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Nearby Earth-sized Alien World Orbits 'Quiet' Star, Boosting Habitable Potential
And it's just a galactic hop, skip and a jump away.
What's the Best Way to Load a Dishwasher?
home.howstuffworks.com/best-way-to-load-dishwasher.htm
Yep, there's an art and a science to stacking a dishwasher. HowStuffWorks explains both sides of the equation.
How Some Cities Prepare to Withstand Climate Change
science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/green-science/cities-withstand-global-warming.htm
Rising sea levels, increased flood and extreme heat are all signs of climate change. Cities are trying some innovate strategies to cope with and mitigate these events.
What Makes a Food 'Natural'?
health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/food-nutrition/natural-foods/what-makes-food-natural.htm
If you think a 'natural food' means it has no artificial ingredients, you're so wrong. HowStuffWorks Now explores what makes a food 'natural.'
Composing in Code: Musician-Programmers Are Changing the Way Music Is Made
Musicians are often drawn to programming. Learn how the two disciplines are joining up to push musical boundaries at HowStuffWorks Now.
Scientists Prove Schrodinger's Cat Can Be in Two Places at Once
A bunch of Yale physicists decided to give Schrodinger's cat not one but two boxes. And that, strangely enough, could eventually prove handy for quantum computing.
Pizza Nightmares: Can Your Diet Determine Your Dreams?
Folklore says heavy or spicy food before bedtime can cause nightmares. Surprisingly, there's been no real study of this - until now.
Ridiculous History: When West Point Cadets Rioted Over Eggnog in 1826
Also known as the Grog Mutiny, the Eggnog Riot saw famous West Point cadets go nog-wild over whiskey restrictions. Read more at HowStuffWorks.
Do Uber Drivers Discriminate Racially? A Study Says Yes
auto.howstuffworks.com/tech-transport/do-uber-drivers-discriminate-racially-a-study-says-yes.htm
Do Uber and Lyft drivers discriminate less than taxi drivers? HowStuffWorks Now looks at a study with mixed results.
The Shoebill Stork: One Freaky and Formidable Bird
animals.howstuffworks.com/birds/shoebill-stork.htm
Biochemically like a heron and anatomically similar to a pelican, the shoebill stork has been called "Monsterface" and even "Death Pelican." But wait until you hear the staccato rat-a-tat-tat of its booming machine-gun call.