient Bertrand Nelson, 56, is now breathing on his own and lifting weights. The breakthrough opens a new pool of donor organs for the 1.2 million Americans living with HIV who previously faced longer waits for compatible organs.

Bonus read:  A new study suggests Earth may not be swallowed by the Sun after all. Updated stellar models show that if the Sun sheds enough mass as it ages, Earth's orbit could drift outward and escape. Mercury and Venus likely won't be so lucky.

From The Frontier

Paper, reimagined. The reMarkable Paper Pure is a black-and-white paper tablet built for writing and reading, with higher contrast, faster performance, less eye strain, and up to three weeks of battery life. It is not trying to compete with your iPad. It is trying to replace the legal pad sitting next to it.

Gym tracker that actually works. The Fort Wearable is built specifically for strength training. It automatically detects exercises, reps, sets, and rest periods, then scores each session based on muscular effort and velocity. Every other fitness tracker is primarily designed for cardio. This one is not.

Fan for everywhere. Dyson's HushJet Mini Cool is a portable bladeless fan that uses a star-shaped nozzle to reduce turbulence and push focused airflow up to 55 mph. Whether it is worth carrying in a bag is a personal calculation, but the engineering behind it is genuinely interesting.

Stairs are no longer an obstacle. The Dreame X50 Ultra is a robot vacuum that can navigate a full home and climb stairs on a voice command. Stair-climbing has been the hard ceiling for robot vacuums for years. The fact that it now works, quietly, in a consumer device is a meaningful jump.

What people are actually watching and sharing

Google's secret flight sim. Google quietly opened up a flight simulator built on Google Earth's 3D maps, letting you pilot an aircraft anywhere on Earth. It has no tutorial, no objectives, and no end state. Take it for a spin here.

The World Cup ball went to space. In a campaign linking athletic performance with scientific innovation, the official World Cup ball made a detour before the tournament. The unusual warmup is here and it is exactly as strange as it sounds.

Pollen vs. CPU. A viral image on Reddit places a pollen grain on top of a 20-year-old CPU chip, putting millions of years of biological engineering next to decades of human engineering in the same frame. One overwhelms the other in size. The image has been circulating widely because it reframes the scale question in a way that is hard to shake.

Wood-burning Peugeot. During the German occupation of France, fuel was scarce enough that drivers converted cars to run on combustible gas from burning wood. This 1940s Peugeot 202 is a genuinely elegant solution to a problem most people today have no frame of reference for.

Drone traffic police. A new generation of drones in China can identify riders not wearing helmets using image recognition and issue warnings on the spot. The technology works, it is already deployed, and the debate about where this ends is just getting started.

Only Good News

Tooth Guard. Periodontitis destroys the bone and tissue holding teeth in place, and current treatments can control it but not reverse the damage. Researchers now claim to have developed a gel from jackfruit latex, pomegranate peel, and a common statin that showed early signs of both fighting infection and stimulating new bone growth simultaneously. The jackfruit latex keeps the treatment precisely where it is needed, reducing reliance on systemic antibiotics.

No Fire, No Foul. Scientists built an AI platform that detects dangerous electrical arcing on power lines, the kind that causes wildfires but is often too subtle to trip a conventional circuit breaker. Trained on 5,700 waveform signatures and validated against five years of Southern California Edison data, the system increased fault signal visibility from 6% to 72%.

Dream On. Stanford researchers found a way to fill the blank of general anesthesia with pleasant dreams. A five-step protocol, including ten minutes of quiet during recovery, pushed dream recall to 93% in fully adherent patients, with over 86% describing their dreams as positive. It won't speed physical recovery, but it could meaningfully change how patients experience surgery.

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