Menu

Blog

Page 10907

Aug 14, 2016

Towards the T-1000: Liquid metals propel future electronics

Posted by in categories: computing, mobile phones

Science fiction is inching closer to reality with the development of revolutionary self-propelling liquid metals—a critical step towards future elastic electronics.

While building a shape-shifting liquid metal T-1000 Terminator may still be far on the horizon, the pioneering work by researchers at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, is setting the foundation for moving beyond solid state electronics towards flexible and dynamically reconfigurable soft circuit systems.

Continue reading “Towards the T-1000: Liquid metals propel future electronics” »

Aug 14, 2016

Russia Charges U.S. Tech Giant Apple With Fixing Prices For iPhones

Posted by in category: mobile phones

This is interesting. Russia has gone already after Google over an anti-trust situation over Android. Now Apple. Wonder who is next? Meantime, China is refusing US tech and companies in many areas of its industry over US involvement of the S. China Sea decisions handed down by a tribunal at The Hague. And, everyone knows about the new partnership in the recent months between China and Russia. Looks like US largest GDP producer is battling on many fronts.


Russian antitrust authorities charged U.S. tech giant Apple on August 8 with fixing the retail prices for iPhones in the country.

The Federal Antimonopoly Service said its investigation “showed that from the start of official sales of iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus in Russia, the majority of resellers set identical prices for them and held them for a certain period.”

Continue reading “Russia Charges U.S. Tech Giant Apple With Fixing Prices For iPhones” »

Aug 14, 2016

Think you can take out a swarm of attack drones? DARPA wants to hear from you

Posted by in categories: drones, military

Pentagon research agency DARPA wants to develop a system that’s capable of countering a swarm of attack drones.

Read more

Aug 14, 2016

Immortality Through Technology, Exploring the Singularity with Ray Kurzweil

Posted by in categories: computing, life extension, Ray Kurzweil, singularity

https://youtube.com/watch?v=vxEBJ91xoqs

I love investing. Every investor who strives to understand their craft to the fullest, ends up at the undeniable conclusion that time is the most valuable asset, bar none. Without it, nothing else of value can exist, it’s the magic ingredient. We can leave value behind for our loved ones, but on an individual level, this intangible asset is a requirement to value and enjoyment as a life form.

Technological innovation and growth can be compared to a snowball rolling down a mountainside, growing faster with each rotation, while speeding up simultaneously. Moore’s Law has held for decades, some say we will hit a wall in silicon transistor shrinking, but the advent of graphene has recently given new light on how this can continue on. New materials, will keep the acceleration of processing power and shrinking of those technologies, intact.

Continue reading “Immortality Through Technology, Exploring the Singularity with Ray Kurzweil” »

Aug 14, 2016

World War 3 in SPACE: Superpowers engineering battle-ready laser-armed cosmic tech

Posted by in categories: engineering, existential risks

Ok, which country will have a Darth Vader leading the command?


HUMANITY’S next war will move away from Earth and be a brutal battle for control of the stars, experts predict.

Read more

Aug 14, 2016

Another Tesla Autopilot Crash, This Time in China

Posted by in categories: government, robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation

One more of these; we may see government step in at the consumer’s urging.


Nobody was killed or even injured. But a minor accident involving a Tesla Model S running on Autopilot in China is again raising questions about exactly how the feature works.

The electric car company said Wednesday that it is investigating the Aug. 2 incident. The driver’s Tesla sideswiped a Volkswagen that was parked halfway in the lane of a busy Beijing highway. The company said Autopilot was engaged and the driver was not holding the steering wheel.

Continue reading “Another Tesla Autopilot Crash, This Time in China” »

Aug 14, 2016

Fun With DNA

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing

We have seen the beauty of DNA in medical advancements, tech for storage, and even in designer fashion, Now, lets play with Art and art expression.


Tiny computers, microscopic art, bringing back the dodo—the future uses of the double helix.

Read more

Aug 14, 2016

The MetroSpiritual: Does your DNA code prove you’re part alien?

Posted by in categories: alien life, futurism

This is a new one on me. I will admit that some of us often have folks trying to figure out how we come up with the stuff that we share as our vision of the future.


As scientists suggest humans may be descendants of alien civilizations, see which extraterrestrial race you most connect with.

Read more

Aug 14, 2016

Revolutionary computer program could change chemistry forever

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, computing

Nice.


Software can tell chemists how to make new molecules from scratch and its inventors claim it has already mapped out a cheaper route to a blockbuster drug.

Continue reading “Revolutionary computer program could change chemistry forever” »

Aug 14, 2016

The head of Google’s Brain team is more worried about the lack of diversity in artificial intelligence than an AI apocalypse

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Something that I have shared many times as an issue/ gap with robotics and other AI technology.


Lack of diversity is more than a public relations issue, people.

Read more