Scientists have discovered that the bacteria behind Lyme disease and anaplasmosis have a sneaky way of surviving inside ticks—they hijack the tick’s own cell functions to steal cholesterol they need to grow. By tapping into a built-in protein pathway, the bacteria keep themselves alive until they can infect a new host. The research opens the door to new methods of stopping these diseases before ticks ever get the chance to bite. A new web tool also reveals that this trick might be used by other blood-feeding bugs too.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250704032922.htm
Microsoft's first Windows 11 preview build of 2026 brings more Copilot+ PC
features to everyone — here's what's new
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Microsoft's first new preview build of Windows 11 for 2026 is packing a
handful of Copilot additions, along with a new mobile Resume feature and
more.
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19 hours ago
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