Menu

Blog

Page 10558

Jun 8, 2017

Can China’s spaceplane give it the edge against US in space race?

Posted by in category: space travel

Key feature will be its horizontal take-off, instead of vertical like traditional spacecraft – and it will be able to land at an airport.

PUBLISHED : Thursday, 08 June, 2017, 8:33am.

UPDATED : Thursday, 08 June, 2017, 11:50am.

Continue reading “Can China’s spaceplane give it the edge against US in space race?” »

Jun 8, 2017

This is us: Earliest fossils of our species found in Morocco

Posted by in category: futurism

NEW YORK (AP) — How long has our species been around? New fossils from Morocco push the evidence back by about 100,000 years.

The bones, about 300,000 years old, were unearthed thousands of miles from the previous record-holder, found in fossil-rich eastern Africa. The new discovery reveals people from an early stage of our species’ evolution, with a mix of modern and more primitive traits.

“They are not just like us,” said Jean-Jacques Hublin, one of the scientists reporting the find. But they had “basically the face you could meet on the train in New York.”

Continue reading “This is us: Earliest fossils of our species found in Morocco” »

Jun 8, 2017

The Tough Little Drone Ship That Explores Acid Lakes

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

The Poás Volcano in Costa Rica is home to two crater lakes, and they could not be more different. The first fills an inactive crater, its water is clear blue and its rim lush with vegetation. The other could be accurately described as a hell hole.

Laguna Caliente—literally hot lagoon in Spanish—derives its hellish qualities from the churning of magma underneath the active crater. Sulfur-rich vapor rises out of the lake, gagging anyone unlucky enough to get a whiff and poisoning anyone unlucky enough to get too many whiffs. The water itself is three times as acidic as battery acid. And every once in awhile, a rumbling below shoots a jet of hot, acidic water into the sky. It’s not the kind of place where you want to paddle a boat.

So Guy van Rentergem decided to build a drone boat. Van Rentergem visited Laguna Caliente in 2015 with friends and volcanologists, but he is not a volcanologist himself. However he is a chemist, a constant tinkerer, and a long-time caver who’s worked with geologists in the past. Next year, he told his colleagues, he’s coming back with an autonomous boat so they can map the bottom of the lake.

Continue reading “The Tough Little Drone Ship That Explores Acid Lakes” »

Jun 8, 2017

First Space Nation

Posted by in category: space

It might seem like an idea taken straight out of science fiction, but a ‘space nation’ could soon become a reality.

The ambitious plans, first announced last year, were hatched by an international group of scientists and are backed by a Russian billionaire.

Continue reading “First Space Nation” »

Jun 8, 2017

Apple’s new software is a game changer for augmented reality, experts say

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, computing, mobile phones

One of Apple’s new announcements has tech experts excited for augmented reality. One chief executive calls it a “game-changer.”

Apple unveiled its new operating system for its iPhone and iPad products, the iOS 11, at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday.

The system also introduces ARKit, a new framework for developers to more easily build apps that use augmented reality: the tech that allows devices to display computer-generated images over the real world.

Continue reading “Apple’s new software is a game changer for augmented reality, experts say” »

Jun 7, 2017

Industrial 3D printing

Posted by in category: 3D printing

This new 3D printer can build things never thought possible…

Read more

Jun 7, 2017

The World’s Largest Floating Solar Plant Is Finally Online

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

The largest floating solar power plant in the world is now online in China. Floating where coal used to be mined, the installation is helping China transition toward renewables and making the most of its surroundings.

The world’s largest floating solar power plant is now online in China. Built by Sungrow, a supplier of PV inverter systems, the 40MW plant is now afloat in water four to 10 meters deep, and successfully linked to Huainan, China’s grid. The placement was chosen in large part because the area was previously the location of coal mining operations; and, as a result, the water there is now mineralized and mostly useless. The lake itself was only formed after years of mining operations, the surrounding land collapsed and created a cavity that was filled with rainwater.

Read more

Jun 7, 2017

Adding Limbs to Your Body

Posted by in category: cyborgs

What would you do if you had four arms?

Read more

Jun 7, 2017

Swarm of tiny robots

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

You can control this swarm of tiny robots with your gestures.

Read more

Jun 7, 2017

We Could Build an Artificial Brain Right Now

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

We Could Build an Artificial Brain Right Now.

Large-scale brainlike systems are possible with existing technology—if we’re willing to spend the money.

Read more