Menu

Blog

Page 10296

Nov 2, 2016

Could A Black Hole Be Blocking The Light From That ‘Alien Megastructure’ Star?

Posted by in category: cosmology

The top 7 explanations for the star’s weird behavior, ranked roughly in order of plausibility.

Read more

Nov 2, 2016

Aging, Just Another Disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, life extension

Aging leads to diseases and ultimately death. Time for people to ditch the semantics and recognise that aging and disease are not two mysterious independent processes but are in fact one and the same.


Aging leads to the diseases of aging and the discussion is largely a matter of semantics.

“The concept of aging is undergoing a rapid transformation in medicine. The question has long been asked: Is aging a natural process that should be accepted as inevitable, or is it pathologic, a disease that should be prevented and treated? For the vast majority of medicine’s history, the former position was considered a self-evident truth. So futile was any attempt to resist the ravages of aging that the matter was relegated to works of fantasy and fiction. But today, the biomedical community is rethinking its answer to this question.

Continue reading “Aging, Just Another Disease” »

Nov 2, 2016

This Desalination System Uses Waves To Create Drinking Water

Posted by in categories: futurism, innovation

The best of tech and science innovation, shaping our future.

Read more

Nov 2, 2016

If You Upload Your Mind to the Cloud—Would You Still Be You?

Posted by in category: futurism

From time to time, the Singularity Hub editorial team unearths a gem from the archives and wants to share it all over again. It’s usually a piece that was popular back then and we think is still relevant now. This is one of those articles. It was originally published January 25, 2015. We hope you enjoy it!

Read more

Nov 2, 2016

SoftBank Is Investing in a Microchip to Make the Singularity a Reality

Posted by in categories: existential risks, robotics/AI, singularity

In Brief:

  • As part of a strategy to prepare for the Singularity, Japanese telecom multinational SoftBank spent $31 billion to acquire microprocessing company ARM.
  • This hypothetical day in the future when machine intelligence surpasses that of humanity may not be the doomsday it is portrayed as in much of pop culture.

Read more

Nov 1, 2016

CenturyLink Buys Level 3 for $34 Billion

Posted by in category: internet

CenturyLink is buying Level 3 in a transaction valued at $34 billion; the combined company will boast 450,000 route miles of fiber.

Read more

Nov 1, 2016

Physicists might have found a way to break the Second Law of Thermodynamics

Posted by in categories: energy, quantum physics, space

The laws of thermodynamics are some of the most important principles in modern physics, because they define how three fundamental physical quantities — temperature, energy, and entropy — behave under various circumstances.

But now physicists say they’ve found a loophole in one of these laws, and it could create scenarios in which entropy — or disorder — actually decreases with time.

Thanks to modern physics, almost everything in the Universe can be explained according to two theories: general relativity for the big stuff like stars, galaxies, and the Universe itself; and quantum mechanics, for behaviours on the atomic scale.

Continue reading “Physicists might have found a way to break the Second Law of Thermodynamics” »

Nov 1, 2016

The future of America is driverless — By Tamara Warren | The Verge

Posted by in categories: policy, transportation

vrg_1228_foxx_profile_landscape_fin-0
“In his final months on the job, US Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx has been vocal about the pressing need to repair America’s broken infrastructure, and all the ways in which technology will fundamentally change the way we move.”

Read more

Nov 1, 2016

Google’s A.I. Learns How to Encrypt Itself

Posted by in categories: education, encryption, robotics/AI

And how to keep secrets.

Read more

Nov 1, 2016

Can you judge a person

Posted by in category: computing

First impressions count, but they’re notoriously subjective. Now computers have learned to make snap judgments just like humans do.

Read more