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Dec 24, 2023

To win the new space race, NASA and the DoD need to shift their collaboration into high gear

Posted by in categories: military, space

Military leaders argue that the Department of Defense must be more involved if the US is to win the new space race for a lunar outpost.

Dec 24, 2023

Karl Friston: The Physics of Sentience

Posted by in category: physics

Dr. Karl Friston, University College London, applies the free energy principle to set forth an account of life, or self-organization, in terms of active inference. August 19th, 2023.

Dec 24, 2023

New Fossil Analysis Has Just Re-Written The Human Evolution Timeline

Posted by in category: evolution

New dating analysis of existing human remains found worldwide has raised questions about some of our current histories of human evolution.

Dec 24, 2023

Human Flourishing through Models of Intelligence and Care

Posted by in category: futurism

A cross-disciplinary workshop at Tufts University, August 18th-21st, 2023.

Dec 24, 2023

‘Golden Veil’: China makes material that disguises missile as passenger jet

Posted by in categories: materials, transportation

A Chinese research team claims to have developed a new device called ‘Golden Veil’ that can disguise cruise missiles as commercial aircraft.

Dec 24, 2023

Using the human as a sensor for better health

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, wearables

Amid a rise in the innovation of wearable technology, researchers are looking for ways to harness the adaptive sensing ability of the human body.

A recent University of Melbourne panel discussion covered the future of wearable sensors. Professor Graham Kerr, Bill Dimopoulos, Galen Gan and Professor Peter Lee considered the management of information generated from such technology and its interpretation for improving health.

Dec 24, 2023

‘Conscious’ AI no longer a far-fetched possibility, experts warn

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Academics from around the world have signed an open letter calling for further research into consciousness science for artificial intelligence (AI) experiments.

Dec 24, 2023

KITT The Amazing Car Of Tomorrow — A Knightrider Christmas

Posted by in categories: media & arts, transportation

Let’s kick off the Holiday Season in style, shall we? Like, say, with a single few people even know exist, from a massive pop culture phenomenon of the early ’80s? YES PLEASE! This really needs no introduction. It’s KITT, the Amazing Car of Tomorrow, in full hero mode, Saving Santa from bad weather, and then making the rounds to bring joy and cheer on Christmas Morning — All told in an early ’80s rap, over an electro groove lifted from the Knight Rider theme song. Hopefully you’ve already hit play, but if you haven’t yet, HIT PLAY NOW! And if you have, then PLAY IT AGAIN! And of course, I’d like to wish you all a Verry Merry Christmas! Like it? Subscribe! Follow me at / djmikebrady I don’t own any of the rights associated with this music, I simply share so that it will be heard. #PlayingRecords #NeedleDrop #RecordCollection

Dec 24, 2023

Galactic Mysteries Unraveled: Dwarf Galaxies Revealed As Unexpected Star-Forming Powerhouses

Posted by in category: space

If you gaze at the vast galaxies filled with countless stars, it’s easy to assume they are star factories, churning out brilliant balls of gas. However, it’s the less evolved dwarf galaxies dwarf galaxies have bigger regions of star factories, with higher rates of star formation.

Recent findings by researchers from the University of Michigan shed light on this phenomenon: Dwarf galaxies experience a delay of about 10 million years before they expel the gas congesting their space. This delay allows star-forming regions in these galaxies to retain their gas and dust longer, fostering the formation and development of more stars.

Dec 24, 2023

Team develops transistors with sliding ferroelectricity based on polarity-switchable molybdenum disulfide

Posted by in categories: computing, materials

Over the past few years, engineers have been trying to devise alternative hardware designs that would allow a single device to both perform computations and store data. These emerging electronics, known as computing-in-memory devices, could have numerous advantages, including faster speeds and enhanced data analysis capabilities.

To store data safely and retain a , these devices should be based on with advantageous properties and that can be scaled down in terms of thickness. Two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors that exhibit a property known as sliding ferroelectricity have been found to be promising candidates for realizing computing-in-memory, yet attaining the necessary switchable electric polarization in these materials can prove difficult.

Researchers at National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan Semiconductor Research Institute, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University and National Cheng Kung University recently devised an effective strategy to achieve a switchable electric polarization in molybdenum disulfide (MoS2). Using this method, outlined in a Nature Electronics paper, they ultimately developed new promising ferroelectric transistors for computing-in-memory applications.

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