History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
6,000 years of security: How ancient Egyptians invented the first lock and key
The world’s first lock and key system was invented in ancient Egypt around 4000 BCE. Made of wood, it used simple pins and ...
A group of scientists are studying the Cyclades, an island group in Greece's Aegean Sea, looking for signs of early human ...
Quadcopters, electromagnetic rifles and an AI-powered navigation system were among the wares displayed at one of Africa and ...
Thales is deepening its strategic cooperation with AIO to accelerate Egypt’s technological autonomy. The partnership spans AI ...
AUSTIN, Texas, Nov. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- TTEC Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: TTEC ), a leading global CX (customer ...
The discovery was made by the Gulf of Suez Petroleum Co., a joint venture between Egyptian General Petroleum Corp. (EGPC) and United Arab Emirates-based Dragon Oil. The additional output is set to be ...
Partnership with AOI Electronics and ZeroTech taps into Egypt’s fast-growing security camera market and lays groundwork for broader technology localization Iveda® (NASDAQ: IVDA), the global leader in ...
Iveda® (NASDAQ: IVDA), the global leader in cloud-based AI video analytics technology, today announced a major expansion of its regional strategy in Egypt with a new tri-lateral manufacturing ...
Identifying signs of life in ancient rocks is hard. It is not enough to find organic molecules—rocks of all sorts contain them but “organic” just means the molecules contain chains of carbon atoms.
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Peer Inside a 2,000-Year-Old Egyptian Cat Mummy
Scientist at the University of Aberdeen are using 3D imaging software to create interactive models of mummies and other ancient artifacts. Editorial: Another daylight robbery of the U.S. Treasury ...
Technology giant Ericsson and Egypt’s Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU), to reinforce collaboration over a three-year period ...
Step through the gates of Olympus and you meet a reality far more exacting than myth: stone fatigue, seismic stress, polluted air and the relentless wear of millions of visitors. Today’s conservators ...
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