Menu

Blog

Page 11479

May 5, 2016

The Science of Tattoo Removal Cream Just Left the World of Wishful Thinking

Posted by in category: science

Your immune system holds the key to making tattoos permanent — and also to erasing them.

Read more

May 5, 2016

“Black Holes could be Portals to Other Universes” — Stephen Hawking

Posted by in categories: cosmology, media & arts

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-OTbRoY1ao&feature=share

“Black holes could be interdimentional portals to other universes” — Stephen Hawking.

~~
Links:
1) VIDEO LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enJEbzZi2Fs

Continue reading “‘Black Holes could be Portals to Other Universes’ — Stephen Hawking” »

May 5, 2016

This Astrophysicist Posed an Alien Challenge and the Internet Is Racing to Solve It

Posted by in categories: alien life, encryption, internet

If aliens sent you an encrypted binary message, could you answer? René Heller, an astrophysicist at the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, wants to hear from you.

Last month, Heller posed a hypothetical question as part of the #SETIDecryptChallenge: “Suppose a telescope on Earth receives a series of pulses from a fixed, unresolved source beyond the solar system,” he wrote. “It turns out the pulses carry a message.”

The encrypted message is a vast sea of 0’s and 1’s. You can see it here, but here’s a GIF for your convenience.

Continue reading “This Astrophysicist Posed an Alien Challenge and the Internet Is Racing to Solve It” »

May 5, 2016

Deep Space Industries partners with Luxembourg to test asteroid mining technologies

Posted by in categories: government, space travel

Deep Space Industries, the asteroid mining company, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Luxembourg Government to co-fund the development and launch of DSI’s first spacecraft. Known as Prospector-X, the small spacecraft will test key technologies in Low Earth Orbit that will be necessary for future asteroid prospecting.

Read more

May 5, 2016

Americans Distracted By The Transgender Bathroom Argument While 3 Nuclear Disasters Unfold

Posted by in categories: internet, sex

The debate over which bathroom transgender people can use has been taking over the Internet and our social conversations for weeks now, and it’s getting a bit ridiculous. Transgender people have always used the bathroom that they feel comfortable with, whether it’s the bathroom that belongs to the sex they were born with or not, and there have been no problems.

In the heat of this debate, Americans are not only divided on the issue but collectively distracted from bigger, more important issues, such as the fact that there are three nuclear disasters occurring throughout the nation that have been getting no media attention.

One major disaster that will soon come to head all started with a fire at the Bridgeton Landfill in Missouri that has been burning for five years. Despite this extremely long length of time, authorities say that this fire is nowhere close to being contained. What’s more is that St. Louis County officials have reported that they have an emergency plan in place because the fire is closing in on nuclear waste dump.

Continue reading “Americans Distracted By The Transgender Bathroom Argument While 3 Nuclear Disasters Unfold” »

May 5, 2016

Alaska’s Pavlof Volcano spews ash 20K feet into air

Posted by in category: futurism

Interesting News


A volcano on Alaska’s Aleutian Islands erupted Sunday afternoon and sent ash 20,000 feet into the air, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Read more

May 5, 2016

An Autonomous Robot Surgeon Just Beat A Human Surgeon At Their Job

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

Autonomous robot surgeon prototype stitches pigs’ colons better than human and human-assisted robot surgeons:

In his proof-of-concept study, the STAR system stitched together two parts of a pig’s colon. The researchers likened this task to reconnecting a cut garden hose—and just like the hose, if the stitching is done imperfectly, the colon can be prone to leaks that can be life-threatening. Using the vision system and a pressure sensor at the end of the robotic arm, the STAR tool automatically placed sutures in the tissue to reconnect it, both in tissue in the lab and inside living pigs. The researchers then compared the STAR’s performance to that of a surgeon performing the same task with a laparoscopic tool as well as a robot-assisted surgery in which the surgeon controls the robot.

Comparing the uniformity of the sutures, number of mistakes and the highest pressure that the tissue could withstand without leaking, the STAR system performed better than the human and the human-directed robot. None of the living pigs had any complications from the operations.

Continue reading “An Autonomous Robot Surgeon Just Beat A Human Surgeon At Their Job” »

May 5, 2016

The End of Aging? Soon It Might Be a Prescription Away

Posted by in categories: biological, Elon Musk, life extension

They are worth 6 billion dollars.


They are calling him the Elon Musk of biology. But will we see an end to aging soon?

Continue reading “The End of Aging? Soon It Might Be a Prescription Away” »

May 5, 2016

The Brilliantly Insane Plan to Reconstruct Leonardo da Vinci’s Genome

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, media & arts

The more da Vinci’s the better, if you ask me!


An international team of scholars has just unveiled plans to science the shit out of Leonardo da Vinci, the man who gave us the Mona Lisa and envisioned futuristic technologies like helicopters and tanks 500 years ago. Goals of the fledgling “Leonardo Project” include recovering the famous Renaissance figure’s remains and reconstructing his genetic code.

The Leonardo Project brings together geneticists, genealogists, archaeologists, and art historians from Italy, Spain, France, the United States and elsewhere. “This is a fabulous, interdisciplinary project,” said Rhonda Roby, a geneticist at the Craig Venter Institute in California, who will be contributing its expertise in genomic reconstruction to the effort.

Continue reading “The Brilliantly Insane Plan to Reconstruct Leonardo da Vinci’s Genome” »

May 5, 2016

How to Watch Tonight’s Eta Aquarid Meteor Shower

Posted by in category: space

The Eta Aquarid meteor shower is tonight, and it’s going to be a spectacular show. Here’s how, when, and where to watch the Eta Aquarids—and why they’ve been so unjustly ignored for so long.

The Eta Aquarids are a late spring meteor shower made up of the icy debris of Halley’s Comet. The comet is actually responsible for two separate meteor showers a year—this one and the Orionids, which occurs in October.

The Orionids are typically overshadowed by the Eta Aquarids, but that shouldn’t be seen as a judgement on the latter’s quality. All it means is that people have been sleeping through a really excellent meteor shower for no good reason. Tonight is your chance to rectify that.

Continue reading “How to Watch Tonight’s Eta Aquarid Meteor Shower” »