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Mar 31, 2024

Frontiers: The Internet comprises a decentralized global system that serves humanity’s collective effort to generate

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education, internet, nanotechnology, Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI, supercomputing

Process, and store data, most of which is handled by the rapidly expanding cloud. A stable, secure, real-time system may allow for interfacing the cloud with the human brain. One promising strategy for enabling such a system, denoted here as a “human brain/cloud interface” (“B/CI”), would be based on technologies referred to here as “neuralnanorobotics.” Future neuralnanorobotics technologies are anticipated to facilitate accurate diagnoses and eventual cures for the ∼400 conditions that affect the human brain. Neuralnanorobotics may also enable a B/CI with controlled connectivity between neural activity and external data storage and processing, via the direct monitoring of the brain’s ∼86 × 109 neurons and ∼2 × 1014 synapses. Subsequent to navigating the human vasculature, three species of neuralnanorobots (endoneurobots, gliabots, and synaptobots) could traverse the blood–brain barrier (BBB), enter the brain parenchyma, ingress into individual human brain cells, and autoposition themselves at the axon initial segments of neurons (endoneurobots), within glial cells (gliabots), and in intimate proximity to synapses (synaptobots). They would then wirelessly transmit up to ∼6 × 1016 bits per second of synaptically processed and encoded human–brain electrical information via auxiliary nanorobotic fiber optics (30 cm3) with the capacity to handle up to 1018 bits/sec and provide rapid data transfer to a cloud based supercomputer for real-time brain-state monitoring and data extraction. A neuralnanorobotically enabled human B/CI might serve as a personalized conduit, allowing persons to obtain direct, instantaneous access to virtually any facet of cumulative human knowledge. Other anticipated applications include myriad opportunities to improve education, intelligence, entertainment, traveling, and other interactive experiences. A specialized application might be the capacity to engage in fully immersive experiential/sensory experiences, including what is referred to here as “transparent shadowing” (TS). Through TS, individuals might experience episodic segments of the lives of other willing participants (locally or remote) to, hopefully, encourage and inspire improved understanding and tolerance among all members of the human family.

“We’ll have nanobots that… connect our neocortex to a synthetic neocortex in the cloud… Our thinking will be a… biological and non-biological hybrid.”

— Ray Kurzweil, TED 2014

Mar 31, 2024

Scientist reveals how to regrow your age-shrunken brain in just six months

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience

Research shows that losing cognitive function in old age may not be inevitable and simple measures can help extend the brain’s health span.

Mar 31, 2024

This 3D experiment could help predict landslides precisely

Posted by in category: materials

MIT researchers devise new technique to visualize the internal forces within granular materials in intricate 3D detail.

Mar 31, 2024

New conversion surfaces to enhance spacecraft instruments

Posted by in categories: engineering, particle physics, space

Southwest Research Institute has invested in research to enhance the capabilities of spacecraft instruments. Consequently, they have developed more effective conversion surfaces for the detection and analysis of low-energy particles in outer space.

Led by Dr. Jianliang Lin of Mechanical Engineering and Dr. Justyna Sokół of the Space Science Division, the project could potentially change our understanding of space physics and exploration.

Mar 31, 2024

This new application can detect printed document forgery

Posted by in category: mobile phones

New app for smartphones to detect forgery in documents with the pilot project expected to be deployed in Zurich later this month.

Mar 31, 2024

Desk-sized steam turbines could change energy landscapes

Posted by in category: energy

Researchers have reduced the size of steam turbines using supercritical CO2 as a medium, hinting at smaller power plants.

Mar 31, 2024

World’s fastest: This camera can shoot 156.3 trillion frames per second

Posted by in category: electronics

INRS researchers unveil an ultrafast camera featuring SCARF tech, allowing images to be captured at an unprecedented 156.3 trillion fps.

Mar 31, 2024

China’s new EV-based catapult can fire a 30-ton plane in 2.1 seconds

Posted by in categories: military, sustainability

Chinese researchers have allegedly developed a new, powerful Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) using technology found in electric vehicles.

The catapult can launch a 30-tonne projectile from 0 to 230 feet/s (0 to 70 m/s) in around 2.1 seconds.

Continue reading “China’s new EV-based catapult can fire a 30-ton plane in 2.1 seconds” »

Mar 31, 2024

This drug-delivering contact lens will heal corneal wounds faster

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, engineering

Conventionally, corneal abrasion patients wear a clear, oxygen-permeable bandage contact lens for seven to 10 days but this treatment does not ensure the drug remains in the eye for sustained treatment, according to a statement by the University of Waterloo.

This new lens material was developed with the ambition to address the limitations of current methods for treating corneal abrasions. The contact lens material is derived from gelatin methacrylate, a collagen by-product. Collagen is a protein naturally found in the eye and is involved in the wound-healing process but it’s too soft and weak to perform as an appropriate contact lens material.

Dr. Evelyn Yim, an associate professor of chemical engineering at the University of Waterloo, found a way to transform gelatin methacrylate into a biomaterial ten times stronger than collagen, the statement revealed.

Mar 31, 2024

Nuclear fusion can satisfy super AI’s enormous energy appetite — Altman

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, robotics/AI

According to Altman, AI will require vast amounts of energy to operate, and nuclear fusion would be the best bet for its source.

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