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Mar 19, 2016
A Student Claims to Have Designed Working Artificial Gills
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: innovation, wearables
In time for vacation/ summer holiday season.
A mysterious site showcases a detailed blueprint of a wearable device that lets users breathe underwater like fish.
Mar 19, 2016
Watch out for these malware attacks on your vehicle — Federal Bureau of Investigation to drivers
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: cybercrime/malcode, transportation
FBI — You have a connected car/ self driving car in the US; be careful because the hackers are coming.
That’s why the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation issued a bulletin warning about the increasing vulnerability of motor vehicles to hacking.
The FBI warns drivers to ensure their car’s software is up to date, to be careful making unauthorized modifications to their car’s software and when connecting to third-party devices, and be wary of who has physical access to their vehicle. Instead it’s meant to educate the public after a series of publicly known hacks of cars in 2015, including a Jeep intentionally hijacked by researchers while driving down the highway.
Mar 19, 2016
Virtual reality horror game The Brookhaven Experiment will scare the s**t out of you
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, virtual reality
The unholy, skinless, bloody creatures shambled toward me on all sides. My pistol was pitifully inadequate. For the first time ever, I pulled a VR rig off my head in the middle of a demo.
Not even extreme nausea had caused me to do so before Thursday, when I demoed the HTC Vive game The Brookhaven Experiment at Valve Software’s booth at the 2016 Game Developers Conference. I’d always choked down the bile and forced myself to finish the demo rather than bail, even though this is almost always a bad decision. Call it stupid gamer pride.
Mar 19, 2016
Pretty Certain This Tarp-Covered Object Isn’t A UFO But It Is Very Intriguing
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: law enforcement, transportation
The image above has been splashed all over the net over the last week. It looks like a scene out of The Flight Of The Navigator, but really, that tarp could be hiding the future of American air power.
The image was taken by Arizona resident Charlene Yazzie on Arizona Route 77, with the convoy of trucks and black SUVs from the Department of Public Safety heading south toward the town of Holbrook, Ariz.
Continue reading “Pretty Certain This Tarp-Covered Object Isn’t A UFO But It Is Very Intriguing” »
Mar 19, 2016
Sci-fi author has brain cryogenically frozen so it can be reanimated in the future
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, life extension, neuroscience
If I am not mistaken she edited The Three Body Problem, she did not write it.
In what seems like a story ripped straight from the pages of an Isaac Asimov novel, a recently deceased Chinese woman named Du Hong just had her brain cryogenically frozen in hopes that, in the future, the technology to bring her back to life will be created. No joke. Hong, a science fiction author herself, paid upwards of $120k to have her brain sent from China to Scottsdale, Arizona to undergo a freezing procedure at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation. Her idea is that while modern tech doesn’t allow for the reanimation of her brain today, inevitable advancements in cryonics will one day bring her back to life.
Before passing away last May from pancreatic cancer, the 61-year-old Du decided she wanted to allow her brain to be the subject of experiments after her death. Though it took some time before the team at Alcor actually conducted the procedure, doctors in Beijing prepped Du’s brain after her official time of death on May 30. Despite the Alcor Life Extension Foundation agreeing to freeze Du’s brain, the organization made it clear that it wouldn’t be the one to actually attempt to bring Du back to life in the future.
Mar 19, 2016
The case for a robot president
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: computing, geopolitics, robotics/AI
I did an interview on AI and politics for CBC, which also went out on NPR yesterday.
This week, Google’s artificially intelligent computer, AlphaGo won a tournament in the complex board game called Go. American presidential candidate Zoltan Istvan says it’s that in a matter of 10 to 15 years A.I. will be advanced enough to be president of the United States of America.
Mar 19, 2016
Fun (and Some Nausea) with the First Games for the Oculus Rift Headset
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: entertainment, virtual reality
An initiative to resolve global suffering with the removal of all money, debt and trade, which are now outdated and unnecessary through modern technology.
Mar 18, 2016
Kuwait has become the first country to make DNA testing mandatory for all residents
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, government, law enforcement
In a controversial move, Kuwait has passed a law making it mandatory for all its 1.3 million citizens and 2.9 million foreign residents to have their DNA entered onto a national database.
Anyone who refuses to submit their DNA for testing risks one year in prison and a fine of up to US$33,000, and those who provide a fake sample can be jailed for seven years.
The decision came after an Islamic State-led suicide bombing in Kuwait City on 26 June, which killed 26 people and wounded 227 more. The government hopes that the new database, which is projected to cost around US$400 million, will make it quicker and easier to make arrests in the future.