When we talk about the enormity of the cosmos đ«, itâs easy to toss out big numbers â but far more difficult to wrap our minds around just how large, how far, and how numerous celestial bodies really are. Join us for a cosmic journey to see the size of our Milky Way galaxy: https://go.nasa.gov/2UxkHIN
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Apr 14, 2019
The rise of the killer robots â and the two women fighting back
Posted by Derick Lee in category: robotics/AI
Today, the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots is following a similar roadmap. The UN has held several rounds of talks in Geneva, including a session at the end of March. But the CSKR has lost faith in that process, and is now focusing on individual western states.
Jody Williams and Mary Wareham were leading lights in the campaign to ban landmines. Now they have autonomous weapons in their sights.
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Apr 13, 2019
Standby, Stabilization and Transport Services
Posted by Paul Battista in category: futurism
Apr 13, 2019
You Need Vitamin D to Live. How Could This Woman Survive With None in Her Blood?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
She had a series of bone fractures, but when doctors did blood tests, the supplements she took for treatment were nowhere to be found.
Apr 13, 2019
Heads in the cloud: Scientists predict internet of thoughts âwithin decadesâ
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: computing, internet, neuroscience
Summary: Researchers predict the development of a brain/cloud interface that connects neurons to cloud computing networks in real time. Source: FrontiersImagine a future technology that would.
Apr 13, 2019
Longevity Myth Busting â Aubrey de Grey
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Allison Duettmann challenges Aubrey De Grey with the top objections against longevity to be debunked and debated before opening up the floor to the public.
Aubrey de Grey, Ph.D.
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Apr 13, 2019
How to biohack your cells to fight cancer â Greg Foot
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
Check out the science of biohacking, where biologists go into a patientâs genetic code and reprogram their immune system to recognize and fight cancer cells.
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Apr 13, 2019
The worldâs largest plane just flew for the first time
Posted by Heather Blevins in categories: space, transportation
After years of development in the desert north of Los Angeles, a gigantic, six-engined mega jet with the wingspan of an American football field flew Saturday morning for the first time.
âWe finally did it,â said Stratolaunch Systems CEO Jean Floyd at a news conference from the hangar at Mojave Air & Space Port. âIt was an emotional moment to watch this bird take flight.â
Stratolaunch, the company founded in 2011 by the late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, conducted the first test flight of the worldâs largest plane.
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Apr 13, 2019
Googleâs Next Big Money Maker Could Be the Maps on Your Phone
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: business, economics, mobile phones
Indeed, Schindler stressed that Google would generate personalized Maps recommendations in âprivacy-sensitive, opt-in ways.â
The company is betting that adding more data about places and businesses to Maps will lead people to spend more time on the service. As users expect more from Maps, Google has extra space to introduce more ads.
âWe want to be able to highlight things that are around you and surface them nearby to you in a way thatâs not disrupting your experience,ââ said Rajas Moonka, director of product management for Google Maps. Because so much of what users are looking for in Google Maps is commercial in nature, ads can be a helpful addition to the experience, he said.
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Apr 13, 2019
Inside the lab using mind-changing psychology experiments to solve the Israel-Palestine conflict
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: electronics, neuroscience
To read a manâs mind, first you have to outline his skull.
Last November, I watched a psychologist use a digital pen to draw the circumference of a manâs head. The coordinates of his brain were quickly mapped, pinpointing the precise areas within his skull that process emotions. Behind him, a massive magnetic mind-readerâa neuroimaging device called a magnetoencephalography, or MEGâemerged from the wall, funneling into an oversized white helmet. It took two scientists to slowly maneuver the apparatus into position around his head.