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Dec 17, 2021

2022 Cyber Security Trends: Ransomware, Extortion, and State Espionage

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business, cybercrime/malcode

2021 will be remembered as a significant year for the cyber security industry. With the pandemic accelerating digital transformation, the threat landscape was in constant flux. Major ransomware attacks demonstrated not just their impact on businesses, but wider society too. As we look ahead to 2022, the only constant in our industry is uncertainty in the cyber realm, but here are a few of our predictions for next year, based on trends we’re already seeing emerge.

Ransomware.

Dec 17, 2021

The science events to watch for in 2022

Posted by in categories: particle physics, science, space

Omicron, Moon missions and particle physics are among the themes set to shape research in the coming year.

Dec 17, 2021

This just in from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou: The team is still hard at work encapsulating NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope for launch

Posted by in category: space

We will keep you posted.

Dec 17, 2021

Mathematician Hurls Structure and Disorder Into Century-Old Problem

Posted by in categories: computing, mathematics

The mathematician Ben Green of the University of Oxford has made a major stride toward understanding a nearly 100-year-old combinatorics problem, showing that a well-known recent conjecture is “not only wrong but spectacularly wrong,” as Andrew Granville of the University of Montreal put it. The new paper shows how to create much longer disordered strings of colored beads than mathematicians had thought possible, extending a line of work from the 1940s that has found applications in many areas of computer science.

The conjecture, formulated about 17 years ago by Ron Graham, one of the leading discrete mathematicians of the past half-century, concerns how many red and blue beads you can string together without creating any long sequences of evenly spaced beads of a single color. (You get to decide what “long” means for each color.)

This problem is one of the oldest in Ramsey theory, which asks how large various mathematical objects can grow before pockets of order must emerge. The bead-stringing question is easy to state but deceptively difficult: For long strings there are just too many bead arrangements to try one by one.

Dec 17, 2021

Military rescuers geared up for safe landing of Soyuz spacecraft carrying space tourists

Posted by in categories: military, space travel

“Specialists of the Central Military District’s search/rescue and parachute service have been relocated in full to the Republic of Kazakhstan to provide for the safe landing of the Soyuz MS-20 descent capsule with space tourists from Japan on its board,” the press office said in a statement.

The Central Military District has redeployed additional personnel from the Chelyabinsk Region in the Urals to bolster the basic group that provided for the safe launch of the Soyuz spacecraft. In particular, about 50 more rescuers have been redeployed to Kazakhstan together with eight Mi-8 helicopters and two PEM-1 and PEM-2 ‘Blue Bird’ search and evacuation vehicles, the statement says.

Overall, the search and rescue operation to provide for the safe landing of the Soyuz MS-20 descent module involves about 200 rescuers, 12 Mi-8 helicopters, two An-12 planes and an An-26 aircraft and over 20 motor vehicles, including six pieces of ‘Blue Bird’ rescue and evacuation equipment.

Dec 17, 2021

NASA promotes East Coast Starship option at LC-49 following SpaceX interest

Posted by in category: space travel

The prospect of Starship making its mark on the Space Coast entered another level this week when NASA revealed it would conduct environmental assessments on LC-49 to support Starship launch and landing operations.

With SpaceX already confirming they will restart work on a Starship pad inside 39A, the potential of a second site at LC-49 could provide a considerable increase in Starship launch cadence from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC).

Dec 17, 2021

A Dutch vertical farming company has just been valued at over $1 billion

Posted by in category: food

Infarm, an Amsterdam-headquartered start-up that grows food indoors in racks, has been valued at over $1 billion in a new $200 million funding round.

It is the first vertical farming start-up in Europe to pass the $1 billion “unicorn” milestone.

Erez Galonska, co-founder and CEO of Infarm, said in a statement that the current food system is broken.

Dec 17, 2021

Meet the researcher using AI to build children’s animations

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

We’ve all seen children draw quirky, awesome characters, and even heard them talk about their illustrations as if they were real! How cool would it be to actually bring the characters to life?

Researchers at Meta AI have developed a way to do just that. We’re announcing a first-of-its-kind AI-powered animation tool that can automatically animate children’s drawings of human figures within minutes.

Dec 17, 2021

Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa issues NFT from space

Posted by in category: futurism

Yusaku Maezawa, founder of Japan’s online fashion retailer Zozotown, tweeted yesterday on turning the first photo he took into a non-fungible token (NFT).

Dec 17, 2021

Solder Party’s Tiny RP2040 Stamp Lands on Tindie — Alongside an Arduino Uno-Style Carrier Board

Posted by in category: futurism

Clever board packs all the functionality of the RP2040 — plus LiPo battery support, a NeoPixel, and more — into a stamp-size footprint.