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Nov 30, 2016
These 2.5-Billion-Year-Old Bacteria Predate the Rise of Oxygen on Earth
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: futurism
Fossilised bacteria have been uncovered in two separate locations in South Africa, and they’ve been dated to 2.52 billion years ago — long before oxygen started to saturate Earth’s atmosphere.
Instead of thriving in oxygen, like the trees and multicellular organisms that came after them did, these bacteria oxidised sulphur to survive, suggesting that life could be sustained on a planet with less than one-thousandth of a percent of Earth’s current oxygen levels.
The fossils were uncovered in a layer of hard, silica-rich rock in the Kaapvaal Craton of the Limpopo Province in South Africa — one of the two remaining areas in the world where Earth’s crust from 3.6 to 2.5 million years ago is still accessible.
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Nov 29, 2016
The Case Against Dark Matter
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: cosmology, particle physics
A proposed theory of gravity does away with dark matter, even as new astrophysical findings challenge the need for galaxies full of the invisible mystery particles.
Nov 29, 2016
Extraterrestrial Gold Rush: What’s Next for the Space Mining Industry?
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space
Multiple companies are pursuing space mining activities, so what’s standing in the way of a space mining gold rush?
Nov 29, 2016
Take Part In Today’s Worldwide Quantum Physics Experiment
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: entertainment, quantum physics
There is a worldwide scientific experiment today aiming to test the laws of quantum physics via a video game – and you’re invited!
The BIG Bell Test: worldwide quantum experiments powered by human randomness aims to conduct a series of quantum experiments in labs around the world that, for the first time, will be controlled by human decisions made by volunteers (aka Bellsters). Here’s how you can take part.
Coordinated by ICFO, the Institute of Photonic Sciences, the experiments will test Albert Einstein’s idea of “local realism,” a phenomenon at the very core of the mysteries of the quantum world.
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Nov 29, 2016
Depression Treatment
Posted by Matthew White in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, wearables
https://youtube.com/watch?v=melzXkH8KPY
The Happy Headband. Take my money.
The Fisher Wallace Stimulator® is a wearable neurostimulation device that is cleared by the FDA to treat depression and anxiety. During each 20-minute treatment session, the device gently stimulates the brain to produce serotonin and other neurochemicals that reduce depression and anxiety (and support healthy mood and sleep). The device has been proven to be safe and effective in multiple published studies conducted at top institutions such as Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital.
Nov 29, 2016
There’s E Ink everything now, even wallets
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: mobile phones
https://youtube.com/watch?v=INutu2YDF1o
I could live with e-paper everything. I’m talking billboards, monitors, keyboards, remotes, watches, phones, and wallets. Yes, we now have an e-paper wallet called the Wonder Wallet. It just launched on Kickstarter. Why an e-paper wallet, you ask? Because e-paper looks cool and because on Kickstarter, anything can maybe become reality with your blind trust.
I don’t have many details on Wonder Wallet, but I do know that users can display an image on their wallet and that it connects to phones through Bluetooth. Do you really want to keep your phone connected to your wallet all day? That sounds like a battery drain to me. Oh yeah, you also have to charge the wallet, although it should last for around three days.
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Nov 29, 2016
Scientists to Challenge Albert Einstein’s ‘Speed of Light is Constant’ Theory
Posted by Aleksandar Vukovic in category: physics
https://youtube.com/watch?v=0n9nru9Ep4M
A team of scientists from London and Canada is set to challenge one of Albert Einstein’s accepted theories regarding the classification of the speed of light as constant, which means that light in a vacuum will have the same numerical value under any conditions.
The new theory of the scientists, described in a paper published in the journal Physical Review, hypothesizes that the speed of light might actually be a variable.
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Nov 29, 2016
Microsoft update left Azure Linux virtual machines open to hacking — By Rene Millman | SC Magazine UK
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in category: computing
“Microsoft patches configuration hole that allowed hackers to upload software packages to its Azure update infrastructure.”
Tag: Linux
Nov 29, 2016
Vote for your scientific breakthrough of the year!
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Vote for senolytics and help get aging research into public view.
Please VOTE NOW for senescent cell removal (The purge that refreshes) and help make aging research the science breakthrough of the year and get rejuvenation biotechnology into the public eye.
#aging #sens
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