From time to time I still have my accent. There are a ton of words I’m constantly pronouncing wrong or can’t say right at all. This man just figured out the same thing. He’s been saying many of the words he uses daily incorrectly. I know it varies by region, from the NYC accent to the southern accent. I think that’s what makes us unique. Have you tried this as well? Are you saying all the words correctly?
Your tooth enamel is the hardest thing your body makes, harder than steel. It is also the one part of you that never grows back. The cells that build it die the moment your teeth come in, so every chip and cavity you pick up after that stays for life.
This is the reason a dentist can't just heal a bad tooth. There is nothing left to regrow it with, so they drill out the decay and plug the gap with metal or resin. The plug holds, but the tooth never makes new enamel on its own again. And this kind of damage hits close to half the people alive.
In November 2025, a team at the University of Nottingham showed a way around it. They made a gel out of proteins copied from the ones a baby's body uses to grow enamel in the first place. You paint it on a worn tooth, and it lays down a tiny frame. The frame then pulls minerals out of your own spit, and fresh enamel crystals start growing on top, locking onto the old ones. The tooth ends up growing its own enamel back.
Tested on real human teeth in a lab, two weeks of the gel grew back a layer that took chewing and acid as well as natural enamel does. The honest part is the size of it. That new layer is about as thin as a sheet of kitchen foil, while the enamel that takes the beating when you chew is roughly 200 times thicker. And so far it has only worked on teeth sitting in a dish, never in a living mouth.
A milder version is already real. A Swiss treatment called Curodont, which uses a similar protein-based trick, has spent years patching the chalky white spots that appear just before a cavity forms. Nottingham wants to rebuild a thicker layer than that, and its new company hopes to sell a first product in 2026, around the time human testing begins. The real promise is smaller than the headline but more useful. It works best before there's a real cavity, catching a tooth while the damage is still small, so you never reach the day you're staring at the drill.
Please stop. I don’t want an AI summary of my Google search. I don’t want an AI summary of the text message from my friend at work. I don’t want an AI summary of the email I’m about to read. Please just stop.
BREAKING: MICROSOFT JUST ANNOUNCED TO BAN ITS OWN ENGINEERS FROM USING AI DUE TO THE COST OF USING IT.
VP OF NVIDIA SAID, “THE COST OF AI FOR MY TEAM WAS MORE THAN HUMANS”
“AI CAN COST MORE THAN HUMAN WORKERS NOW”
Women give birth lying on their backs today because, back in the day, a European king had a weird f£tish for watching women’s private parts while they delivered.
He supp0sedly made them lie down with legs spread open so he could get a better view.
Hmm, what do you think about this ? 🤔
Chris Kirkpatrick says he signed more autographs as Chip Skylark from ‘FAIRLY ODDPARENTS’ than as himself from NSYNC.
“There were kids, they had pictures they drew of me. And I’m like ‘Oh my god, how would Chip sign his name?’”
Kentucky mother hides a camera in her nonverbal autistic son's hair after suspecting he was being abused at elementary school.
Tiphanee Lee says she suspected something was off when she received complaints about her son's behavior at school.
Lee decided to take matters into her own hands and put a small camera in her son's dreads.
When Lee reviewed the footage, she heard noises while her son's head moved around as a staff member accosted him.
"While this was happening there was adults in the room who did nothing to stop it. This is unacceptable," Tiphanee said.
The incident is reportedly under investigation.