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Jun 17, 2023

World’s first cosmic-ray GPS can detect underground movement

Posted by in categories: futurism, particle physics

A team of scientists have successfully demonstrated the world’s first cosmic-ray GPS to detect movement underground and in volcanoes which can potentially aid in future search-and-rescue missions.

Cosmic rays are high-energy particles originating from outer space, including sources such as the sun, distant galaxies, supernovae, and other celestial bodies. Although we can’t see or feel cosmic rays directly, they constantly bombard the Earth from outer space.

In fact, these particles are so abundant that scientists estimate one cosmic ray hits one square centimeter of the Earth’s surface every minute! Scientists study cosmic rays to learn about the universe and how particles interact at high energies.

Jun 17, 2023

Physicists create contained ball of turbulence in a tank

Posted by in category: physics

University of Chicago physicists have finally engineered a way to create turbulence in a tank of water by using a ring of jets to blow loops until an isolated “ball” of turbulence forms and stays.

Jun 17, 2023

YuMi the autonomous robot is helping to reverse deforestation in the Amazon

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability

ABB

This is according to a press release by ABB published on Tuesday.

Jun 17, 2023

Rocket Lab to launch mysterious space mission — what could it be?

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA recently announced its Wallops Visitor Center won’t be open for the mission and ‘there is no live stream planned for launch’.

Rocket Lab will launch a mission from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia within the next few days, but the company has not disclosed what it is lifting to orbit and it won’t stream the mission live.

NASA announced via Twitter on Tuesday, June 13, that its Wallops facility is “scheduled to support a Rocket Lab launch between June 15–20 in the evening.”

Jun 17, 2023

First deployment outside Russia since fall of the USSR

Posted by in categories: geopolitics, military, nuclear energy, treaties

Vladimir Putin confirmed Russia has sent nuclear arms to its ally Belarus, which borders Ukraine. Putin has repeatedly warned that Russia, which has more nuclear weapons than any other country, will use all means to defend itself. Russia has a huge numerical superiority over the united states and the nato military alliance when it comes to tactical nuclear weapons. The united states believe Russia has around 2,000 such working tactical warheads. Reports say, the united states has around 200 tactical nuclear weapons, half of which are at bases in Europe. Remember, Belarus has borders with 3 nato members — Poland, Lithuania & Latvia. The treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, signed by the soviet union, says no nuclear power can transfer nuclear weapons or tech to a non-nuclear power.

Jun 17, 2023

Proactive and predictive tools for transformation

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business

Those well-established conventional IT systems, however, can no longer be taken for granted. Companies are accelerating their digital transformation efforts, automating, optimizing, and reinventing their business processes. The pace of change continues to accelerate: Deloitte reports, for example, that 58% of organizations have stepped up their modernization plans due to the covid-19 pandemic.

Many ERP apps are now being moved to public cloud services, such as AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud, while others are being replaced with SaaS-based alternatives, including Salesforce and Workday. The previously monolithic ERP platform is being deconstructed.

Enterprises now find themselves with a mixed-bag, hybrid cloud environment: some legacy core applications remain on premises, while new applications are cloud native and run in containers or as microservices.

Jun 17, 2023

Brain Waves Synchronize when People Interact

Posted by in category: neuroscience

The minds of social species are strikingly resonant.

Jun 16, 2023

Artificial skin heals wounds and makes robots sweat

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, cyborgs, health, robotics/AI, virtual reality

Circa 2020

Imagine a dressing that releases antibiotics on demand and absorbs excessive wound exudate at the same time. Researchers at Eindhoven University of Technology hope to achieve just that, by developing a smart coating that actively releases and absorbs multiple fluids, triggered by a radio signal. This material is not only beneficial for the health care industry, it is also very promising in the field of robotics or even virtual reality.

Continue reading “Artificial skin heals wounds and makes robots sweat” »

Jun 16, 2023

How Nvidia Became ChatGPT’s Brain and Joined the $1 Trillion Club

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, policy, robotics/AI

CEO Jensen Huang’s big bet on AI went from hand-delivering processors to Elon Musk and Sam Altman in 2016 to joining today’s alpha pack of Silicon Valley. He is worth close to $40 billion.


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Jun 16, 2023

Wearable textile captures energy from body movement to power devices

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, mobile phones, wearables

Nanoscientists have developed a wearable textile that can convert body movement into useable electricity and even store that energy. The fabric potentially has a wide range of applications from medical monitoring to assisting athletes and their coaches in tracking their performance, as well as smart displays on clothing.

The research team responsible for the describe how it works in a paper published in Nano Research Energy.

From smart watches to cordless headphones, people already have access to a wide range of wearable electronic devices. A range of health, sport and activity monitors are now integrated into smartphones.