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Jul 26, 2016
Dolly the sheep’s siblings ‘healthy’
Posted by Aleksandar Vukovic in category: biotech/medical
But the new study, which tracked four sheep cloned from the same ewe as Dolly, found they had aged normally.
Some of the animals did show mild — and in one case moderate — signs of osteoarthritis. But the researchers say that it was not sufficiently severe that any of the animals required treatment.
Dolly the sheep’s “siblings” are generally healthy, a study has shown, providing hope that cloning can yield animals free from degenerative illness.
Jul 26, 2016
NASA’s Weird Asteroid Redirect Mission Is Actually Making Progress
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: space
Other NASA officials have said they have plans to speak with Congressional staffers about ARM and assuage concerns the agency is wasting valuable time and resources on something impractical.
A successful ARM mission would be the craziest thing NASA has ever done, but would also hit on pretty much every big agency objective. ARM would basically kill a dozen space birds with one space rock.
Photos via Screenshot from NASA webcast., NASA.
Continue reading “NASA’s Weird Asteroid Redirect Mission Is Actually Making Progress” »
Jul 26, 2016
Explorers spot mysterious purple orb on ocean floor
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: futurism
It’s blobby. It’s bright purple. It lives under the water. But what is it? Scientists aren’t exactly sure just yet.
In 15 years the human specie is going to develop super human level machine intelligence.
-What it means to be Super-Human?
–The country with Artificial Intelligence will be the country on top.
Jul 26, 2016
Engineer finds a huge physics discovery in da Vinci’s ‘irrelevant scribbles’
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: physics
Until now, art historians dismissed some doodles in da Vinci’s notebooks as “irrelevant.”
But a new study from Ian Hutchings, a professor at the University of Cambridge, showed that one page of these scribbles from 1493 actually contained something groundbreaking: The first written records demonstrating the laws of friction.
Although it has been common knowledge that da Vinci conducted the first systematic study of friction (which underpins the modern science of tribology, or the study of friction, lubrication, and wear), we didn’t know how and when he came up with these ideas.
Continue reading “Engineer finds a huge physics discovery in da Vinci’s ‘irrelevant scribbles’” »
Jul 26, 2016
The next 25 years of research: Disruption, invention and an element of surprise
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: innovation
Jul 25, 2016
America’s biggest chip manufacturers have admitted that transistors are about to stop shrinking
Posted by Gerard Bain in category: computing
In the next five years, it will be too expensive to further miniaturize—but chip makers will innovate in different ways.
Jul 25, 2016
Investigating Alzheimer’s pathologies
Posted by Roman Mednitzer in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Julie Harris gave a fascinating talk at the recent NeuroFutures conference on mapping whole brain connectivity to investigate Alzheimer’s pathologies in mouse models.
20 GB/s Wi-Fi
Hold on to your hats – or in this case, your wireless devices – and prepare to be blown away by 802.11ay. The next generation wireless standard promises almost three times the speed of 802.11ad with transmission rates of 20 Gbps, up from 802.11ad’s current rate of 7 Gbps. It will also extend transmission distance from the 10 meter limit of 802.11ad to as far as 300–500 meters!
Scheduled for release next year, 802.11ay will increase bandwidth and improve the reliability and robustness of the 60GHz millimeter wave spectrum. It will be designed to improve throughput, range and use-cases.