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Apr 8, 2016
Trends in Nanomedicine — Technology Benchmarking & Innovator Analysis
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, health, life extension, nanotechnology
Nanomedicine has been something that many in tech expected to be a critical part of the healthcare landscape for over a decade. I am glad to see how quickly the technology is being adopted as part of bio-medical research and treatments for various diseases, etc.
NEW YORK, April 7, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — Nano-based science paving the precision medicine era.
The continued development of new treatments associated with the demographic trends and public health considerations is remarkable. Nanotechnology has been identified as one most relevant key enabling technologies of the last ten years, significantly impacting on many different biomedical developments in a broad spectrum of applications therapeutics, diagnostics, theranostics, medical imaging, regenerative medicine, life sciences research and biosciences, among many others. In fact, nanomedicine is present in all therapeutic areas, exhibiting a perceptible and extensive impact in the treatment and diagnosis of some most concerned diseases.
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Apr 8, 2016
‘Chatbots’ are coming; next stop Facebook
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
I expect to see more and more online consumers having their own “Personalized” bots that mimics them online. Granted at the moment we see the more generic versions of a personal assistant, etc. However, I do believe the next major push will be providing the consumers the flexibility of personalizing their bots that mimics them in their communication styles, interaction style, interests, personalities, etc.
SAN FRANCISCO — Will there be a bot for that?
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Apr 8, 2016
The new Library of Alexandria builds up its supercomputing powers
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: supercomputing
Good trivia.
Julius Caesar set out to destroy the original Library of Alexandria: if only he could see the new resources the researchers have access to now.
Apr 8, 2016
UV-C LEDs and lasers: low-voltage light sources for killing germs
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
Aluminum gallium nitride UV-C LED devices fabricated with novel epitaxial techniques show improved efficiency and have longer operating lifetimes.
Apr 8, 2016
Quantum dots enhance light-to-current conversion in layered metal dichalcogenide semiconductors
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, electronics, quantum physics, solar power, sustainability
Improving light-sensing devices with Q-Dots.
Harnessing the power of the sun and creating light-harvesting or light-sensing devices requires a material that both absorbs light efficiently and converts the energy to highly mobile electrical current. Finding the ideal mix of properties in a single material is a challenge, so scientists have been experimenting with ways to combine different materials to create “hybrids” with enhanced features.
In two just-published papers, scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, Stony Brook University, and the University of Nebraska describe one such approach that combines the excellent light-harvesting properties of quantum dots with the tunable electrical conductivity of a layered tin disulfide semiconductor. The hybrid material exhibited enhanced light-harvesting properties through the absorption of light by the quantum dots and their energy transfer to tin disulfide, both in laboratory tests and when incorporated into electronic devices. The research paves the way for using these materials in optoelectronic applications such as energy-harvesting photovoltaics, light sensors, and light emitting diodes (LEDs).
Apr 8, 2016
WebTorrent Desktop Streams Torrents Beautifully
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, internet, media & arts
WebTorrent is best described as a BitTorrent client for the web. It allows people to share files directly from their browser, without having to configure or install any additional software. Now WebTorrent Desktop has arrived, offering a lightweight yet feature-rich streaming and castable experience on Windows, Linux and Mac.
Every day millions of Internet users fire up a desktop-based BitTorrent client to download and share everything from movies, TV shows and music, to the latest Linux distros.
Sharing of multimedia content is mostly achieved by use of a desktop client such as uTorrent, Vuze, qBitTorrent or Transmission, but thanks to Stanford University graduate Feross Aboukhadijeh, there is another way.
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Apr 8, 2016
Video: Humans Could Engineer Themselves for Long-Term Space Travel
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: bioengineering, biological, genetics, space
Humans may need to genetically engineer themselves to withstand the harsh and unpredictable environments encountered during long-term space travel, one researcher says.
Apr 8, 2016
SCHAFT Unveils Awesome New Bipedal Robot at Japan Conference
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: robotics/AI
Out of nowhere, at a conference in Japan today, SCHAFT demoed a new bipedal robot designed to “help society”.
Since today everybody is debating the question whether we live in a computer simulation, here is why I think Bostrom’s simulation argument is wrong: