After releasing five albums and garnering critical acclaim, St. Louis rock/emo band Foxing might just be done for good: The group just announced they’re going on an indefinite hiatus. The news came ...
St. Louis emo stalwarts Foxing have announced that they’re going on hiatus. “[It] has become clear to us that in our pursuit of our dreams and making the most honest and genuine art we can, our ...
Foxing have announced that they are going on an indefinite hiatus, saying their “sense of self without the band has eroded”. The US emo group, who formed in 2011, shared the news with fans on Patreon ...
Foxing are going on an indefinite hiatus. In 2023 the beloved emo band celebrated ten years of their debut full-length The Albatross, and last year they put out their fifth studio album Foxing. Now ...
"Even the quietest and seemingly empty regions of the galaxy can harbor extreme processes." Astronomers have discovered an extraordinary celestial system containing a runaway pulsar fleeing the scene ...
Did you know there are some financial metrics that can provide clues of a potential multi-bagger? In a perfect world, we'd like to see a company investing more capital into its business and ideally ...
Pulsar Fusion, a U.K.-based firm attempting to unlock nuclear fusion to power space travel, has picked Austin for its U.S. location. The company said Monday it’s searching for roughly 50,000 square ...
Pulsar Fusion, the UK-based fusion propulsion company behind the breakthrough Sunbird platform, is opening a new U.S. office in Austin, Texas. This strategic move supports Pulsar’s increasing ...
A giant cosmic "bone" structure, G359.13, exists in the Milky Way. G359.13 is one of the longest and brightest filaments in our galaxy. A fast-moving neutron star likely caused a large bend in the ...
Anduril this week revealed its Pulsar-L jammer, a small, lightweight electronic warfare system designed to track and defeat threats like drone swarms. (Anduril) Defense technology firm Anduril ...
The Trailblazer: A spinning neutron star is tied to a mysterious tail – or so it seems. Astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory found that this pulsar, known as PSR J0357+3205 (or PSR J0357 ...