IEyeNews

iLocal News Archives

iScience

iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Voyager Solar System ‘exit’ debated

Jonathan Amos By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News The possibility that the Voyager-1 spacecraft may have left the Solar System is being hotly debated. Launched in September 1977, the probe was sent initially to study the outer planets, but…

iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Satellite maps oldest light in the universe

From Australian Network News A new, detailed map of the most ancient light in the cosmos has revealed our universe to be about 80 million years older than thought. The 50-million pixel, all-sky snapshot of radiation left over from the…

iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Science isn’t just for scientists

Beyond providing valuable research, citizen science is a fun way for people to engage with nature and learn about the world and their place in it. By David Suzuki with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington. A…

Editors Choice iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

The baffling response to Arctic climate change

With Arctic ice melting, Australia on fire and increasing droughts, floods and extreme weather throughout the world, it’s past time to get serious about global warming. By David Suzuki with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington. The…

Editors Choice iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Global Warming puts the Arctic on thin ice

From P1 Foundation Answers to questions about the Arctic’s shrinking ice cap and its global significance. 1. Why are global warming specialists watching the Arctic so closely? The Arctic is global warming’s canary in the coal mine. It’s a highly…

iCommunity iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Dewlap Research On Grand Cayman

CITN/Cayman27 has been showing a fascinating story about the Anole lizard in their Environment Break programme. The Anole lizard is a species common in Grand Cayman and native to Cayman Brac and Little Cayman. Tess Driessens together with Simon Baeckens…

iLocal News iScience iTech iWorld News News

How passwords can wreck your two-factor authentication

By Patrick Lambert TechRepublic Passwords are used everywhere to access online services, and even though security researchers know that this type of authentication is almost as bad as it gets, it’s the default way we all access our online accounts,…

iCommunity iHealth iLifestyle iLocal News iScience iWorld News News top news

Gender gaps in health

From Cayman Islands Ministry of Community Affairs, Gender and Housing From birth to death, human beings experience a wide range of emotional, psychological and physical experiences that shape our lives and inevitably can affect the state of our health and…

iCrime iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

President Obama upbraids China over cyber attacks

President Barack Obama has said in a TV interview that the US is engaging in “tough talk” with China about its alleged cyber attacks on America. Mr Obama told ABC News some, but not all, hacking originating from China was…

Editors Choice iCommunity iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWeather iWorld News News

Warning about the catastrophic impact on lowlands from sea level rises

Scientific evidence indicates that global warming could well lead to a sea-level rise of 1 meter or more in the 21st century. A rise in sea levels by a meter from climate change could destroy more than 60 percent of…