Evolution

The evolution of digital platforms: From media to online gaming

Explore 2026 platform transformation insights from media to interactive experiences with strategic development analysis.

Digital Platform Evolution.
Mobile Gaming Evolution.

How casino technology mirrors broader trends in mobile entertainment

The face of "Little Foot".

Scientists reconstruct the face of “Little Foot,” a 4-million-year-old human ancestor

160-million-year-old Anchiornis fossils.

160 million years later: This rare fossil is overturning everything we knew about how birds evolved


Humanity once came dangerously close to extinction, study suggests

The researchers believe that humans maintained a tiny population of only 1,300 adults for at least 100,000 years.

Slightly larger brains than modern humans, and stronger, but extinct. An illustration of the Neanderthal man.

How did the first stages of evolution start? - study

The researchers found primitive cell-like membranes in hydrothermal vents, which may reveal how life began on unhospitable Earth.

 A cell is seen undergoing mitosis, replicating its chromosomes as it divides (Illustrative).

Skull found in China points to an unknown human species

This 300,000-year-old skull found in China has traits of both humans and other more distantly-related hominids, implying a new branch on the human evolutionary tree could have lived there.

 An artistic illustration of a human skull.

Why males have lower-pitched voices - study

A new study finds that large group size and mating systems in which males have multiple mates drove the evolution of lower-pitched voices in primates.


Humans' ancestors, dogs, bats may have coexisted with dinosaurs – study

Primates, whom humans evolved from, rabbits and hares, dogs and cats were shown to have evolved just before the mass extinction, so they coexisted with dinosaurs.

 Life reconstruction of Brontosaurus excelsus, a type of diplodocid sauropod dinosaur (Illustrative).

Ohio researchers use CAT scan to test felines’ sense of smell

The authors said that their findings deepen their understanding of how the evolution of more convoluted channels enabled mammals’ - especially cats’ - enhanced sense of smell.

A JERUSALEM alley cat.