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Jan 5, 2024

How Can SMEs Prepare For The Quantum Computing Era?

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Small and medium-sized enterprises should be ready for opportunities and threats of the oncoming quantum era.

Jan 5, 2024

New Discovery could Aid Regenerative Heart Therapies

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Researchers identify RBFox1 as a key intrinsic regulator of heart muscle cell maturation, overcoming a major limitation in cardiac regenerative therapy and disease modelling and demonstrating for the first time that RNA splicing control can significantly impact this process.

Scientists led by Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore and the University of California, Los Angeles, (UCLA) in the United States have discovered a new control mechanism that can drive the maturation of human stem cell-derived heart muscle cells, providing fresh insight into the maturation process of heart muscle cells from fetal to adult form.

After birth, heart muscle cells undergo extensive changes to become fully mature adult cells, altering their form, function and physiology.

Jan 5, 2024

Benjamin_2021_Neuromorph._Comput._Eng._1_013001.pdf

Posted by in category: futurism

Neuromorphic hardware neurogrid simulates cortical cell types dendrites and top down attention.


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Jan 5, 2024

Controlling the Size, Composition and Dispersion of Metal Nanoparticles

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, nanotechnology

Nanoparticles seem the future of electronics, at least until the next big thing.


Nano-engineered oxides are very important for the development of next-generation catalysts and microelectronics. Recently, metal exsolution from oxides has emerged as a promising nano-structuring tool to fabricate nanoparticle-decorated oxides. However, controlling the size, density, composition, and location of exsolved nanoparticles remains a challenge, limiting the ultimate performance achievable by these nanostructures.

The following nanoparticle production control was achieved: 1. ion sputtering can controllably reduce the size of surface exsolved nanoparticles down to 2 nm, which are among the smallest values reported in the literature thus far. 2. implanted metal ions can tailor the composition of nanoparticles exsolved both at the surface and in the bulk, providing a convenient and direct way to synthesize exsolved nanoparticles with alloyed compositions. 3. irradiation-induced lattice defects can catalyze the nucleation of nanoparticles, and this enables controlling the density and location of exsolved nanoparticles at specific sample locations using ion irradiation.

Continue reading “Controlling the Size, Composition and Dispersion of Metal Nanoparticles” »

Jan 5, 2024

A butterfly-inspired design to create crumple-recoverable electronics

Posted by in categories: engineering, mobile phones

Over the past decades, electronics engineers have created devices of various shapes and with increasingly sophisticated designs. This includes electronics that can be folded onto themselves, such as foldable phones, along with various other compressible devices.

Researchers at Ajou University and other institutes in South Korea recently introduced a new design for developing crumple-recoverable electronics, or in other words, electronics that can recover their original shape after being crumpled or compressed onto themselves to reduce their size. This design, outlined in a paper published in Nature Electronics, draws inspiration from the mechanism that allows butterflies to unfold their wings when leaving their cocoon.

“Nature is rich of different plants and animals, each of which survived by adapting and evolving in extreme environments,” Seungyong Han, co-author of the paper, told Tech Xplore. “Personally, I’ve always thought that by closely observing these phenomena, we can find clues to solve various problems in modern society. Also, by approaching this from an engineering perspective, I believed we could achieve results that may improve people’s daily lives.”

Jan 5, 2024

A record-setting transplant heals a baby’s broken heart

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

📸 Look at this post on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/100064499509946/posts/774174594742517/?mibextid=CDWPTG


Partial-heart transplant from a living donor allows an infant’s heart valves to grow as he does.

Jan 5, 2024

Scientists Discover First New Antibiotics in Over 60 Years Using AI | Vantage with Palki Sharma

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

AI finds a new class of antibiotics.

Jan 5, 2024

Square Enix plans ‘aggressive’ use of AI to create new forms of content

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, business, robotics/AI, virtual reality

Generative AI provoked a lot of discussion last year around images, text and video, but it may soon affect the gaming industry as well. Square Enix said it plans to be “aggressively applying” AI and other cutting-edge tech in 2024 to “create new forms of content,” according to president Takashi Kiryu’s New Year’s letter.

“Artificial intelligence (AI) and its potential implications had for some time largely been subjects of academic debate,” he said. “However, the introduction of ChatGPT, which allows anyone to easily produce writing or translations or to engage in text-based dialogue, sparked the rapid spread of generative AIs. I believe that generative AI has the potential not only to reshape what we create, but also to fundamentally change the processes by which we create, including programming.”

The company will start by using it to improve productivity in development and assist in marketing. “In the longer term, we hope to leverage those technologies to create new forms of content for consumers, as we believe that technological innovation represents business opportunities,” Kiryu added. Square Enix also plans to build more immersive AR and VR experiences, including “new forms of content that fuse the real world and virtual worlds.”

Jan 5, 2024

Largest male specimen of world’s most venomous spider found in Australia

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

SYDNEY — With fangs that could pierce a human fingernail, the largest male specimen of the world’s most venomous arachnid has found a new home at the Australian Reptile Park where it will help save lives after a member of the public discovered it by chance.

The deadly Sydney funnel-web spider dubbed “Hercules” was found on the Central Coast, about 50 miles north of Sydney, and was initially given to a local hospital, the Australian Reptile Park said in a statement Thursday.

Spider experts from the nearby park retrieved it and soon realized it was the largest male specimen ever received from the public in Australia.

Jan 5, 2024

Meet the Investor Who Made Bill Gates $50 Billion | A Michael Larson Documentary

Posted by in category: education

https://bit.ly/YTFINaiUSFebBill Gates has a mysterious investor who oversees nearly all of h…

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