Menu

Blog

Page 3405

Jul 28, 2022

New Brain Implant Begins Human Trials — Neuralink Update!

Posted by in categories: computing, space

The Brain Computer Interface industry is progressing quickly and it’s not just Neuralink. Synchron…


The Brain Computer Interface industry is progressing quickly and it’s not just Neuralink. Synchron has been approved for human trials by the FDA and Neuralink might not be far behind.

Continue reading “New Brain Implant Begins Human Trials — Neuralink Update!” »

Jul 28, 2022

The James Webb Space Telescope may have just found its first supernova

Posted by in category: cosmology

This could be the first step to studying the oldest explosions in the universe.

Jul 28, 2022

Travel to Space

Posted by in category: space travel

Jul 28, 2022

Columbia Engineering Roboticists Discover Alternative Physics

Posted by in categories: physics, robotics/AI

A new AI program observed physical phenomena and uncovered relevant variables—a necessary precursor to any physics theory.

Jul 28, 2022

The chemical controlling life and death in hair follicles

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry

A single chemical is key to controlling when hair follicle cells divide, and when they die. This discovery could not only treat baldness, but ultimately speed wound healing because follicles are a source of stem cells.

Jul 28, 2022

Smart City Technologies That Could Soon Change The Way We Live And Work

Posted by in category: futurism

Many people may not realize just how big an impact combined smart city technologies could have on the ways we live and work in the coming years.

Jul 28, 2022

Low-energy fluidic cells could shade and cool buildings dynamically

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

A large percentage of a building’s energy usage is consumed by heating and cooling, but a new dynamic shading system designed by researchers at the University of Toronto could help. Inspired by the skin of krill, the system uses cells of blooming pigment that can block light on demand.

Krill are tiny marine organisms that are usually transparent, but have the ability to move pigments around in the cells beneath their skin, allowing them to turn darker to protect themselves from UV damage in bright sunlight. This, the UToronto team reasoned, would be a useful ability for windows and building facades to have.

Continue reading “Low-energy fluidic cells could shade and cool buildings dynamically” »

Jul 28, 2022

A new type of soft robotic actuator that can be scaled down to just one centimeter

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI

A team of researchers at Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia’s Bioinspired Soft Robotics Laboratory has developed a new pleat-based soft robotic actuator that can be used in a variety of sizes, down to just 1 centimeter. In their paper published in the journal Science Robotics, the group describes the technology behind their new actuator and how well it worked when they tested it under varied circumstances.

Engineers working on soft robotics projects have often found themselves constrained by standard pneumatic artificial muscle actuators, which tend to only work well at a given size due to the large number of complex parts. In this new effort, the researchers have added a new feature to such actuators that requires fewer parts, resulting in a smaller actuator.

Continue reading “A new type of soft robotic actuator that can be scaled down to just one centimeter” »

Jul 28, 2022

How an unknown Vietnamese carmaker is trying to beat Tesla in the U.S.

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

VinFast is an unknown Vietnamese automaker selling electric vehicles (EVs) in America. Top staffers hail from industry leaders such as BMW.

Jul 28, 2022

Galactic remnant of the universe’s ‘dark ages’ is rotating, say astronomers

Posted by in category: space

Physics World.


One of the most distant galaxies ever observed is very likely to be rotating, say astronomers. An in.