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May 19, 2023

Specialized polymers bring us one step closer to ‘cyborgs’

Posted by in categories: biological, cyborgs

Coating implantable electronics in the polymer PEDOT can extend their life, which could make cyborgs more common in the future.


Researchers have developed a special polymer coating for electronics implants that make them less abrasive to biological tissue.

May 19, 2023

Scientists in China have grown deer antlers on mice using stem cells:

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

They identified a new type of stem cell, which enables deer to regenerate their antlers year after year.

When transplanted into mice, it took just 45 days for them to grow antler-like bumps containing cartilage and bone.

This early research could potentially give us a better way to repair skeletal injuries — and maybe even help us to regrow our own limbs one day: https://www.freethink.com/science/deer-antlers-regeneration.

Continue reading “Scientists in China have grown deer antlers on mice using stem cells:” »

May 19, 2023

Researchers are stuffing drones into taxidermy birds to make them seem more ‘natural’

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

Researchers have engineered a robotic lionfish with synthetic arteries, similar to those found in a human’s circulatory system. The fish “blood” that runs through it serves as both the robot’s power source and controls its movement. The findings, published Wednesday in Nature, may propel the new wave of soft robots, in which inventors seek to improve lifelike automated machines for human connection.


It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s… sort of both, actually. And its designers think animals won’t notice the difference.

May 19, 2023

A bit long, but a good read

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education, evolution, genetics, media & arts, mobile phones, nanotechnology, neuroscience, Ray Kurzweil, singularity

Ago when I was a kid in college my friend Eric got me into many things. We played music together and used a Kurzweil Keyboard, and a bunch of weird stuff. We had an ADAT hooked up to the Kurzweil with fiber optic cables. I had Roland keyboards & Drum machines but I loved the Kurzweil. He started teaching me many things because he was really smart. I was studying psychology so he loaned me his DSMIV and books on Industrial Organiza… See more.

A bit long, but a good read. About 20 years ago when I was a kid in college my friend Eric got me into many things. We played music together and used a Kurzweil Keyboard, and a bunch of weird stuff. We had an ADAT hooked up to the Kurzweil with fiber optic cables. I had Roland keyboards & Drum machines but I loved the Kurzweil. He started teaching me many things because he was really smart. I was studying psychology so he loaned me his DSMIV and books on Industrial Organizational Psychology. He then told me about other books like “Society of Mind”(Marvin Minsky), “Age of Intelligent Machine” (Ray Kurzweil), Engines of Creation (K Eric Drexler), of course Richard Feynman, and many more. I dreamed of that technology and kept reading more. In the 2000’s Drexler and Feynman’s visions became a paradign and applications started rolling out, and now nanotechnology is applied to most everything we know. We are now at the second paradigm where we see the visions of Minsky/McCarthy, Kurzweil and others becoming easily available applications. As a Child I watched the Jetsons & Srar Trek and now with flying cars it’s not if, but when. Space travel is already here. All these technologies will transform global societies, but we must all focus on investing more in the advancement of society than the destruction of it. Many of the things we now invision in our minds we may see in 10 years. People think saving your consciousness & longevity is impossible, but I don’t. Some even thought that regenerating tissue and organs is impossible, but we can do that now. Now people keep saying, “This ancient turtle died, this rhino died (I hear that all the time in Kenya), this elephant died, but I say okay it’s not cool, but what can we salvage from it to bring the species back with advances in technology later? Do we use cryogenics? How do we save the genetic material? Technology can be used in so many ways. Every Day Lifeboat posts feats many do not know. If more people on earth had such a focus, as opposed to dumbed down entertainment like The Kardashians for instance, we would be living in a much better world with more people proposing more ideas and collaborations. I always say we are moving in the wrong way in the evolutionary process, and it is a bit telling that some phones are smarter than many people. I you add ChatGPT. We have so much advanced technology and science, yet we can’t even fight cancer. It took decades for people to learn the importance of diet in HIV treatment. However, Ray Kurzweil has for decades talked about the importance of diet for longevity. Just the other day it was published that processed foods affect cognitive function. Before that it was released processed foods cause cancer. We must change, and go in the right way of evolution to the Singularity another paradigm shift and cooperarion, instead of backwards to a barbaric age of conflict and greed. Always share your knowledge and I thank all who do share in this group. More should share as well, and Lifeboat should use more platforms to reach more people.

May 19, 2023

Tensor Holography MIT Student creates AI learning advancing Holograms

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical, holograms, media & arts, mobile phones, robotics/AI, virtual reality

From 2021

A new method called tensor holography could enable the creation of holograms for virtual reality, 3D printing, medical imaging, and more — and it can run on a smartphone.

Continue reading “Tensor Holography MIT Student creates AI learning advancing Holograms” »

May 19, 2023

15-year-old Gersende drives to school in a Citroën Ami every day

Posted by in category: education

Only a scooter driving licence is needed! #DWREV

May 19, 2023

Sound vibrations can encode and process data like quantum computers do

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

A simple mechanical system built from aluminium rods uses vibrations to encode information, mimicking quantum computing in a non-quantum system.

By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan

May 19, 2023

Wearable smart ring Oura could soon let you make payments, confirm your identity and much more

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, wearables

All of this when it just looks like a regular piece of jewelry.

May 19, 2023

Meet ‘DarkBERT:’ South Korea’s Dark Web AI could combat cybercrime

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, internet, robotics/AI

A team of researchers from South Korea has developed a new LLM called “DarkBert,” which has been trained exclusively on the “Dark Web.”

A team of South Korean researchers has taken the unprecedented step of developing and training artificial intelligence (AI) on the so-called “Dark Web.” The Dark Web trained AI, called DarkBERT, was unleashed to trawl and index what it could find to help shed light on ways to combat cybercrime.

Continue reading “Meet ‘DarkBERT:’ South Korea’s Dark Web AI could combat cybercrime” »

May 19, 2023

New device allows amputees to feel temperature sensation

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, transhumanism

A new non-invasive device called MiniTouch provides thermal feedback about the object being touched.

Amputees can regain temperature sensation in their phantom hand thanks to new bionic technology. Researchers from Switzerland’s Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPF) are leading this innovation.

They created a non-invasive device called MiniTouch for the study, which provides thermal feedback about the object being touched.