Menu

Blog

Page 11294

Mar 11, 2016

Solar energy rolls out like a carpet with groundbreaking Roll-Array photovoltaics

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability, transportation

The Roll-Array is easily towable by a standard 4×4 vehicle such as a Land Rover. When connected to the back of the car, the flexible solar panels are pulled out of a spool and create ground cover in a matter of minutes. On their website, Renovagen claims the panels will be able generate up to 100kWp – 10 times more power than other transportable solar panels on the market today.

solar power, solar energy, alternative energy, solar panels on a roll, rollable solar panels, Roll-array, rollarray, Renovagen, John Hingley, flexible solar panels, pv array, photovoltaic, photovoltaic panels, rolling solar panels

Continue reading “Solar energy rolls out like a carpet with groundbreaking Roll-Array photovoltaics” »

Mar 11, 2016

Scientist identifies mechanism to regenerate heart tissue

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

The MDI Biological Laboratory has announced new discoveries about the mechanisms underlying the regeneration of heart tissue by Assistant Professor Voot P. Yin, Ph.D., which raise hope that drugs can be identified to help the body grow muscle cells and remove scar tissue, important steps in the regeneration of heart tissue.

Heart disease is a leading cause of death in the western world. Yin is using zebrafish to study the regeneration of tissue because of the amazing capacity of these common aquarium fish to regenerate the form and function of almost any body part, including heart, bone, skin and blood vessels, regardless of their age. In contrast, the adult mammalian cardiovascular system has limited regenerative capacity.

“Although zebrafish look quite different from humans, they share an astonishing 70 percent of their genetic material with humans, including genes important for the formation of new heart muscle,” Yin said. “These genes are conserved in humans and other mammals, but their activity is regulated differently after an injury like a .”

Continue reading “Scientist identifies mechanism to regenerate heart tissue” »

Mar 10, 2016

Google’s AI systems are on a roll as robots learn the best way to pick up objects [Video]

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

As achievements go, learning how to pick up objects doesn’t sound quite as impressive as twice beating the world Go champion – it is, after all, something the average toddler can do. But it’s the fact that the robots themselves figured out the best way to do it using neural networks that makes this notable.

A recent Google report spotted by TNW explains how the company let robot arms pick up a variety of different objects, using neural networks to learn by trial-and-error the best way to handle each. Some 800,000 goes later, the robots seemed to have it figured out pretty well …

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

Microfluidics: DARPA is betting embedded water droplets could cool next-gen chips

Posted by in categories: computing, futurism

More urgency placed on making Microfluidics/ embedded H2O droplets for cooling microchips so that the emergence of high performing microchips coming in the future.


DARPA and Lockheed Martin have a plan to build microfluidic cooling into modern microprocessors. This could dramatically improve CPU cooling and break the bottleneck on clock speed scaling — at least, for a little while.

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

ARPA-E Funding Personal Climate Control Systems with Robots, Foot Coolers, and More

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

Government’s other big NextGen Program “Advanced Research Projects Agency-EnergyAdvanced Research Projects Agency-Energy” (ARPA) is funding a personal climate change solution with robots, foot coolers, etc. There is one fact; US Government does love their acronyms.


Why heat or cool a whole building when you could heat or cool individual people instead?

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

A brief look at what the man who put the @ in email started

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Another example of technology outliving it’s creator — email.


A brief history of electronic messages, from the Queen’s first email to the triumph of spam to the launch of Gmail to mobile email.

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

Electroceuticals: The Future of Medicine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

More news from DARPA’s Electrical Rx efforts along with GSK’s own advancement.


In the future, doctors won’t treat diseases with drugs. Instead, they’ll use tiny implantable devices that communicate with our body’s electrical language.

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

Giant step forward taken in generating optical qubits

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

More large steps forward in Quantum technology with the latest chip with optical qubits.


The optical chip overcomes a number of obstacles in the development of quantum computers. A research team has demonstrated that on-chip quantum frequency combs can be used to simultaneously generate multiphoton entangled quantum bit states. It is the first chip capable of simultaneously generating multi-photon qubit states and two-photon entangled states on hundreds of frequency modes. The chip is scalable, compact, and compatible with existing technologies.

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

Gravitational Waves Will Show The Quantum Nature Of Reality

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Now that LIGO has finally seen gravitational waves, we know that ripples in the fabric of space are real. But is gravity fundamentally a quantum force? Gravitational waves can teach us, but it’s won’t be LIGO that does it!

Read more

Mar 10, 2016

IARPA awards $18.7 million contract to Allen Institute to reconstruct neuronal connections

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, information science, neuroscience, robotics/AI

Allen Institute working with Baylor on reconstructing neuronal connections.


The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) has awarded an $18.7 million contract to the Allen Institute for Brain Science, as part of a larger project with Baylor College of Medicine and Princeton University, to create the largest ever roadmap to understand how the function of networks in the brain’s cortex relates to the underlying connections of its individual neurons.

The project is part of the Machine Intelligence from Cortical Networks (MICrONS) program, which seeks to revolutionize machine learning by reverse-engineering the algorithms of the brain.

Continue reading “IARPA awards $18.7 million contract to Allen Institute to reconstruct neuronal connections” »