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Feb 18, 2019
Thispersondoesnotexist.com is face-generating AI at its creepiest
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: robotics/AI
Nvidia’s incredible people-creating AI is now available online. Now you can create startling images of people who do not exist, to your heart’s content.
Feb 18, 2019
Tesla is making the Model 3 faster with a software update
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: mapping, sustainability, transportation
To make a regular car go faster on the track, you can add go-fast components like a turbocharger or better fuel, or improve handling components like brakes and tires. Carmakers can also make a dizzying amount of software tweaks to everything from the stability and traction control systems to throttle mapping and how much fuel gets into the engine.
But with an electric car, the software is the star of the show. Code controls everything. That’s why Tesla can introduce Track Mode to the Model 3 with a software download, unlocking new features designed to get the electric sports sedan around a track faster than before.
On something like the BMW M5, putting the car in Sport Mode adjusts a dizzying array of settings for throttle response, transmission, chassis, steering, stability control, and whether the car operates in all- or rear-wheel drive.
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Feb 18, 2019
First successful CWD vaccine tested in deer
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Circa 2015
The first successful vaccination of deer against chronic wasting disease is reported in the journal Vaccine, (Vaccine 2015;38:726–33), posted online in advance of print Dec. 21, 2014.
Researchers say the breakthrough may not only protect U.S. livestock against CWD but may also shed new light on human diseases suspected of being caused by prion infections, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, kuru, familial insomnia, and variably protease-sensitive prionopathy. Some studies also have associated prionlike infections with Alzheimer’s disease.
Continue reading “First successful CWD vaccine tested in deer” »
Feb 18, 2019
Two Undersea Robots are Saving Marine Life From Lost and Abandoned Fishing Nets
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: robotics/AI
Feb 18, 2019
Bacteria used to neutralize algae-bloom toxin
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biological
When algal blooms occur in lakes, the over-abundant cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) produce a toxin known as microcystin. Now, Ohio-based scientists are using other types of bacteria to neutralize that toxin, in a process that could be cheaper and more eco-friendly than the alternatives.
Feb 18, 2019
Radiation-eating bacteria could make nuclear waste safer
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biological, food, nuclear energy
Circa 2017
Microbes can thrive on radioactive waste products and make them less likely to leak out of underground respositories.
Feb 18, 2019
New Israeli Cancer Vaccine May Cure 90% of All Cancer Types in One Shot
Posted by Victoria Generao in category: biotech/medical
Feb 18, 2019
China to test magnetized plasma artillery
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: energy, military
The Chinese military is looking to procure test systems for magnetized plasma artillery, according to a notice on the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) weapon and equipment procurement website weain.mil.cn last week.
Released on Wednesday and due expire on Thursday, the notice invites tenders for a theory-testing and a launch system for magnetized plasma artillery.
Although the weapon sounds as if it comes from a sci-fi movie, it will probably not shoot high-energy plasma but ultra-high velocity cannon shells.
Feb 18, 2019
Toilet Seat Could Save Your Ass
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Our morning routine could be appended to something like “breakfast, stretching, sit on a medical examiner, shower, then commute.” If we are speaking seriously, we don’t always get to our morning stretches, but a quick medical exam could be on the morning agenda. We would wager that a portion of our readers are poised for that exam as they read this article. The examiner could come in the form of a toilet seat. This IoT throne is the next device you didn’t know you needed because it can take measurements to detect signs of heart failure every time you take a load off.
Tracking heart failure is not just one test, it is a buttload of tests. Continuous monitoring is difficult although tools exist for each test. It is unreasonable to expect all the at-risk people to sit at a blood pressure machine, inside a ballistocardiograph, with an oximeter on their fingers three times per day. Getting people to browse Hackaday on their phones after lunch is less of a struggle. When the robots overthrow us, this will definitely be held against us.