Menu

Blog

Page 11002

Mar 14, 2016

Arms Race Develops for Cyber Security Skills as Boards Take a Strong Interest in Defending from Cyber Attacks

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, governance

Barclay Simpson, a leading Corporate Governance recruitment consultancy, has released its annual Security & Resilience market report which suggests that demand continues to rise for cyber security skills as an arms race develops between cyber criminals and those looking to secure systems and data from increasingly complex cyber attacks. With increased prominence and board attention, 68% of managers do not believe their security departments are sufficiently resourced given the demands that are made on them (down from 76%) whilst 69% have recruited or attempted to recruit in the last 6 months.

Read more

Mar 14, 2016

Qualcomm brings virtual reality software development kit

Posted by in categories: energy, mobile phones, virtual reality

Chipset maker Qualcomm Technologies has introduced a virtual reality (VR) software development kit (SDK) targeting VR-capable Android smartphone and headset makers.

The Snapdragon VR SDK offers access to optimized VR features, to simplify development and to help developers with attain improved VR performance and power efficiency with the Snapdragon 820 for Android smartphones and upcoming VR headsets.

Qualcomm will be offering the SDK in the second quarter of 2016 through the Qualcomm Developer Network.

Continue reading “Qualcomm brings virtual reality software development kit” »

Mar 14, 2016

US Bets $100 Million on Machines That Think More Like Humans

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, government, military, space

“One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

When Neil Armstrong stepped onto the dusty surface of the moon on July 20, 1969, it was a victory for NASA and a victory for science.

Continue reading “US Bets $100 Million on Machines That Think More Like Humans” »

Mar 14, 2016

Michigan company looks to halve offshore wind costs

Posted by in categories: climatology, energy, physics

Company uses physics of thunderstorms to summon energy out of air.

Read more

Mar 14, 2016

Humanoid robots can’t outsource their brains to the cloud due to network latency

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI

Ars talks to robotics rockstar Hiroshi Ishiguro, on crafting convincing human-android interactions.

Read more

Mar 14, 2016

World’s Thinnest Lens Could Revolutionize Nanotechnology

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

Another great invention by the folks from Australia.


Researchers said they developed the new thinnest lens in the world. Made from a crystal called molybdenum disulphide, the new lens is 2,000 thinner than a human hair and can revolutionize the field of nanotechnology. (Photo : Gerd Altmann | Pixabay)

A team of Australian scientists said they have developed the thinnest lens in the world. The new 6.3-nanometer lens, which is 2,000 times thinner than a human hair, can lead to novel advances in medicine and science which could revolutionize nanotechnology.

Continue reading “World’s Thinnest Lens Could Revolutionize Nanotechnology” »

Mar 14, 2016

The ‘great smoky dragon’ of quantum physics

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, particle physics, quantum physics

Abstract: Since the 17th century, science was intrigued by the nature of light. Isaac Newton was certain that it consists of a stream of particles. His contemporary Christiaan Huygens, however, argued that light is a wave. Modern quantum physics says that both were right. Light can be observed both as particles and as waves — depending which characteristic is measured in an experiment, it presents itself more as one or the other. This so-called wave-particle dualism is one of the foundational principles of quantum physics. This questions our common sense: can one and the same indeed be of two contradictory natures at the same time?

Read more

Mar 14, 2016

Scientists grow eye lens from patients’ own stem cells, restoring vision

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Lens regeneration in monkeys after minimally invasive surgery. Slit-lamp microscopy showed regenerating lens tissue grew from the peripheral to the central lens in a circular symmetrical pattern 2–3 months after surgery, reaching the center at 5 months post-surgery; direct illumination showed that the visual axis remained translucent. (credit: Haotian Lin et al./Nature)

Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Shiley Eye Institute, with colleagues in China, have developed an eye lens restoration treatment that has been tested in monkeys and in a small human clinical trial. It produced much fewer surgical complications than the current standard-of-care and resulted in regenerated lenses with superior visual function in all 12 of the pediatric cataract patients who received the new surgery.

Congenital cataracts — lens clouding that occurs at birth or shortly thereafter — is a significant cause of blindness in children.

Continue reading “Scientists grow eye lens from patients’ own stem cells, restoring vision” »

Mar 13, 2016

Laser inscribing the characters onto a computer keyboard

Posted by in category: computing

Read more

Mar 13, 2016

This is a spherical flight vehicle built by Korea Aerospace University

Posted by in category: transportation

It has a single rotor and uses four control surfaces.

Read more