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Aug 11, 2016
Quantum dots with impermeable shell used as a powerful tool for “nano-engineering”
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: 3D printing, chemistry, engineering, nanotechnology, quantum physics, wearables
I never get tired of talking about the many uses for Q-dot technology. One area that has me even more intrigued is how it is used in crystallized formations. I expect to see more and more experimenting on crystalized formations on many fronts including complex circuitry for performance and storage.
And, with synthetic technology today plus 3D printing along with Q-dots we could (as I have eluded to many times over several months) truly begin to see some amazing technology be developed on the wearable tech front.
Wearables could include synthetic circuitry stones in various accessories to not only store information, but also serve as another form of unique id because in synthetic stones we have been able (like in nature) create complex crystalized formations that are each unique/ 1 of a kind like a unique finger print, or iris of an eye. I expect to see some very interesting things coming in this space.
Aug 11, 2016
The Most Dangerous Object Known To Humanity
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: futurism
How the origin of Earth’s greatest meteor shower might be the demise of life on Earth as we know it.
Aug 11, 2016
Future By Design | The Venus Project — Directed by William Gazecki
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in category: futurism
Lifeboat’s Jacque Fresco in a 2006 documentary about his work and The Venus Project
Aug 11, 2016
Seven ways to skin Schrödinger’s cat — By Richard Webb | New Scientist
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in category: physics
““If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you haven’t understood quantum mechanics.” That jibe, supposedly made by physicist Richard Feynman half a century ago, still rings true today.”
Aug 11, 2016
Dark matter hopes dwindle with X-ray signal
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: cosmology
A previously detected, anomalously large X-ray signal is absent in new Hitomi satellite data, setting tighter limits for a dark matter interpretation.
08/10/16.
CERN.
Continue reading “Dark matter hopes dwindle with X-ray signal” »
Aug 11, 2016
Bionic Bird drone looks and flies just like a bird
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: cyborgs, drones, transhumanism
Aug 11, 2016
The laws of nature make life on other planets inevitable — according to this groundbreaking theory
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: alien life, biological, chemistry, physics
According to theoretical physicist and super-genius Stephen Hawking, “The human race is just a chemical scum on a moderate-sized planet orbiting round a very average star in the outer suburb of one among a hundred billion galaxies.” Indeed, to most modern scientists we are nothing more than an entirely random ‘happy accident’ that likely would not occur if we were to rewind the tape of the universe and play it again. But what if that is completely wrong? What if life is not simply a statistical anomaly, but instead an inevitable consequence of the laws of physics and chemistry?
A new theory of the origin of life, based firmly on well-defined physics principles, provides hefty support for the notion that biological life is a “cosmic imperative”. In other words, organic life had to eventually emerge. If such a theory were true, it would mean that it is very likely that life is widespread throughout the universe.
Aug 11, 2016
Science Explained: The Possibility of Life on Mars
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: science, space
Where there is water, there is life. This is a statement that has been reaffirmed over and over again. Whether it is in the acidic waters surrounding volcanoes or in the dark and frozen wastes of the icy Antarctic, wherever we find liquid water, we find life. That’s what makes one of the most recent finds by NASA’s Curiosity rover so amazing—Evidence of liquid water on Mars. And even more recently (this month, in fact), NASA announced that it had confirmed evidence of water flowing on Mars.
Granted, this “flowing water” is really more of a trickle (damp soil, if you will), but the find is still exciting for a number of reasons.
Continue reading “Science Explained: The Possibility of Life on Mars” »
Aug 11, 2016
Scientists Argue the US Ban on Human Gene Editing Will Leave It Behind
Posted by Carse Peel in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics, law, sex
As the biotech revolution accelerates globally, the US could be getting left behind on key technological advances: namely, human genetic modification.
A Congressional ban on human germline modification has “drawn new lines in the sand” on gene editing legislation, argues a paper published today in Science by Harvard law and bioethics professor I. Glenn Cohen and leading biologist Eli Adashi of Brown University. They say that without a course correction, “the United States is ceding its leadership in this arena to other nations.”
Germline gene modification is the act of making heritable changes to early stage human embryos or sex cells that can be passed down to the next generation, and it will be banned in the US. This is different from somatic gene editing, which is editing cells of humans that have already been born.
Continue reading “Scientists Argue the US Ban on Human Gene Editing Will Leave It Behind” »