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Dec 7, 2015

Tiny dark matter stars would harbour particles that act as one

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

A certain dark matter candidate could clump into stars where it would behave like the Borg race in Star Trek – and this might make it observable.

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Dec 7, 2015

The PlayStation VR Games Sony Announced Today Look Amazing — By Drew Olanoff | TechCrunch

Posted by in categories: business, virtual reality, wearables

screen-shot-2015-12-05-at-11-40-28-am

“Sony unveiled some new information about the PlayStation VR and showed off some new titles. Unfortunately we’ve gotten no more information on dates aside from early 2016. However, the games we saw during today’s keynote look fantastic.”

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Dec 7, 2015

Gene Editing Progress: Newly Engineered System Slashes Error Rate

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

After recent good news regarding the accuracy of famed CRISPR-Cas9, a new form has been engineered that’s even more accurate than the original.

A string of positive developments

If you’ve been reading the news lately, you may know recent analysis of the gene editing system CRISPR-Cas9 has had a string of positive updates. We found out it’s surprisingly more accurate than we first believed, which bodes well as scientists across the world start thinking about the move into human models.

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Dec 7, 2015

Life in the Robot Age: When We’re All Unemployed

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

“You’ll never get a good job, son, if you’re smoking pot all the time!”

That’s a scolding you won’t hear in the future. Besides the fact that pot smokers can become president, the future will not require you to get a good job. The traditional motivation to keep your mind orderly and bourgeois will be gone, so let your mind fly its freak flag and wander the Technicolor pathways already cleared by St. John of Patmos, Salvador Dali, and Carl Sagan.

In the near future, we may all be unemployed. We are entering what is generally called the “second machine age.” And, optimistically speaking, it may become the best thing that ever happened to the human being.

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Dec 7, 2015

Drivers Race In Virtual Reality Using Real Cars

Posted by in categories: transportation, virtual reality

We hear about virtual reality all the time, but what if your driving in *real life* actually controlled a virtual car? http://voc.tv/1P6L9zh

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Dec 7, 2015

The High Speed robot from Stäubli

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Visit: www.technologyvista.com

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Dec 7, 2015

e-Celsius® Performance

Posted by in categories: health, innovation

Bodycap develops innovative solutions, promoting new uses and is placed at the service of world players in the health and well-being.

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Dec 6, 2015

60 Minutes On This Bicycle Can Power Your Home For 24 Hours

Posted by in categories: energy, habitats

Would you exercise for an hour every day if the workout powered your home for twenty-four hours?

People often complain about the high costs of energy and the fact that they “never have time to workout.” This invention certainly solves both conundrums.

And, most importantly, this free power invention has the potential to lift the 1.3 billion people who presently live without electricity out of poverty.

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Dec 6, 2015

Google files patent for ‘needle-free’ blood-drawing system

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

WATCH: Google has recently filed a patent for a blood drawing system that is completely needle-free. It could be used to test blood glucose levels for diabetics. Jenny Sung explains.

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Dec 6, 2015

Longer Life in a Pill May Already Be Available at Your Local Drug Store

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

To most of the scientific community, “anti-aging” is a dirty word.

A medical field historically associated with charlatans and quacks, scientists have strictly restricted the quest for a “longevity pill” to basic research. The paradigm is simple and one-toned: working on model organisms by manipulating different genes and proteins, scientists slowly tease out the molecular mechanisms that lead to — and reverse — signs of aging, with no guarantee that they’ll work in humans.

longer-life-in-a-pill-41But it’s been a fruitful search: multiple drug candidates, many already on the market for immune or psychiatric disorders, have consistently delayed age-associated diseases and stretched the lifespan of fruit flies, roundworms and mice. Yet human trials have been far beyond reach — without the FDA acknowledging “aging” as a legitimate target for drug development, researchers have had no way of pitching clinical trials to the regulatory agency.

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