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Ceres’ Four-Mile Tall ‘Pyramid’ Is Closer Than Ever, Still Puzzling
The closer we get to Ceres, the largest object in our solar system’s asteroid belt, the stranger it becomes.
In June, NASA released a photo of Ceres, taken by the Dawn spacecraft from 2,700 miles away, that showed a several-mile high “pyramid” protruding from the dwarf planet’s otherwise generally smooth surface. And a new photo, taken last Wednesday from only 900 miles away, shows the mountain is four miles high and has a perimeter of previously unseen, reflective streaked slopes.

Vote or die? Meet the presidential candidate who wants to live forever
A new article from The Daily Dot on transhumanism and my campaign:
The Daily Dot is the hometown newspaper of the World Wide Web, reporting on Reddit, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and more.
New Camera Chip Provides Superfine 3-D Resolution
New imaging technology fits on a tiny chip and, from a distance, can form a high-resolution three-dimensional image of an object on the scale of micrometers.
Microsoft wants you to scan in 3D using only your phone
Forget using dedicated scanners to capture objects in 3D — Microsoft’s MobileFusion would let you use only your phone.

A little light interaction leaves quantum physicists beaming
A team of physicists has taken a step toward making the essential building block of quantum computers out of pure light. Their advance has to do with logic gates that perform operations on input data to create new outputs.

Omnidirectional Virtual Reality Treadmill to Open Up Preorders
Chinese-based VR treadmill project Kat Walk raised nearly $150,000 on Kickstarter, and the company has announced that non-Kickstarter preorders are coming soon.
MIT’s New 3D Printer Can Print 10 Materials Simultaneously
Fab news, everyone!

‘Information sabotage’ on Wikipedia claimed | KurzweilAI
“Wikipedia entries on politically controversial scientific topics can be unreliable due to “information sabotage,” according to an open-access paper published today in the journal PLOS One.”

In The Future, Space Planes Could Be Powered By Microwaves
Over half a century after the dawn of the space age, getting to space remains an epic challenge. Twice this year, the first stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket met a fiery end on the Atlantic Ocean—both attempts to recover and reuse rockets to reduce launch costs. A third rocket never made orbit, exploding on ascent.