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Oct 21, 2015
Back to the Future Day: Six experts predict life in 2045
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
What will life be like in 30 years’ time? We asked six forecasters to do better than Back to the Future II’s predictions.
Oct 21, 2015
10 Things Back to the Future 2 Got Right
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: futurism, transportation
We’re going back to the future! In Back to the Future Part 2 Doc and Marty travel to the future—October 21, 2015. Yup, we’re living their future! But while we might not have flying cars, hoverboards, or self-fitting shoes, a lot of their predictions about the future weren’t that far off. Here’s a list of 10 they got right.
But seriously, they got a lot wrong. Find out what in our other video, 10 Things Back to the Future 2 Got Wrong!
Continue reading “10 Things Back to the Future 2 Got Right” »
Oct 21, 2015
We’re Living In A New Golden Age Of Space Movies
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, space
Just a few years ago, we were wondering where all the movies about outer space had gone. And now, we don’t have to wonder any more, because we’ve been getting a crop of fantastic new movies about astronauts, spaceships, and the joy of exploration.
There have been at least a couple of previous golden ages of space movies—the period following 2001 comes to mind, and so does the boom in space-opera adventures after Star Wars. The post-2001 boom saw a handful of idea-rich, very human-focused movies about ideas, which used space and science fiction as a way to further conversations and arguments that were rooted in the eras they were made in. Space, following Star Wars, became a fantastical, otherworldly setting, full of the magic and monsters of pulp serials and fantasy, dressed in other-worldly garb.
Oct 21, 2015
Fears huge NEW asteroid could HIT Moon ‘causing H-bomb explosion
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: space
A HUGE asteroid with a highly unpredictable orbit that has more chance of HITTING the Moon than Earth when it passes on HALLOWEEN is being closely monitored after being discovered just DAYS ago.
Oct 21, 2015
TransAstra Corporation’s Optical Mining Technology
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space
This video shows key elements of the optical mining technology that TransAstra has developed.
Oct 21, 2015
Nike confirms self-lacing sneakers from ‘Back to the Future’ are real
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: entertainment, futurism
Marty McFly’s self-lacing Nikes from Back to the Future are finally real.
Nike has confirmed to Mashable the “first pair of self-lacing Nike Mag shoes is in New York City.” The company didn’t provide further details as to the sneakers’ precise whereabouts in the city, but they’re sure to turn up soon enough.
See also: USA Today travels ‘Back to the Future’ with front page from the film.
Oct 21, 2015
5 REAL Possibilities for Interstellar Travel | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: energy, entertainment, quantum physics, space travel
Tweet at us! @pbsspacetime.
Facebook: facebook.com/pbsspacetime
Email us! pbsspacetime [at] gmail [dot] com.
Comment on Reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/pbsspacetime
Continue reading “5 REAL Possibilities for Interstellar Travel | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios” »
Oct 21, 2015
Will Fintech Upstarts Do To Banks What Uber Has Done To Taxis — Or Will Banks Win?
Posted by Rob Chamberlain in category: finance
Quoted: “Masters went on to say that, because financial services involve Americans’ livelihoods (and not just, say, their taxi ride to Brooklyn), regulations ruling the space are many multitudes more complex than they are in other industries — and the 100-plus year-old banks have a leg up in dealing with these rules.
“Anyone who imagines that as a result of the advent of new technology we will see a world where incumbent financial institutions who provide vital, heavily-regulated intermediated services, custodial services, safe-keeping services will be decimated and completely removed from the picture overnight is just naive and wrong,” she said, pointing out that customers of legacy banks can pay bills and deposit checks through their iPhones — so it’s not as if there’s been no innovation in traditional financial services.”
Read the article here > http://www.forbes.com/sites/maggiemcgrath/2015/10/20/will-fi…ately-win/
Oct 21, 2015
Scientists Have Genetically Engineered Dogs To Make Them More Muscly
Posted by Bryan Gatton in categories: biotech/medical, food, genetics, health, military
As long as they don’t enter the food supply.
First micropigs, now dogs: Scientists in China have used a gene-editing technique to produce the world’s first genetically engineered pooches. Although these two endeavors share scientific roots, with their production aimed at assisting medical research, unlike the teeny tiny pigs, the researchers behind this latest project are not intending to sell their customized animals as pets.
So it probably won’t come as a surprise that the dogs weren’t engineered to be cuter, fluffier or more pocket-sized: they had their DNA tweaked to make them more muscly. The first of many potential edits the team would like to carry out, this was done with the forces in mind.
Continue reading “Scientists Have Genetically Engineered Dogs To Make Them More Muscly” »