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You probably know someone like this. Maybe you are someone like this. They remember your birthday, show up when things fall apart, and somehow always know the right thing to say. Everyone likes them. But ask them to name their close friends, and there’s a long, uncomfortable pause. This isn’t a mystery to untangle — […]

The post Psychology says people who are extremely kind but have no close friends aren’t socially inept — they’re operating with a version of kindness that prioritizes other people’s comfort so completely that they never let anyone close enough to actually know them appeared first on Space Daily.

Ambition is quieter than people think. It rarely looks like hunger. Most days it looks like a person who can't rest without feeling guilty for trying.

Modern ambition rarely looks like hunger. It looks like a person who can't sit down without feeling guilty, whose productivity masks a private war with rest. Here's what's actually driving it.

The post Ambition is quieter than people think. It rarely looks like hunger. Most days it looks like a person who can’t rest without feeling guilty for trying. appeared first on Space Daily.

There’s a moment you notice it in older people. The way they don’t flinch when someone disagrees with them. The way they skip the event everyone else felt obligated to attend. The way they say “no” to something without a paragraph of explanation. From the outside, it can look like apathy. Like they’ve checked out, […]

The post Psychology says the reason older people stop caring isn’t apathy – its actually the highest form of self awareness appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who struggle to make decisions weren't born indecisive. They grew up in houses where the wrong choice had consequences nobody warned them about.

Chronic indecision isn't a personality trait. It's a learned response to growing up in environments where the wrong choice triggered outsized, unpredictable consequences — and the nervous system never stopped scanning for them.

The post The people who struggle to make decisions weren’t born indecisive. They grew up in houses where the wrong choice had consequences nobody warned them about. appeared first on Space Daily.

Optical links in contested space

Thursday, 23 April 2026 14:00

In this episode of Space Minds, we head back to Space Symposium where SpaceNews’ Sandra Erwin moderated a panel on how optical communication links can provide warfighters and operators with […]

Smile set to launch on 19 May

Thursday, 23 April 2026 13:43
Smile delivered to space (artist impression, GIF)

The European-Chinese Smile mission is due to launch on Tuesday 19 May 2026, at 05:52 CEST / 04:52 BST / 00:52 local time on a European Vega-C rocket.

The Pentagon’s 2027 budget proposal includes an estimated $58.5 billion tied to artificial intelligence.

Most nights, the last thing I do before turning off the light is read. Not because I’m disciplined or because some productivity guru told me to. I started doing it years ago, back in a stuffy warehouse in Melbourne, killing time on my phone during breaks. Back then it was just survival. Something to escape […]

The post Psychology says people who read before bed every night have a fundamentally different brain than people who watch tv appeared first on Space Daily.

Nostalgia isn't a longing for the past. It's a signal that something essential about you got left behind there.

Nostalgia is usually misread as sentimentality or a wish to return to the past. Psychological research suggests it's something more useful — a signal pointing at the parts of yourself you stopped carrying forward.

The post Nostalgia isn’t a longing for the past. It’s a signal that something essential about you got left behind there. appeared first on Space Daily.

Why is Antarctica’s mass increasing?

Thursday, 23 April 2026 12:00
Despite accelerating loss of ice through glacier melt, exceptionally heavy snowfall in recent years is adding to the mass of the icy continent.

The Antarctic Ice Sheet has been growing since 2020 – and scientists have now identified why. Research funded by the European Space Agency (ESA) looked at factors affecting Antarctica’s delicate environmental dynamics. Despite accelerating loss of ice through glacier melt, exceptionally heavy snowfall in recent years is adding to the mass of the icy continent.

A new grip on space: electrostatic capture technology Image: A new grip on space: electrostatic capture technology
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