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Nov 6, 2023

AI-chip cousins? CEO Nvidia, AMD lead US tech war against China

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Jensen Huanf and Lisa Lu, CEOs of NVIDIA and AMD, are cousins. However, they are not close and have not been seen out together publicly.

Those who keep abreast of what’s happening in the semiconductor industry know that top dogs NVIDIA and AMD are competitors that regularly take potshots at each other. But what a lot of people may not know is that the CEOs of these two companies are cousins.


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Nov 6, 2023

US scientists simulate heartbeats to recharge pacemaker battery

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

This research is still in the initial stages and needs further investigation before it becomes part of the pacemakers used today.

Researchers at the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle successfully designed a leadless pacemaker that can be partially charged using energy generated by the beating heart. The research findings will be presented at the American Heart Association’s (AHA) Scientific Sessions to be held later this weekend, a press release said.

Pacemakers are small devices that detect a patient’s heartbeat and send electrical pulses to the heart if it needs to be paced. According to the AHA’s report, as many as 93,000 pacemaker and defibrillator procedures were performed in the US in 2018.

Nov 6, 2023

Scientists create the first wireless map of a worm’s nervous system

Posted by in category: neuroscience

The map reveals how every single neuron in the nervous system of the small worm communicates wirelessly.

Making a significant stride in scientific advancement, researchers have created the first-ever map that illustrates the wireless communication among every individual neuron in the nervous system of a small worm.

This is the first time a map of a neuropeptide network is created in any mammal, even though the same has been successfully done in simple organisms.

Nov 6, 2023

New flexible X-Ray detectors could revolutionise cancer treatment

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

The new material mimics human tissue under X-rays, allowing for more accurate and safer imaging of tumors, bones, and organs.

Researchers at the University of Surrey have developed a new type of flexible X-ray detector.


Credit: Dr Prabodhi Nanayakkara.

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Nov 6, 2023

Energy efficient particle collider concept could revolutionize physics

Posted by in categories: cosmology, nuclear energy, particle physics

“There is a whole new discussion at least posing the question of the carbon footprint of particle physics.”

A particle collider, sometimes referred to as an atom smasher, is a type of high-energy physics apparatus used to investigate the fundamental particles and forces that exist in the cosmos. Subatomic particles, such as protons, electrons, or other charged particles, are accelerated to extremely high speeds and collide at extremely high energies in particle colliders.

Scientists use them to study the core components of matter and the fundamental forces of existence such as the nature of dark matter, the properties of quarks and leptons as well as the strong nuclear force, the weak nuclear… More.

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Nov 6, 2023

Scientists finally solved the centuries-long mystery of where a starfish’s head is

Posted by in category: futurism

“Turns out, starfish genes suggest it contains multiple heads, one at the center and in each limb.”


Scientists couldn’t find the starfish head for the longest time since they were looking in the wrong place. Turns out, the head is all over its body.

Nov 6, 2023

What is quantum mechanics trying to tell us?

Posted by in category: quantum physics

The weirdness of quantum mechanics begs for a philosophical interpretation. What can it all possibly be pointing to?

Nov 6, 2023

Toyota’s EVs Aim To Win With 620 Miles Of Range, But Not Big Batteries

Posted by in categories: chemistry, robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation

Awkward name aside, the Lexus LF-ZC Concept that debuted at the Japan Mobility Show last week is a very big deal. When it goes into production in 2026, it will be the first electric vehicle on an all-new, ground-up Toyota platform; will do some very next-level things with the company’s steer-by-wire technology; and an alleged 620 miles of electric range.

It is not, however, going to do that with some huge battery pack that weighs as much as an apartment building. Instead, it’s going to rely mostly on chemistry to deliver on those big range claims.

As part of the auto show festivities, Toyota invited several international media outlets, including InsideEVs, to Japan last week. There, the world’s largest automaker previewed a number of emerging technology concepts, including a simulated “manual transmission” for electric cars, an advanced in-car AI assistant and its EV battery plans for the next few years.

Nov 6, 2023

Liberals Shocked About Musk’s Non-Woke Chatbot

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Liberals prefer Soviet-style woke censorship.

Nov 6, 2023

A quasicrystal from nanoparticles using DNA

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

The breakthrough opens the way for designing and building more complex structures.