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Monday

About 14 percent of the Gigafactory in Nevada has been built so far. At 5.8 million square feet, it will be a building with one of the biggest footprints in the world. Tesla hide caption

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Tesla

A Rare Look Inside The 'Gigafactory' Tesla Hopes Will Revolutionize Energy Use

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Friday

An illustration shows what a helicopter drone would look like on the surface of Mars. NASA/JPL-Caltech hide caption

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NASA/JPL-Caltech

Someday A Helicopter Drone May Fly Over Mars And Help A Rover

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Thursday

A brown bear in its natural habitat. Wildlife ecologists in Minnesota found that black bears in their study experienced an increase in heart rate when buzzed by drones. iStockphoto hide caption

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iStockphoto

Drones Increase Heart Rates Of Wild Bears. Too Much Stress?

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Friday

Can people tell a computer-generated story from a human-authored one? How about a poem, or a playlist? Three new contests hope to find out. ImageZoo/Corbis hide caption

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ImageZoo/Corbis

Shall I Compare Thee To An Algorithm? Turing Test Gets A Creative Twist

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Wednesday

Tuesday

One of these things is not like the other: A 3-D printed model of a beige cowbird egg stands out from its robin's egg nest mates, though their shape and heft are similar. Ana Lopez/Courtesy of Mark Hauber hide caption

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Ana Lopez/Courtesy of Mark Hauber

Higher-Tech Fake Eggs Offer Better Clues To Wild-Bird Behavior

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Sunday

ResearchKit, presented by Apple's Jeff Williams in March, enables app creation to aid medical research. Eric Risberg/AP hide caption

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Eric Risberg/AP

The Promise And Potential Pitfalls Of Apple's ResearchKit

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Monday

Ilana Kohn/Ikon Images/Getty Images

Now Algorithms Are Deciding Whom To Hire, Based On Voice

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Monday

In a project called "Natural Frequencies," the bells in the Campanile on the University of California, Berkeley campus were recently programmed to play a score composed in real time by the seismic shifts taking place along the Hayward fault. Eric Risberg/AP hide caption

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Eric Risberg/AP

Shake, Rattle And Toll: Berkeley's Bells Play Sounds Of Earth

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Wednesday

Emily Neblett, a patient at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital in Nashville, Tenn., demonstrates circuit pieces from the mobile maker space that are connected by magnets. Noah Nelson/Youth Radio hide caption

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Noah Nelson/Youth Radio

'Maker Space' Allows Kids To Innovate, Learn In The Hospital

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Thursday

Dealer Omar Abu-Eid adjusts a stack of chips before the first day of the World Series of Poker's main event in Las Vegas last July. Humans still reign in most versions of poker. Whew. John Locher/AP hide caption

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John Locher/AP

Look Out, This Poker-Playing Computer Is Unbeatable

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Monday

Many institutions have their archives stored on CDs — but the discs aren't as stable as once thought. There is no average life span for a CD, says preservationist Michele Youket, "because there is no average disc." Sarah Tilotta/NPR hide caption

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Sarah Tilotta/NPR

How Long Do CDs Last? It Depends, But Definitely Not Forever

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Monday

Rodin's Left Hand of Eustache de St. Pierre, during the scanning process (from left); computer image created from the scan; inner anatomy; and exterior scan and inner anatomy combined for an augmented reality view of the sculpture. Photo by Matthew Hasel, render by Sarah Hegmann, Division of Clinical Anatomy, Stanford School of Medicine hide caption

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Photo by Matthew Hasel, render by Sarah Hegmann, Division of Clinical Anatomy, Stanford School of Medicine

Using A 3-D Version Of Rodin's Hands To Understand Anatomy

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Sunday