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Dec 11, 2016

UC Berkeley’s wall-jumping robot

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This is SALTO: a powerful new wall-jumping robot built by researchers at UC Berkeley.

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Dec 11, 2016

The future just arrived, first state legalizes driverless cars (5 Photos)

Posted by in categories: law, robotics/AI, transportation

Michigan just made it into the history books today after Governor Rick Snyder signed 4 bills into law, all governing the legality of the autonomous car, making Michigan the first state to officially sign off on driverless cars on the roads.

Many states have allowed testing of driverless vehicles, but Michigan just officially put them on the road for consumers.

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Dec 11, 2016

Microsoft is developing its own quantum computer hardware

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Microsoft has been working on quantum computing for years, but the company is coming out of stealth mode now and taking a more active role in quantum computer development. It wants to build a theoretical type of machine known as a topological quantum computer, despite the difficulty of doing so.

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Dec 11, 2016

CellAge: A New Startup Targeting Senescent Cells With Synthetic Biology — Longevity Reporter

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

Check out the The Longevity Reporter interview with CellAge as they talk about rejuvenation biotechnology.


Innovative new startup Cell Age is using synthetic biology to develop new ways of targeting and removing senescent cells. We caught up with CEO Mantas Matjusaitis for an interview as their first fundraiser goes live on Lifespan.io (find it here)

Continue reading “CellAge: A New Startup Targeting Senescent Cells With Synthetic Biology — Longevity Reporter” »

Dec 11, 2016

Exercise Improves Arterial Resilience to Age-Related Increases in Oxidative Stress

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, life extension, nanotechnology

Excercise is the best low cost activity you can do as part of your personal longevity strategy. Here we see data showing it can improve resistance to oxidative stress.


Researchers digging deeper into the mechanisms by which exercise produces benefits have found that it improves the resistance of blood vessels to oxidative stress. With age the presence of oxidizing molecules and oxidative modification of proteins, preventing correct function, increases for reasons that include damage to mitochondria, the power plants of the cell. Oxidative damage to molecular machinery is somewhere in the middle of the chain of cause and effect that starts with fundamental forms of damage to cells and tissues and spirals down into age-related diseases. Near all of this oxidation is repaired very quickly, the damaged molecules dismantled and recycled, but in most contexts more of it over the long term is worse than less of it.

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Dec 11, 2016

HoloMaps 3D map explorer for Microsoft HoloLens

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, virtual reality

HoloMaps augmented reality map explorer for Microsoft HoloLens displays 3D cities and locations around the world for AR and VR.

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Dec 11, 2016

Magic Leap’s amazing augmented reality looks too good to be true—and it might be

Posted by in category: augmented reality

The company’s demonstrations may have been impressive, but they also involved smoke and mirrors.

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Dec 10, 2016

Thermoelectric paint generates electricity from almost any heat source

Posted by in categories: materials, particle physics

Thermoelectric generators convert heat or cold to electricity (and vice-versa). Normally solid-state devices, they can be used in such things as power plants to convert waste heat into additional electrical power, or in small cooling systems that do not need compressors or liquid coolant. However the rigid construction of these devices generally limits their use to flat, even surfaces. In an effort to apply thermal generation capabilities to almost any shape, scientists at the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) in Korea claim to have created a thermoelectric coating that can be directly painted onto most surfaces.

Variously known as the Peltier, Seebeck, or Thomson effect, the thermoelectric effect is seen in semiconductor devices that create a voltage when a different temperature is present on each side or, when a voltage is applied to the device, it creates a temperature difference between the two sides. In this instance, the new paint created by the UNIST researchers is used specifically to heat a surface when a voltage is applied.

The specially-formulated inorganic thermoelectric paint was created using Bi2Te3 (bismuth telluride) and Sb2Te3 (antimony telluride) particles to create two types of semiconducting material. To test the resultant mixture, the researchers applied alternate p-type (positive) and n-type (negative) layers of the thermoelectric semiconductor paint on a metal dome with electrodes at the top and the base of the dome.

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Dec 10, 2016

NASA and Stephen Hawking are working on a nano-starship that can travel 1/5th the speed of light

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, space travel

NASA researchers have joined forces with Stephen Hawking to build a nano-starship that can travel one-fifth the speed of light.

If successful, the ship, called “StarChip” could reach Earth’s closest star system, Alpha Centauri, in 20 years.

Continue reading “NASA and Stephen Hawking are working on a nano-starship that can travel 1/5th the speed of light” »

Dec 10, 2016

3D Printed Trees Harvest Energy From Sun, Wind, and Temperature

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, energy

Published on December 10th, 2016 | by Steve Hanley.

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