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Oct 26, 2017
Wal-Mart launches shelf-scanning robots in about 40 stores
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
CHICAGO (Reuters) — Wal-Mart Stores Inc will roll out shelf-scanning robots in approximately 40 stores to replenish inventory faster on its shelves and save store employees time when products run out.
FILE PHOTO: Shopping carts are seen outside a new Wal-Mart Express store in Chicago July 26, 2011. REUTERS/John Gress/File Photo.
Oct 26, 2017
This ‘Living Touch Screen’ Is Made out of Bacteria and Gold
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: electronics, materials
A demonstration of the pressure sensor built by bacteria in action as a researcher taps out some Morse code.
As wonderfully bizarre as it sounds, growing touch screens from a bacterial soup isn’t the team’s ultimate goal.
Continue reading “This ‘Living Touch Screen’ Is Made out of Bacteria and Gold” »
Oct 26, 2017
The history of property rights in space, while fairly limited, is also downright goofy
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: government, law, space travel
Have you heard of Dennis Hope? How about The Lunar Embassy of the Galactic Government—no? As space enthusiasts and investors, you really should be familiar with the infamous man who has spent nearly thirty years becoming Earth’s most successful interplanetary real estate agent. As (legitimate) terrestrial governments consider a return to the Moon and the establishment of permanent lunar settlements, however, Hope and his customers may soon face legal challenges from national space agencies and commercial ventures alike.
Read full details here: https://goo.gl/VoVoZz
Oct 26, 2017
Blade Runner and the World of Tomorrow
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: futurism, space travel
https://youtube.com/watch?v=kRlb10nBWiM
Science fiction is plagued by the slow march of time. What might have looked sleek and futuristic ten or more years ago might today look fantastic-but-unrealistic at best, or silly and outdated at worst. But whatever the case may be, the bottom line is this: no speculative sci-fi, not even cyberpunk, survives contact with the time period it portrays.
Of course, the point of science fiction isn’t to make our best attempts at clairvoyance. In fact, one may argue that, since the genre’s birth, science fiction is more like a subgenre of fantasy; it draws upon concepts that are simply more plausible to modern sensibilities (and thereby more capable of suspending disbelief) than magic and sorcery. Early works within the genre depict grand feats of science unreachable by the technological constraints of the time period, (such as defeating death, traveling through time, or voyaging through space) and remain unfulfilled to this day. Even today, we make stories that stretch the truth of what humankind is capable of in our near future, enjoyable as they may be.
Oct 26, 2017
This is the lightest robot that can fly, swim and take off from water
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: robotics/AI
Oct 26, 2017
Scientists Claims: Aliens May Already Live Inside Super-Massive Black Holes
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: alien life, physics
A supermassive dark opening isn’t the best place to live. Notwithstanding, there are physicists who think about existence existing in such outrageous spots and likely effectively occupied by some most progressive races – super outsiders. “Insides of super gigantic dark openings might be occupied by cutting edge human advancements living on planets with the third-kind circles,” Russian cosmologist Vyacheslav I. Dokuchaev at Moscow’s Institute for Nuclear Research of the Russian Academy of Sciences writes in his paper distributed in Cornell University’s online diary arXiv. “We could live inside a super gigantic dark gap in the long run… yet super-outsiders may have effectively outsmarted us,” claims Dokuchaev. His dubious hypothesis did not depend on sci-fi yet on Einstein’s speculations.
Oct 26, 2017
Video: Sophia becomes first robot to receive Saudi citizenship
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI
Sophia is Hanson Robotics’ most advanced robot. After receiving her citizenship, she was interviewed by Andrew Ross Sorkin in Riyadh. During the course of her interview, she took a dig at Elon Musk and Hollywood movies for portraying the artificial intelligence in a questionable light.
Oct 26, 2017
Scientists working toward reversible kind of gene editing
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
Scientists are altering a powerful gene-editing technology in hopes of one day fighting diseases without making permanent changes to people’s DNA.
The trick: Edit RNA instead, the messenger that carries a gene’s instructions.
“If you edit RNA, you can have a reversible therapy,” important in case of side effects, said Feng Zhang of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, a gene-editing pioneer whose team reported the new twist Wednesday in the journal Science.