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Dec 13, 2022

Crawling robots will survey ageing US nuclear missile silos

Posted by in categories: military, nuclear weapons, robotics/AI

Decades-old US silos holding Minuteman III missiles that have been a key nuclear deterrent since the 1970s will be assessed by robots that can crawl straight up walls.

Dec 13, 2022

I got a chip implanted in a biohacking garage

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biological, cyborgs, food, genetics, health, neuroscience

In the underground movement known as, people are taking their health into their own hands. Biohacking ranges from people making simple lifestyle changes to extreme body modifications.

One popular form of focuses on nutrigenomics, where biohackers study how the foods they eat affect their genes over time. They believe they can map and track the way their diet affects genetic function. They use dietary restrictions and blood tests, while tracking their moods, energy levels, behaviors, and cognitive abilities.

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Dec 13, 2022

Japan and the Netherlands just picked sides in the U.S.-China cold war over chips. Here’s what they chose

Posted by in category: computing

The two American allies are signing on to the U.S. offensive against China’s flagging chip industry.

Dec 13, 2022

Unmasking BACE1 in aging and age-related diseases

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience

The BACE1 enzyme has a rate-limiting role in the amyloidogenic pathway (see Glossary) and has been extensively studied for its neuronal functions[1]. Since 2000, intensive efforts have focused on developing small-molecule BACE1 inhibitors to reduce amyloid β (Aβ) production in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) brains. However, human clinical trials involving most BACE1 inhibitors were stopped at Phase 2/3 due to limited therapeutic benefits[2]. BACE1 inhibitors act by reducing Aβ-related pathologies in AD brains, that is, they are used to treat the symptoms rather than the underlying disease.

Dec 13, 2022

China Maps Out Plans to Put Astronauts on the Moon and on Mars

Posted by in categories: mapping, space

While grand spaceflight plans of some nations have ended up many years behind schedule, China completed the assembly in orbit of its Tiangong space station in late October, only 22 months later than planned. And on Nov. 29, the Shenzhou 15 mission blasted off from China’s Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center deep in the Gobi Desert and took three astronauts to the space station to begin permanent occupancy of the outpost.

These human spaceflight achievements, combined with recent space probes to the moon and Mars, add to the evidence that China is running a steady space marathon rather than competing in a head-to-head space race with the United States. That China’s space program is making good time toward its long-term goals was reinforced during a rare visit for foreign media to the country’s heavily guarded desert rocket base for the Nov. 29 launch — including lengthy interviews with senior Chinese space officials by in for The New York Times.

Dec 13, 2022

The Last Thoughts of a Dying Astronaut

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

It was supposed to be just another spacewalk, a simple routine inspection.

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Dec 13, 2022

The Truth About AI Getting “Creative”

Posted by in categories: media & arts, robotics/AI

Let’s talk about AI Art, Lensa, ChatGPT, and why it’s all deeper than you think.

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Dec 13, 2022

The Landscape of AI Tools

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

And how we can use them. “The Landscape of AI Tools” is published by HungryMinded in Seeds For The Future.

Dec 12, 2022

Abandoned: the human cost of neurotechnology failure

Posted by in category: neuroscience

When the makers of electronic implants abandon their projects, people who rely on the devices have everything to lose.

Dec 12, 2022

This Floating ‘Pyramid’ Wind Turbine Will Produce More Energy at a Lower Cost, Company Says

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Clean energy will reduce dependency on Russia and Arab countries for oil and gas.


What if the weight could instead be distributed between multiple support poles? That’s the design Eolink has in mind; its floating turbine swaps out the single large pole for four thinner ones angled towards each other in a pyramid shape. This not only distributes the weight of the turbine’s pieces, it allows the whole structure to be lighter.

The turbine Eolink plans to build as a proof of concept will have a generating capacity of five megawatts and weigh 1,100 tons. Its base will be a square with each side 171 feet (52 meters) long, and its rotor’s diameter will be 469 feet (143 meters). For reference, that’s about one and a half Big Bens, or four-fifths of the Washington Monument.

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