Despite claims data centres' water consumption had been exaggerated, Sydney Water managing director Darren Cleary repeated the organisation's forecast that data centres could use up to 25 per cent of ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. Why does a sneeze take over your whole face? And why can light trigger it in some people?
Sneezing is often seen as a minor inconvenience, something to be quickly suppressed, especially in public or professional settings. But doctors warn that holding in a sneeze may do more harm than good ...
Suppressing a sneeze may have led to a spontaneous leak of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and air entering the skull of a woman with no history of trauma or surgery. A 45-year-old woman was referred to an ...
Spring doesn’t officially arrive until March 20, but if you’ve already started sneezing or feeling itchy, you’re not imagining it. A few mild temperature days are enough to kick allergy season into ...
There's nothing more frustrating than not being able to sneeze when you feel like you have to let one out. While a big sneeze can be jarring and a little messy, it's completely normal bodily function.
The latest “Brain Sneezing” international cartoon competition has been announced, calling for cartoons with the topic “Alternative Quotient – AIQ” – “Artificial Intelligence in Cartoon Humour”.
The sights of summer, like flowers and grass, can lead to the sound of sneezing. For some, it's constant, for others, it's sporadic, but we all know how it feels. "When we get exposed to dust, strong ...
The patient: A man in his 30s in the U.K. The symptoms: The patient arrived at the emergency department in severe pain and with a swollen neck that he struggled to move. He reported that the pain had ...
The internet has crowned sneezing as the body’s secret detox method—claiming everything from “sneezing expels toxins from your brain” to “seven sneezes equals one orgasm.” But before you start ...
We’ve all been there. That tickle in your nose hits during a quiet meeting, a formal dinner, or maybe a first date. Your body screams “SNEEZE!” but social etiquette whispers “don’t you dare.” So you ...
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