I could possibly use a tabbed file manager. In fact, I sometimes do. It's called Explorer++...
What I could really use, though, is a file manager with side-by-side directory windows. And also, Mr. Microsoft, if you're listening: a file manager that doesn't change my layout preferences in search results to something stupid and unhelpful and, incidentally, not what I have selected as my, you know, preference.
What I could really use, though, is a file manager with side-by-side directory windows. And also, Mr. Microsoft, if you're listening: a file manager that doesn't change my layout preferences in search results to something stupid and unhelpful and, incidentally, not what I have selected as my, you know, preference.
ScienceAlert.com incorrectly credits this work to scientists at the Carnegie Institution.
In fact, Paul Asimow at Carnegie wrote a "Perspective" (comment) for the journal "Science," but as you can see in the published paper, the research was actually done by first author Emily Sarafian and colleagues at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts.
This is why it is important to go to the primary sources when possible, instead of relying on a news report which, in this case, was not correct.