Archive for the ‘education’ category: Page 84
Mar 24, 2022
Elon Musk Sets New Target for First SpaceX Starship Orbital Flight
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: education, Elon Musk, space travel
The biggest of the billionaire’s rockets could launch before school lets out in North America.
Mar 24, 2022
JPL and the Space Age: The Changing Face of Mars
Posted by Alan Jurisson in categories: education, space
Other than Earth, no planet in our solar system has been so thoroughly or long examined as Mars. For decades, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory has continuously explored the Red Planet with an array of orbiters, landers, and rovers.
What laid the groundwork for this unparallel record of exploration? This 90-minute documentary describes the challenges of JPL’s first attempts to send spacecraft to the Red Planet.
Continue reading “JPL and the Space Age: The Changing Face of Mars” »
Mar 19, 2022
Clockwork DevTerm R-01 Takes RISC-V Out For A Spin
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: computing, education
If you’re anything like us you’ve been keeping a close eye on the development of RISC-V: an open standard instruction set architecture (ISA) that’s been threatening to change the computing status quo for what seems like forever. From its humble beginnings as a teaching tool in Berkeley’s Parallel Computing Lab in 2010, it’s popped up in various development boards and gadgets from time to time. It even showed up in the 2019 Hackaday Supercon badge, albeit in FPGA form. But getting your hands on an actual RISC-V computer has been another story entirely. Until now, that is.
Clockwork has recently announced the availability of the DevTerm R-01, a variant of their existing portable computer that’s powered by a RISC-V module rather than the ARM chips featured in the earlier A04 and A06 models. Interestingly the newest member of the family is actually the cheapest at $239 USD, though it’s worth mentioning that not only does this new model only include 1 GB of RAM, but the product page makes it clear that the RISC-V version is intended for experienced penguin wranglers who aren’t afraid of the occasional bug.
Beyond the RISC-V CPU and slimmed down main memory, this is the same DevTerm that our very own [Donald Papp] reviewed earlier this month. Thanks to the modular nature of the portable machine, this sort of component swapping is a breeze, though frankly we’re impressed that the Clockwork team is willing to go out on such a limb this early in the product’s life. In our first look at the device we figured at best they would release an updated CPU board to accommodate the Raspberry Pi 4 Compute Module, but supporting a whole new architecture is a considerably bolder move. One wonders that other plans they may have for the retro-futuristic machine. Perhaps a low-power x86 chip isn’t out of the question?
Mar 17, 2022
Dr. Douglas Willard — Game Changing Development Program, Space Technology Mission Directorate, NASA
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: economics, education, engineering, government, space travel
Advancing Space Tech For Future Missions — Dr. Douglas Willard, Ph.D., Game Changing Development Program, Space Technology Mission Directorate, NASA
Dr. Douglas E. Willard, PhD, (https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/game_changing_de…g-willard/) is Program Element Manager, Game Changing Development Program, Space Technology Mission Directorate, at the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
Mar 17, 2022
Can We Resurrect Extinct Species? Scientists Put Jurassic Park to the Test
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biotech/medical, education, existential risks, genetics
De-extinction grabbed our imagination in the 90s with Jurassic Park. Scientists have since asked: how possible is it?
According to a new study, nearly impossible. But wait—it’s not all bad news. While bringing back a faithful copy of an extinct species may be impossible, we could bring back a hybrid species that’s a genetic mix between an extinct species and its modern descendant.
Published in Current Biology, the study eschews the grandiose mammoth, instead focusing on a tiny test case: the Christmas Island rat. Hefty in size and loudly vocal when invading docked ships and their cargo, the rodents were last seen in the 1900s. With a stroke of luck, the team recovered DNA from two well-preserved museum samples and compared them against a close relative: the Norway brown rat, a popular lab model for genetic studies today.
Mar 17, 2022
TOP 5 Female Humanoid Robots 2022 That Will Shock You | PRICE REVEALED!
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: education, law, robotics/AI
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Such robots have a long history dating back to the 4th century when the.
concept of a humanoid robot first appeared in many different cultures.
around the world, including Greece, China, and even Japan!#humanodrobot #bostondynamics #artificialintelligence📺Interesting fact: Smart individuals watch the full video!
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Continue reading “TOP 5 Female Humanoid Robots 2022 That Will Shock You | PRICE REVEALED!” »
Mar 15, 2022
Elon Musk Shares Transphobic Meme Following Report of Grimes Dating Chelsea Manning
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: biotech/medical, education, Elon Musk, engineering, space travel
Sooner or later Musks childish, morally and politically inept use of social media will thwart his greater (and great) ambition. Whatever your personal beliefs, there is exactly ZERO doubt that every generation since and including millennials has become exponentially less willing to tolerate this kind of stuff. Musk is going to NEED to both the fresh and enthusiastic intelligence and majority scale support, and not JUST in SpaceX research labs and on site engineering teams either.
He’s going to need IMMENSE, PROLONGED, and RELIABLE political support even as the reins of power are being passed from one generation to the next. If he keeps using Twitter like he has nothing to lose and no one’s support He’s going to find that he really does no longer have anything to lose nor anyones support.
At that point, he’ll have difficulty getting from city to city, much less get to Mars to build CITIES or become a secure, far more survivable interplanetary civilization!
Mar 13, 2022
Open-Access Dataset of Macaque Brain Published
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: education, neuroscience
Researchers have released a new open-access data set recorded from the visual cortex of macaque monkeys during rest state.
Summary: Researchers have released a new open-access data set recorded from the visual cortex of macaque monkeys during resting state.
Source: KNAW
Continue reading “Open-Access Dataset of Macaque Brain Published” »
Mar 13, 2022
A new resource for teaching responsible technology development
Posted by Chima Wisdom in categories: computing, education
Designed to train students to practice responsible technology development, the Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Computing (SERC) publishes a collection of original pedagogical materials developed for instructional use on MIT OpenCourseWare.