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Dec 23, 2013
Building Bitcoin use in South Florida and beyond
Posted by Seb in categories: bitcoin, economics
By Lance Dixon ldixon@MiamiHerald.com
The U.S. Senate has deemed it legitimate. Detractors dismiss it as unstable and a vehicle for criminal trade. China has banned new deposits on its largest exchange.
Bitcoin, the international digital payment system and currency and one of the hottest technology and finance topics this past year, could become a widespread vehicle for trade, believe the leaders of a Miami group. To further that view, Miami International Bitcoin will be partcipating in the North American Bitcoin Conference slated for Miami Beach in January.
“The thing that’s really exciting about Bitcoin is that, here in South Florida, we have a half billion people to the south of us who do not have access to a banking system that works well, capital markets, credit — things that we take for granted,” said Charles Evans, business professor at Florida Atlantic University and one of the founders of Miami International Bitcoin.
Dec 23, 2013
Singapore Government Decides Not to Interfere With Bitcoin
Posted by Seb in categories: bitcoin, business, economics, geopolitics, government
Terence Lee for Tech in Asia
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the country’s central bank, has decided not to intervene on whether businesses can accept Bitcoin as a means of transacting goods and services.
“Whether or not businesses accept bitcoins in exchange for their goods and services is a commercial decision in which MAS does not intervene,” it told Singapore-based Bitcoin trading platform Coin Republic in an email.
Dec 23, 2013
Infinity Point Will Arrive by 2035 Latest
Posted by Seb in categories: human trajectories, posthumanism, singularity, transhumanism
By: Eray Ozkural - h+
During writing a paper for the 100 Year Starship Symposium, I wished to convince the starship designers that they should acknowledge the dynamics of high-technology economy, which may be crucial for interstellar missions. Thus motivated, I have made a new calculation regarding infinity point, also known as the singularity. According to this most recent revision of the theory of infinity point, it turns out that we should expect Infinity Point by 2035 in the worst case. Here is how and why.
Dec 22, 2013
Ohio training students for civilian drone jobs
Posted by Seb in categories: drones, education
By LISA CORNWELL, Associated Press
CINCINNATI (AP) — Some Ohio schools are preparing students for a boom in the drone industry once the federal government, as is expected, allows civilian unmanned aircraft to fly in U.S. airspace.
The Federal Aviation Administration estimates as many as 7,500 commercial drones could be flying in national airspace within a few years, and has until 2015 to present a plan for safely integrating drones into U.S. airspace.
Dec 22, 2013
D.C. businesses starting to accept Bitcoin
Posted by Seb in categories: bitcoin, business
By Mohana Ravindranath — The Washington Post
In May, brothers Guiseppe and Mario Lanzone started a Peruvian food business in Washington, hoping to cash in on the District’s enchantment with food trucks.
Today, the two are betting on another trend: a virtual currency called Bitcoin. The Lanzones decided a few weeks ago they would be accepting Bitcoin, announcing the change in a tweet to their 800 followers.
Dec 22, 2013
Solidator 3D Printer Prints Large Objects and Does it Fast
Posted by Seb in category: 3D printing
by Paul Strauss — Technabob
Two of the biggest challenges with today’s desktop 3D printers are that they 1) don’t print very large objects and 2) are painfully slow. The Solidator 3D printer aims to change both of those things, in a printer that costs less than $5,000.
Dec 22, 2013
Japanese Team Dominates Competition to Create Generation of Rescue Robots
Posted by Seb in categories: engineering, robotics/AI
By JOHN MARKOFF — The New York Times
HOMESTEAD, Fla. — An international competition to pave the way for a new generation of rescue robots was dominated by a team of Japanese roboticists who were students in the laboratory of a pioneer in the design of intelligent humanoid machines.
The early roboticist, Hirochika Inoue, began working in the field almost a half-century ago at the University of Tokyo, and in the mid-1990s led the design of robots that could both walk and manipulate objects.
Continue reading “Japanese Team Dominates Competition to Create Generation of Rescue Robots” »
Dec 22, 2013
3D Printing Gives Flight to Unmanned Aircraft
Posted by Seb in categories: 3D printing, drones, engineering, transportation
Dec 21, 2013
Homes on Mars? 3D Printing Could Make That Possible, Says NASA
Posted by Seb in categories: 3D printing, space
Thinking about building a home on Mars, but having trouble finding a contractor? That might no longer be such a problem, thanks to a new technology that one day could make it much faster to build one there than it takes us now on Earth. A professor at the University of Southern California has designed an automated 3D printer that, he says, would make it “possible to build an entire home within a day.” “You press a button and it will be built,” says Behrokh Khoshnevis, who teaches industrial and systems engineering at USC.
The process, called “Contour Crafting,” was conceived as a way to quickly construct emergency housing on this planet out of concrete. But NASA sees other applications for Khoshnevis’ homebuilding innovation — for starters, projects such as an airport on the moon. “Behrokh’s work is one of the most creative and far reaching concepts I’ve seen,” said Jason Derleth, the program manager for NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts, in a news release this past summer. “He really has a chance to change the world by robotically printing buildings here, and he may even change the next human world by doing the same on the moon and Mars.”