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Aug 23, 2017
This Robot Ship Experiment Could Disrupt the Global Shipping Industry
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Japan’s largest container line plans to test a remote-controlled vessel across the Pacific Ocean in 2019 as it pursues fully autonomous technology that could disrupt the global shipping industry.
Nippon Yusen K.K. is considering using a large container ship for the test from Japan to North America and a crew will be on standby for safe operations, Hideyuki Ando, a senior general manager at Monohakobi Technology Institute, said in an interview Wednesday. The institute, a unit of Nippon Yusen, conducts research and development in areas such as safe vessel operation, energy saving, and logistics.
Aug 23, 2017
Scientists discover 91 volcanoes below Antarctic ice sheet
Posted by John Gallagher in categories: climatology, sustainability
This is in addition to 47 already known about and eruption would melt more ice in region affected by climate change.
Aug 23, 2017
New Recipe For Heating Nuclear Fusion Plasma Boosts Ion Energy Output 10 Times
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics
Extracting useful amounts of energy from the merging of atoms is tricky business, not least thanks to the challenges of controlling squirming clouds of ultra-hot plasma.
Our clean power fusion goals could be a step closer now researchers have tweaked their fusion recipe to add a new ion to the mix. This allows researchers to get a better grip on how high-energy charged particles move not just inside reactors on Earth, but potentially provide insights into how they behave in stars.
A team of researchers at MIT have used data from experiments conducted on a type of fusion reactor called a tokamak to explore how adding a third ion to the more traditional two-ion plasma mix shakes things up.
Continue reading “New Recipe For Heating Nuclear Fusion Plasma Boosts Ion Energy Output 10 Times” »
Aug 23, 2017
139 Countries Could Move to 100% Clean Energy Under Researchers’ Plan
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: energy, sustainability
A research group based at Stanford University has drawn a plan for nations to reduce global warming by relying on solar and wind power.
Aug 23, 2017
Colorado School of Mines plans to launch space mining graduate program
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: economics, education, law, policy, space
You can go to school for space mining.
GOLDEN, Colo. — The Colorado School of Mines plans to launch a new graduate program that could help people inhabit other planets some day.
The school is working to launch the space resources graduate program that will teach students how to explore, extract and use resources not only on Earth but also on the moon, Mars, asteroids and more.
Continue reading “Colorado School of Mines plans to launch space mining graduate program” »
Aug 23, 2017
What a Driverless World Could Look Like
Posted by Müslüm Yildiz in categories: biotech/medical, food, robotics/AI, transportation
What if traffic flowed through our streets as smoothly and efficiently as blood flows through our veins? Transportation geek Wanis Kabbaj thinks we can find inspiration in the genius of our biology to design the transit systems of the future. In this forward-thinking talk, preview exciting concepts like modular, detachable buses, flying taxis and networks of suspended magnetic pods that could help make the dream of a dynamic, driverless world into a reality.
“Some people are obsessed by French wines. Others love playing golf or devouring literature. One of my greatest pleasures in life is, I have to admit, a bit special. I cannot tell you how much I enjoy watching cities from the sky, from an airplane window.”
Continue reading “What a Driverless World Could Look Like” »
Aug 23, 2017
Climate change to be a crisis for the 1%?
Posted by Harry J. Bentham in category: futurism
Point discussed at 1:31 in the video: https://youtu.be/VJ_qtKf64Is?t=1m3s
From the conference text at: https://www.academia.edu/34323947/Mont_Order_July_2017_Conference_Text
- “Climate change not likely to be stopped, likely to result in a crisis. No resources may be left for next generation.“
- “Crises occurred in the past, and the 1% lost the most. The 99% are likely to survive climate change by struggling through anything (droughts, resource shortages, food shortages, economic crashes etc.) whereas the 1% could lose everything.”
- “If the elite crack under pressure as Donald Trump does, this supports the above. The future of the 1% during a climate change crisis could be a larger scale version of the insanity that grips people who suffer a financial loss and become homeless after a relatively normal life.”
- “As above, the Great Depression did not impact average person, but drove stockbrokers and other wealthy people to ruin or suicide.”
Tags: climate change, futurism, Mont Order
Aug 23, 2017
Autophagy and How it Aids Longevity
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Autophagy means “eating of self” (“auto”= self; “phag” = eating)[1]. Although its name might sound harmful, autophagy appears to have longevity-promoting effects[2]. Here, we will explain what autophagy is, how it works, its benefits, and how it plays a role in aging.
What is Autophagy?
Autophagy is the way cells break down misbehaving or nonfunctional organelles and proteins in the cell[1,2]. This means autophagy can consume organelles such as, mitochondria, peroxisomes, and the endoplasmic reticulum[1].
Aug 23, 2017
Antoxerene closes $1.5M for drug discovery in aging
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Antoxerene performs pipeline testing for small molecule drugs that target protein-drug and protein-protein interactions. The platform is based on a patent-pending production technology, which enables manufacturing of impossible to express protein targets in biologically active form, at scale.