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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. Scientists Warn The Sun Could Be About To Produce A ‘Superflare’

    Scientists have developed a new probabilistic forecasting system for extreme solar flares, known as "S-class" superflares, which are capable of causing widespread technological disruptions. This system, utilizing machine learning and analysis of historical solar activity, identifies specific time windows and regions on the sun where these powerful eruptions are more likely to occur. The research suggests a heightened risk for such an event between mid-2025 and mid-2026, potentially providing one to two years of advance warning for space weather operators. AI

    Scientists Warn The Sun Could Be About To Produce A ‘Superflare’

    IMPACT New machine learning-based forecasting system offers potential for early warning of disruptive solar events.

  2. AMD posts record first-quarter results, driven by skyrocketing data center CPU demand — company expects consumer andgaming revenue to decline in Q2 over rising memory and component costs

    AMD has reported record first-quarter financial results, largely driven by a significant increase in demand for its data center CPUs and AI accelerators. The company's CEO, Lisa Su, highlighted that AI workloads, particularly inferencing and agentic AI, are fueling this growth and has raised its long-term outlook for the server CPU market. AMD anticipates continued strong performance in its data center segment, expecting substantial year-over-year growth in both server CPUs and AI accelerators in the upcoming quarters. AI

    AMD posts record first-quarter results, driven by skyrocketing data center CPU demand — company expects consumer andgaming revenue to decline in Q2 over rising memory and component costs

    IMPACT Accelerates enterprise adoption of AI infrastructure and agentic AI workloads, driving demand for high-performance computing.

  3. Biggest Sunspots In Years Turn Toward Earth — Expect Northern Lights

    The European Space Agency's Solar Orbiter spacecraft has detected a large sunspot region on the far side of the sun, which is expected to turn towards Earth around May 22nd. This region has already produced several solar flares and coronal mass ejections, raising the possibility of geomagnetic storms. NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars also captured images of this sunspot, highlighting its significant size and activity. AI

    Biggest Sunspots In Years Turn Toward Earth — Expect Northern Lights