Today’s Solutions: April 23, 2026

Can the monarch highway help s

Can the monarch highway help save a butterfly under siege?

Interstate 35 lies at the heart of a vast circulatory system, one of the massive transportation arteries that enable Americans to move long distances quickly. The highway also cuts through the heart of the eastern monarch’s central flyway, which produces the vast majority of brilliant orange Read More...

Doctors Without Borders have c

Doctors Without Borders have created a mobile hospital on a trailer

Each year, Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) attempts to do more with less money, and this year that enforced ingenuity has spawned a truly remarkable concept—the Mobile Unit Surgical Trailer (MUST). The MUST is a complete mobile hospital on wheels, fully equipped with recovery Read More...

Report: U.S. to surpass Paris

Report: U.S. to surpass Paris commitments even if Trump withdraws

Basic economics, research analysts say, suggest that the U.S. will exceed its commitments in the Paris agreement regardless of whether or not President Donald Trump withdraws, as he’s stated he will. The analysts at Morgan Stanley believe that renewable energy like solar and wind power are Read More...

Coffee drinkers really do live

Coffee drinkers really do live longer

Coffee drinkers rejoice! A mountain of evidence tells us that those who regularly drink coffee have a lower risk of diabetes, fewer strokes and heart problems and lower rates of certain cancers. All of that may explain why coffee drinkers tend to live longer than those who don’t drink the brew. Read More...

Police officers in the U.S. ar

Police officers in the U.S. are practicing mindfulness to reduce stress and violence

Tragedy struck the city of Dallas last year after a U.S. army veteran killed five police officers. To deal with the traumatization and stress of the incident, the Dallas police force has turned to the practice mindfulness. The technique’s goal is to change the way officers manage stress and their Read More...

Deconditioning: How to replace

Deconditioning: How to replace old behaviors with new ones

Deconditioning is a term used to describe a system for diminishing or eliminating the conditioned responses or behavior patterns that you assume over time. We all develop behaviors and strategies that we run based on our upbringing, past experiences, and what society deems appropriate. In most Read More...

Tax incentives might run out o

Tax incentives might run out on Tesla, but electric cars will be just fine

Tesla likes to argue that its customers don’t need government subsidies to buy electric vehicles. “In fact, the incentives give us a relative disadvantage,” Tesla CEO Elon Musk said on a May 3 investor call. “Tesla has succeeded in spite of the incentives not because of Read More...

Refugees find temporary havens

Refugees find temporary havens on Airbnb

Sefani Tadesse got the heads-up at dinnertime. Five Airbnb guests would arrive at midnight. Tadesse and her daughter Bella, 13, rushed to clean their Oakland condo, washing towels, making the beds, buying flowers — and packing their own bags, because they vacate their one-bedroom place and stay Read More...

‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’ i

‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’ is a superheroic meditation on how to be a good person

“Spider-Man: Homecoming,” which zipped into theaters last weekend, is almost everything a summer blockbuster should be: It’s very funny without using humor as an excuse to be less than emotionally accessible; its super-sized throw-downs are anchored in real, human-scale conflicts; its world Read More...

Algorithm spots abnormal heart

Algorithm spots abnormal heart rhythms with doctor-like accuracy

Researchers from Stanford University have found a way to effectively diagnose heart arrhythmias even if a person isn’t exhibiting symptoms and even without a doctor. They’ve developed an algorithm that can detect 14 types of arrhythmia, and can even differentiate between two very similar types Read More...