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Technology saves nature, DNA dogs and Iggy Pop makes history
Mother Nature has a friend in technology, a heartwarming dog reunion and watch the birth of crowd surfing in real time.
These 4 high-tech inventions are giving Mother Nature a fighting chance at a brighter future
"Industrialization is destroying the planet - technology is trying to save it."
As we continue to drive industry forward and the human footprint carves a lasting mark on the planet, a growing global crisis demands urgent answers. Solution may very much lie within the tools that created the problem. New technologyechnology is coming to save the planet.
Science continues to come up with new ways to help the environment. You might have heard of plastic eating algae. Maybe you know about giant machines pulling CO2 out of the air. But there are some new technologies and older ones that are showing unexpected value when it comes to protecting the environment.
The Cleanest Electrolyte Ever—And It Helps You Sleep
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RE Fountain is what your evening routine has been missing. It’s a soothing, spa-inspired nightcap that calms your nervous system, helps you fall asleep faster, and supports cognitive recovery—so you wake up feeling sharp, not sluggish.
From the first drink, you’ll feel a wave of calm. Within weeks, deeper sleep and brighter mornings become your new normal. No melatonin grogginess. No gut disruption. Just clean, science-backed calm in a glass.
Sleep experts and wellness pros are already making it their go-to nightly ritual.
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After their beloved dog died, a family adopted a lookalike. A DNA test blew their minds.
"There was a feeling that I could not explain."
Every pet is unique and irreplaceable. When we lose one of our friends, all we can do is grieve, keep their memory alive, and, if/when we’re ready, share that same love with someone new. For some, it’s less painful to switch gears completely, bringing home a new companion with a totally different look and personality. Others take home an animal with a similar vibe. One Bay Area couple followed the latter path, and they wound up with a mind-blowing surprise.
Jillian Reiff adopted their previous dog, a half-rat-terrier/half-chihuahua named Rufus, from the San Francisco SPCA in 2016. And he quickly became an essential part of her family’s lives. "We were engaged, and Rufus was there," she told CBS News San Francisco. "He actually had the ring tied around his neck. When my husband and I got married, he was there. He was wearing a little tux. And when we had our children, Maya and Benjamin, Rufus was actually the first family member to meet our kids, even before grandma."
A resurfaced 1970 video captures the historic moment Iggy Pop 'invented' crowd surfing
The Stooges concert was being covered by the local news like a live sporting event.
Back in 1970, Iggy Pop sparked one of the most thrilling and inadvertently hilarious moments in rock history. The singer and provocateur was performing with his raucous proto-punk act The Stooges at the Cincinnati Summer Pop Festival—a major event that also featured giants like Alice Cooper, Traffic, Mountain, Grand Funk Railroad, Bob Seger, and Mott the Hoople, among others. Two songs from The Stooges’ set were filmed and broadcast as part of a locally produced TV special titled Midsummer Rock, documenting what some sources consider the possible invention of crowd surfing.
The whole thing is even more iconic because of the unusual culture clash on display. The special’s buttoned-up presenter, a reportedly 58-year-old TV announcer named Jack Lescoulie, documents this wild stage spectacle with a perplexed but admirably cheerful detachment, as if gazing at an entirely different species. Before the performance even starts, he summarizes his "amaze[ment]" at how the artists conduct themselves: "For instance, when someone says, 'Here’s an act' and announce the act, they may very well tune up for 10 or 15 minutes before they ever play the first number that they’re going to play. And the kids don’t seem to mind. They watch it all and listen to the tune-up, listen to them check speakers."