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News from Saxony

The TU Dresden data center already has high-performance computers. Deneb will be added at the end of 2026. Sven Ellger

Dresden gets one of the most powerful AI computers in Germany

Artificial intelligence requires enormous computing power. TU Dresden is therefore planning a new supercomputer. "Deneb" is the name of the system with 184 high-performance chips, which is due to be launched at the end of 2026. Particularly sustainable: 97 percent of the computing heat flows into the district heating network and heats buildings in the surrounding area.

Cell phones contain valuable raw materials. Researchers from Freiberg have an idea on how to recycle them. © pixabay Pexels

Freiberg team wins millions in funding for clever cell phone recycling

Old cell phones and computers usually end up in the trash - but they contain valuable raw materials. A team from Freiberg has now developed a clever recycling process to recover gold, copper and rare earths. The six researchers from the Helmholtz Institute convinced an international jury and secured millions in funding. Their environmentally friendly process could help to reduce dependence on critical raw material imports.

Rayan Ghrieb gave FCM the lead in the test against FC Winterthur / Photo: Uli Deck/dpa

1. FC Magdeburg wins first winter test

1. FC Magdeburg beat Swiss first division side FC Winterthur 2:1 at their training camp, capitalizing on two of their chances in a game with a lot of idle time.

Symbolic image flu / pixabay Mojpe

Sick to work? The body suffers for weeks

Quickly into the office even though you have a cold? A new study by Chemnitz University of Technology shows: Those who work sick pay a high price. The exhaustion lasts for weeks and the body needs much longer to recover than expected. Researchers warn of a dangerous spiral.

How well do you know fairy tales? Now you can test it. © pixabay Ghinzo

How well do you really know the Grimm fairy tales?

Mirror, mirror in the hand - or was it different? A linguist at Chemnitz University of Technology is investigating how well we still know the famous sayings from Grimm's fairy tales. Anyone can take part in a ten-minute survey. The results will be presented to the public.