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Jan 1, 2021

Meet Digit: A Smart Little Robot That Could Change the Way Self-Driving Cars Make Deliveries

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Ford partnered with Agility Robotics to create a two-legged delivery robot called Digit. It’s easy to see why. One-click shopping and perks like two-day delivery are extremely convenient, but they are taking a toll on our cities and neighborhoods. The U.S. Postal Service alone delivered more than 6 billion packages in 2018, or double the volume it was handling about 10 years ago. To help address this issue, Ford is teaming up with Agility Robotics to explore a brand-new frontier in the world of autonomy — and a new way of thinking about how we make deliveries. Together, we will work toward making sure self-driving vehicles are uniquely outfitted to accomplish something that’s proven surprisingly difficult to do: Carry out that final step of getting your delivery from the car to your door.

Jan 1, 2021

Controlling the nanoscale structure of membranes is key for clean water, researchers find

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, engineering, food, nanotechnology, sustainability

A desalination membrane acts as a filter for salty water: push the water through the membrane, get clean water suitable for agriculture, energy production and even drinking. The process seems simple enough, but it contains complex intricacies that have baffled scientists for decades—until now.

Researchers from Penn State, The University of Texas at Austin, Iowa State University, Dow Chemical Company and DuPont Water Solutions published a key finding in understanding how membranes actually filter minerals from water, online today (Dec. 31) in Science. The article will be featured on the print edition’s cover, to be issued tomorrow (Jan. 1).

“Despite their use for many years, there is much we don’t know about how water filtration membranes work,” said Enrique Gomez, professor of chemical engineering and materials science and engineering at Penn State, who led the research. “We found that how you control the density distribution of the membrane itself at the nanoscale is really important for water-production performance.”

Jan 1, 2021

Happy New Year everyone!

Posted by in category: space

🎆 To celebrate another successful trip around our central star 🌞, we would like to invite you to a 🚀SpAsiaXtraordinary Party🎉

If you are interested in 🛰️space (or, even if not and just want to hang out with strangers online), then join this party tomorrow (January 2, at any time from 4:00pm to 12:00am GMT+8) at bit.ly/SpAsiaXtraordinary21

You can just show up or feel free to do more:

Continue reading “Happy New Year everyone!” »

Jan 1, 2021

Truly Spooky: How Ghostly Quantum Particles Fly Through Barriers Almost Instantly

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Researchers recently resolved a long-standing question in quantum physics, about how long it takes a single atom to tunnel through a barrier.

Jan 1, 2021

Microsoft says Russians hacked its network, viewing source code

Posted by in category: futurism

The firm did not say what type of code was accessed and said no changes to the code were made.

Jan 1, 2021

Hyundai’s new EV may sport 342-mile range and arrive this summer

Posted by in category: futurism

😃


It seems Hyundai Austria put some information up a tad too early.

Jan 1, 2021

Rocky start: 2021 will begin with unwelcome, 220-meter wide asteroid visitor, NASA warns

Posted by in category: space

We’re getting a lot of these aren’t we? 😃


Before that, this year’s final asteroid, 2020 YB4, measuring just 36 meters in diameter or roughly half the wingspan of a 747, passed by the Earth shortly after 6am UTC at a distance of 6.1 million kilometers. That means, in terms of the threat posed by space rocks at least, the planet made it out of 2020 somewhat intact.

Continue reading “Rocky start: 2021 will begin with unwelcome, 220-meter wide asteroid visitor, NASA warns” »

Jan 1, 2021

Quantum Teleportation Was Just Achieved With 90% Accuracy Over a 44km Distance

Posted by in categories: internet, quantum physics

Scientists are edging closer to making a super-secure, super-fast quantum internet possible: they’ve now been able to ‘teleport’ high-fidelity quantum information over a total distance of 44 kilometres (27 miles).

Both data fidelity and transfer distance are crucial when it comes to building a real, working quantum internet, and making progress in either of these areas is cause for celebration for those building our next-generation communications network.

Continue reading “Quantum Teleportation Was Just Achieved With 90% Accuracy Over a 44km Distance” »

Jan 1, 2021

Microsoft Says SolarWinds Hackers Accessed Some of Its Source Code

Posted by in category: futurism

Microsoft revealed that hackers behind the SolarWinds supply chain attack were able to access some of its source code.

Jan 1, 2021

The unhackable computers that could revolutionize the future

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, particle physics, quantum physics

While many institutions are developing quantum computers, making a quantum internet requires a way to transfer the information between computers. This is accomplished by a phenomenon called quantum teleportation, in which two atoms separated by large distances are made to act as if they are identical.


Don Lincoln writes about recent research that has brought us closer to actualizing the goal of a quantum internet, giving us both hope and fear about what it could mean for the future.