#2912: Why SSRIs Can Make You Drenched at 3 AM

SSRIs can wreck your body's thermostat. Here's the neuropharmacology behind night sweats and what you can do.

pharmacologypsychopharmacologyhealth

#2911: Building a $180 Privacy-First AI Wearable

How Omi's $99 dev kit lets you build a local-first voice productivity system that watches your screen.

local-aihardware-engineeringvoice-first

#2910: The Quiet Chemistry of Xylene-Free Markers

What’s really in your permanent marker? The hidden chemical revolution happening on the hardware store shelf.

supply-chainhealthsustainability

#2909: The Reassurance Mirage: When Moderation Fails

How the EU Digital Services Act exposes a 30-to-1 gap in appeal success rates between platforms.

ai-ethicscontent-provenancemisinformation

#2908: Why Backpack Labels Vanish in the Wash

Paint markers flake, xylene bleeds, and most "permanent" labels fade fast. Here's the chemistry that actually survives.

material-sciencepermanent-markersfabric-labeling

#2907: How Medieval Queens Shaped Jewish Policy Before 1306

How four French queens used dower lands and household budgets to protect—or restrict—Jewish communities before the 1306 expulsion.

political-historyisraelinternational-relations

#2906: How Much Bone Do You Actually Get From Palatal Expansion?

A landmark RCT reveals that only 23-32% of screw activation actually separates bone — the rest is dental tipping.

medical-historypalatal-expansionmidpalatal-suture

#2905: How Your Brain Filters Noise (And Why It Fails)

Four layers of neural sound filtering — and why they break differently in ADHD, autism, and APD.

sensory-processingneurodivergenceadhd

#2904: Cable Labels That Actually Survive a Move

Stop blaming yourself for peeling labels. Heat shrink tubes and a patch map solve the real problem.

networkinghardware-reliabilitydiy

#2903: The Maple Syrup Paradox of Fenugreek

Fenugreek smells like maple syrup but tastes bitter. How one bean fooled the world for 8,000 years.

pharmacologycultural-biasfenugreek

#2902: The 47-Second Gap: Choking First Aid Every Parent Needs

Why most parents' first instinct during a choking emergency is dangerously wrong — and what the 2024 unified guidelines actually say.

child-developmentfirst-aidemergency-preparedness
Sunday, May 17

#2901: Can Ink Outlast Stone? The 5,000-Year Quest for Permanence

Egyptian lampblack lasts 4,000 years. Iron gall ink eats through paper. Which marking tech actually wins?

material-sciencestructural-engineeringindustrial-automation

#2900: From Piggy Tier to Production: Making Kids Animation in 2026

Breaking down what it takes to make a YouTube Kids cartoon — and where AI actually helps.

generative-aichild-developmentvideo-generation

#2899: Can We Trust Palestinian Polls in Wartime?

How one man's surveys became the world's only window into Palestinian opinion—and whether the data is real.

osintisraelconflict-mediation

#2898: The Bean That Built the Ancient Levant

How the fava bean went from ancient staple to menu afterthought — and why its revival is failing.

israelsustainabilityfava-beans

#2897: The 2-Minute Baby Cry Diagnostic Algorithm

A pediatrician's structured framework for decoding pre-verbal distress when your baby can't tell you what's wrong.

child-developmentparentingfirst-aid

#2896: What We Lost When We Lost the Courtyard

The biblical chatzer wasn't a patio. It was a pre-industrial cooperative that solved parenting exhaustion.

urban-planningchild-developmentarchitecture

#2895: What Your 10-Month-Old Boy’s Brain Is Actually Doing

The neuroscience behind motor milestones, sleep regressions, and why social media is making parents anxious.

child-developmentneuroscienceneuroplasticity

#2894: Dishwasher vs Marker: The Chemistry of "Permanent

Why your Sharpie fails in the dishwasher, and what actually works for plastic, fabric, and food safety.

material-scienceindustrial-automationchild-development

#2893: Why Your Rotary Shaver Struggles With Thick Hair

Rotary shavers struggle with thick, stiff hair due to a fundamental design mismatch. Here's what's actually happening.

mechanical-engineeringmaterial-scienceergonomics