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Aug 20, 2018
Bill Gates Says This Book Is ‘One of the Most Important’ He’s Ever Read
Posted by Alex Deadpool in category: education
: You’ve called Hans Rosling’s Factfulness “one of the most important books I’ve ever read.” What makes it so significant?
Gates: Hans believed the world was making remarkable progress, and he wanted everyone to know about it. Factfulness is his final effort to help people identify areas where things are getting better and spread that improvement. It explains more clearly than almost anything else I’ve read why it’s so difficult for people to perceive progress. He offers clear, actionable advice for how to overcome our innate biases and see the world more factfully. This is one of the most educational books I’ve ever read, and I think everyone can benefit from Hans’ insights.
If the world really is improving at a faster rate than people think, why does it matter whether people have incorrect notions about it?
Aug 20, 2018
It’s Not Technology That’s Disrupting Our Jobs
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: economics, education, employment, mobile phones, robotics/AI
We can’t turn back the clock, but neither is job insecurity inevitable. Just as the postwar period managed to make industrialization benefit industrial workers, we need to create new norms, institutions and policies that make digitization benefit today’s workers. Pundits have offered many paths forward — “portable” benefits, universal basic income, worker reclassification — but regardless of the option, the important thing to remember is that we do have a choice.
When we learn about the Industrial Revolution in school, we hear a lot about factories, steam engines, maybe the power loom. We are taught that technological innovation drove social change and radically reshaped the world of work.
Likewise, when we talk about today’s economy, we focus on smartphones, artificial intelligence, apps. Here, too, the inexorable march of technology is thought to be responsible for disrupting traditional work, phasing out the employee with a regular wage or salary and phasing in independent contractors, consultants, temps and freelancers — the so-called gig economy.
Continue reading “It’s Not Technology That’s Disrupting Our Jobs” »
Aug 19, 2018
Weaponizing oxygen to kill infections and disease
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, health
The life-threatening bacteria called MRSA can cripple a hospital since it spreads quickly and is resistant to treatment. But scientists report that they are now making advances in a new technique that avoids antibiotics. Instead, they are using light to activate oxygen, which then wipes out antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The method also could be used to treat other microbial infections, and possibly even cancer.
The researchers are presenting their results today at the 256th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).
Clinical facilities currently have few alternatives when trying to rid their patients of MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). The Veterans Health Care System, for example, hires infection prevention staff to track hand hygiene. Going even further, one recent study found that disinfecting every patient admitted to an acute-care setting cut the rate of bloodstream infections in half. However, this procedure isn’t feasible at most hospitals.
Continue reading “Weaponizing oxygen to kill infections and disease” »
Aug 19, 2018
Paper batteries use electron-harvesting bacteria to make electricity
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Many small devices require batteries, but they can be expensive and environmentally unfriendly. Paper batteries powered by bacteria may be the solution.
Aug 19, 2018
Turbine creates energy from oncoming traffic
Posted by Marcia Wiegand in categories: energy, transportation
Aug 19, 2018
Renewable resort: Greek island to run on wind, solar power
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: solar power, sustainability
The innovative 800-kilowatt wind turbine is an effort to protect the environment and attract tourism.
TILOS, Greece (AP) — When the blades of its 800-kilowatt wind turbine start turning, the small Greek island of Tilos will become the first in the Mediterranean to run exclusively on wind and solar power.
The sea horse-shaped Greek island between Rhodes and Kos has a winter population of 400. But that swells to as many as 3,000 people in the summer, putting an impossible strain on its dilapidated power supply.
This summer, technicians are conducting the final tests on a renewable replacement system that will be fully rolled out later this year. It will allow Tilos to run exclusively on high-tech batteries recharged by a wind turbine and a solar park.
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Aug 19, 2018
A $1 Billion Telescope That Will Take Pictures 10 Times Sharper Than Hubble’s Is Now Officially Under Way
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: alien life, transportation
In astronomy, cutting-edge technology often begins with a bunch of bulldozers, busted rocks, and dump trucks.
So it goes with the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT), which will be the world’s largest and most powerful when it sees “first light” in 2024. Astronomers hope to use the huge observatory to study the ancient universe and look for signs of alien life.
Construction crews atop a Chilean mountain range broke ground for the $US1 billion project on Tuesday.
Aug 19, 2018
The Technological Future of Surgery: New Surgical Robots are About to Enter the Operating Theatre
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
The SPORT Surgical System is a versatile Single Incision advanced robotic surgical system that features state of the art Multi-Articulated Instruments.
Credit: titan medical SPORT surgical system