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May 2, 2023

ISpace Loses Contact With Lunar Lander During Historic Moon Landing Attempt

Posted by in category: space travel

iSpace, a private space company based in Japan, lost contact with its Hakuto-R spacecraft as it attempted to become the first private mission to land on the moon this morning. “We have to assume that we could not complete the landing on the lunar surface,” iSpace CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said during a livestream. “Our engineers will continue to investigate the situation, and we will update you with further information when we finish the investigation.”

Hakuto-R launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket last December. It took a long but efficient route, looping way out past the moon before using several orbital adjustments and the gravity of the Earth, moon, and sun to enter lunar orbit last month. On April 13, after a few more final adjustments, it locked into a circular orbit 100 kilometers above the lunar surface.

Continue reading “ISpace Loses Contact With Lunar Lander During Historic Moon Landing Attempt” »

May 2, 2023

Lazareth LMV 496 Flying Motorcycle With Jet Turbines In The Wheels

Posted by in category: drones

The “La Moto Volante” – the Flying Motorcycle is based on his Lazareth LM 847 with a 350kW, 4.7-litre Maserati V8 that was unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show in March 2016. At the center of each wheel hub is a powerful jet turbine, exhaust facing downward, similar to a quadcopter drone, but with much more power.

Source/image(PrtSc): Lazareth Auto-Moto

May 2, 2023

SpaceX launches world’s 1st 5G satellite to bring global connectivity to Internet of Things

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

The Sateliot “GroundBreaker” is the first of a constellation of over 250 spacecraft designed to communicate with terrestrial 5G cell towers worldwide.

May 2, 2023

Ask a Generalized AI What The Greatest Threat Is to Our Planet and You Likely Won’t Like the Answer

Posted by in categories: military, particle physics, robotics/AI

He thinks about Robert Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project that led to the atomic bomb, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki, and the current state of mutually assured destruction (MAD). It started with a science experiment to split the atom and soon the genie was released from the bottle.

I think of the arrival of generalized AI like ChatGPT as being equivalent to the revolution brought on by the invention of movable type and the printing press. Would the Reformation in Europe have happened without it? Would Europe’s rise to world dominance in the 18th and 19th centuries have resulted? The printing press genie uncorked led to a generalized knowledge revolution with both good and bad consequences.

The future uncorked AI genie with no guidance from us could, in answering the question I asked at the beginning of this posting, see humanity as the greatest threat to life on the planet and act accordingly if we don’t gain control over it.

May 2, 2023

This Hypersonic Plane Flys From New York To Tokyo In An Hour

Posted by in categories: business, space

😗


Texas-based Venus Aerospace is working with rotating-detonation propulsion technology to turn the “Stargazer” from sci-concept to Mach-9 business jet that flies at 11110km/h.

By Michael Verdon 02/05/2023

May 2, 2023

Man Gives All His Financial Info to AI and Lets It Make Decisions

Posted by in categories: finance, robotics/AI

Joshua Browder, the CEO of robo-lawyer startup DoNotPay, says that he handed over his entire financial life to OpenAI’s GPT-4 large language model in an attempt to save money.

“I decided to outsource my entire personal financial life to GPT-4 (via the DoNotPay chat we are building),” Browder tweeted. “I gave AutoGPT access to my bank, financial statements, credit report, and email.”

According to the CEO, the AI was able to save him $217.85 by automating tasks that would’ve cost him precious time.

May 2, 2023

Superconductors to enable next-generation transit, energy transmission, and storage

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

~UserGI15994093/iStock.

The concept proposed by the team not only promises to reduce the operating cost of each system but also devise a way to store and transport liquified hydrogen, which is widely considered to be one of the primary sources of clean energy in the future. “The liquified hydrogen would be used to cool the superconductor guideway as it is stored and transported, reducing the need for a separate specialized pipeline system capable of cooling the fuel to 20 degrees Kelvin, or minus 424 Fahrenheit,” said a media release.

May 2, 2023

The US DOD has invented a wearable that quickly identifies infections

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, wearables

The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) invented a wearable during the pandemic that was extremely adept at identifying infections.

This is according to a press release by the department published on Thursday.

Now the organization is ready to take the next steps in what it calls the Rapid Assessment of Threat Exposure project, also known as the RATE program.

May 2, 2023

Mammalian Tree of Life Redefined: Genomic Time Machine Traces Back 100 Million Years of Evolution

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution, time travel

The research uses the genomes of 241 species.

A species is a group of living organisms that share a set of common characteristics and are able to breed and produce fertile offspring. The concept of a species is important in biology as it is used to classify and organize the diversity of life. There are different ways to define a species, but the most widely accepted one is the biological species concept, which defines a species as a group of organisms that can interbreed and produce viable offspring in nature. This definition is widely used in evolutionary biology and ecology to identify and classify living organisms.

May 2, 2023

Strange but true: the expanding Universe doesn’t conserve energy

Posted by in category: energy

The conservation of energy is one of the most fundamental laws governing our reality. But in the expanding Universe, that’s just not true.