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Aug 2, 2019
7 Amazing Agriculture Technologies
Posted by Gerard Bain in categories: food, robotics/AI, sustainability
Agricultural Revolution is one of the milestones of today’s civilization. It was driven by technological innovations and inventions thousands of years ago, and it is still a very crucial part of our species’ social construct. Engineers are developing tools and machines to make farmers’ job a lot easier by technologies like automation for sustainable productivity. Here are 7 innovative ways the technology is used for agriculture.
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Aug 2, 2019
NASA Satellite Discovers Planet That Could Potentially Support Life
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
A NASA satellite has discovered a planet that could have the perfect conditions to host life.
The planet, which is about 31 light-years away from us, was picked up by the space agency’s TESS satellite and its conditions could support life, according to a bunch of scientists who have been researching it.
NASA has given the planet the name GJ 357 d, which isn’t very catchy, but researchers have given it the nickname ‘super-Earth’, due to the fact it has similar conditions to Earth but is much bigger.
Aug 2, 2019
The immortal cells of Henrietta Lacks
Posted by Alexander Rodionov in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Click on photo to start video.
Today would have been the 99th birthday of Ms. Henrietta Lacks, a woman whose remarkable DNA led to countless cures, patents and discoveries:
Aug 2, 2019
Will Artificial Intelligence Improve Health Care for Everyone?
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, health, robotics/AI
But critics point out that all that promise could vanish if the rush to implement A.I. tramples patient privacy rights, overlooks biases and limitations, or fails to deploy services in a way that improves health outcomes for most people.
You could be forgiven for thinking that A.I. will soon replace human physicians based on headlines such as “The A.I. Doctor Will See You Now,” “Your Future Doctor May Not Be Human,” and “This A.I. Just Beat Human Doctors on a Clinical Exam.” But experts say the reality is more of a collaboration than an ousting: Patients could soon find their lives partly in the hands of A.I. services working alongside human clinicians.
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Aug 2, 2019
This week, our partner congratulated Schwarzenegger with his birthday
Posted by Edward Futurem in category: futurism
Голливудские звезды Арнольд Шварценеггер, Сильвестр Сталлоне и Дольф Лунгрен сообщили, что не собираются стареть.
На видео, опубликованном в “Инстаграме”, три звезды блокбастеров заявили, что они “мужчины, которые не собираются стареть”.
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Aug 1, 2019
Got Great General Knowledge? Here’s What Your Brain Looks Like
Posted by Ian Hale in category: neuroscience
Researchers examining the brains of 324 men and women with a special form of magnetic resonance imaging called diffusion tensor imaging have identified interesting differences in the wiring of general knowledge buffs’ brains.
Aug 1, 2019
Havana Syndrome, Part 2: How a dog’s brain may help solve the mystery of Canadian diplomats’ Cuban nightmare
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in category: neuroscience
“Something happened to them. These findings of the inner ear disorder cannot be faked,” he said. “It is not hysteria. It is not crickets.”
Could a dog’s brain offer any clues to the mysterious concussion-like syndrome affecting Canadian and American diplomats who were posted to Cuba?
That is one of the many threads being pulled in an effort by researchers and scientists — and those affected — to better understand the condition referred to as Havana Syndrome, which has been blamed for debilitating some Canadian diplomats and their families.
Aug 1, 2019
Echoless light could help send signals through walls and skin
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in categories: biotech/medical, internet, space travel
In 1948, physicist Leonard Eisenbud proposed a particular way of transmitting the waves to overcome this. But not until now have researchers made it happen.
By Michael Slezak.
It’s a call with no response. A new way of creating waves – whether of light, radio or sound – that don’t echo promises to improve everything from your Wi-Fi signal to medical imaging to shining lasers through space.
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Aug 1, 2019
MIT Creates Lasers That Whisper in Your Ear
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in category: materials
Some call it a SASER and others call it a PHASER.
How do you whisper to someone across the room? With lasers, of course. MIT has developed a system using lasers to transmit audio signals directly to the ear, and no one else in the area can hear them. As a nice bonus, the laser won’t burn your skin or eyes should you turn your head at the wrong moment.
The laser system leverages what is known as the photoacoustic effect. That simply means that the absorption of light waves by a material produces sound waves. In this case, the light is absorbed by water molecules in the air, but the researchers learned to very carefully tune the laser to control where the sound appears. It’s essentially a narrow cone of sound.
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