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Jan 23, 2022

Webb space telescope nears its destination almost a million miles from Earth, ready for critical mirror alignment

Posted by in category: space travel

If all goes well, the telescope will remain in that six-month orbit for the rest of its operational life, firing its thruster periodically to remain on station.

Getting ready to capture “‘wow’ images”

Continue reading “Webb space telescope nears its destination almost a million miles from Earth, ready for critical mirror alignment” »

Jan 23, 2022

Webb Space Telescope: Uncovering Hidden Parts of Our Solar System

Posted by in category: space

The James Webb Space Telescope (Webb) is designed to answer fundamental questions about the Universe.

One of Webb’s key science goals is to study the nearby cosmos: uncovering hidden parts of our Solar System, peering inside dust clouds where stars and planetary systems are forming, and revealing the composition of exoplanets in more detail.

Jan 23, 2022

Linking brains to computers: how new implants are helping us achieve this goal

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

Researchers have developed implants small enough to fit inside brain cells.

Jan 23, 2022

30 Years Ago, Astronomers Discovered The First Exoplanet — And It’s Still Totally Bizarre

Posted by in category: space

It got weird, fast.


And what about Wolszczan’s pulsar detection method? As precise as it is, shouldn’t it have revealed many such pulsar planets by now?

That’s the thing, according to Wolszczan. “I’ve been engaged with a number of long-term surveys, which were to search for millisecond pulsars and then look for planets around them,” he says, and while they’ve found a few objects around neutrons stars, they’ve found nothing like the PSR B1257+12 system. “That is the disappointing part of the whole story.”

Continue reading “30 Years Ago, Astronomers Discovered The First Exoplanet — And It’s Still Totally Bizarre” »

Jan 23, 2022

Brain device records activity in record-breaking detail

Posted by in categories: computing, media & arts, neuroscience

Beyond that, the ECoG technology could be developed for use in the emerging field of brain-computer interfaces, which have a huge range of potential applications – from controlling a computer just by thinking, to streaming music directly to your brain.

By uncovering new knowledge about how the brain works, for example, the device could be used to interpret hand motions in new ways utilising brain wave patterns.

Jan 23, 2022

2022: The Year in which Virtual Reality goes Mainstream

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience, virtual reality

The Future of Virtual Reality has been shown at CES 2022 in the form of retina display VR Headsets, full body tracking solutions and brain computer interfaces previewing what the future of full dive virtual reality could look like. Companies such as Meta/Facebook, Google, Apple and Valve are all investing millions into making Virtual Reality mainstream and look just like real life.

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 A vision into the Future at CES
00:50 Next Generation VR Headsets.
02:29 The Future of VR Hardware.
04:47 VR CPU’s & GPU’s.
07:00 Is the Future of VR Mainstream?
07:48 Last Words.

#virtualreality #vr #future

Jan 23, 2022

A Startup Completed the First Test Flight of Its Unique ‘CycloRotor’ eVTOL Prototype

Posted by in category: transportation

Jan 23, 2022

Scientists Perplexed to Find Something Under Saturn’s ‘Death Star’ Moon

Posted by in category: space

Jan 23, 2022

Why User Education Is Necessary To Avoid AI Failure

Posted by in categories: education, information science, internet, robotics/AI

The more a technology or concept permeates and gets normalized in our day-to-day lives, the more we grow to expect from it. About two decades ago, a sub-56kpbs dial-up internet connection seemed miraculous. Today, with internet speeds as high as 2000Mbps becoming normal, the 56Kbps connection would be considered a failure of sorts—in the developed world, at least. This shift in expectation also applies to AI. Having seen numerous practical AI applications aid human convenience and progress, both the general population and the AI research community now expects every new breakthrough in the field to be more earth-shattering than the previous one. Similarly, what qualifies as AI failure has also seen a massive shift in recent years, especially from a problem owner’s perspective. failure, in most cases, is attributed to technology-centric factors like the quality of data or the capabilities of algorithms and hardware used, ignoring the most crucial aspect of AI success—the end user.

Jan 23, 2022

Radian announces plans to build one of the holy grails of spaceflight

Posted by in category: space travel

A Washington-state based aerospace company has exited stealth mode by announcing plans to develop one of the holy grails of spaceflight—a single-stage-to-orbit space plane. Radian Aerospace said it is deep into the design of an airplane-like vehicle that could take off from a runway, ignite its rocket engines, spend time in orbit, and then return to Earth and land on a runway.

“We all understand how difficult this is,” said Livingston Holder, Radian’s co-founder, chief technology officer, and former head of the Future Space Transportation and X-33 program at Boeing.

On Wednesday, Radian announced that it had recently closed a $27.5 million round of seed funding, led by Fine Structure Ventures. To date, Radian has raised about $32 million and has 18 full-time employees at its Renton, Washington, headquarters.