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Nov 7, 2022

New VR system lets you share sights on the move without causing VR sickness

Posted by in categories: transportation, virtual reality

Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have engineered a virtual reality (VR) remote collaboration system which lets users on Segways share not only what they see but also the feeling of acceleration as they move. Riders equipped with cameras and accelerometers can feedback their sensations to a remote user on a modified wheelchair wearing a VR headset. User surveys showed significant reduction in VR sickness, promising a better experience for remote collaboration activities.

Virtual reality (VR) technology is making rapid headway, letting users experience and share an immersive, 3D environment. In the field of remote work, one of the major advances it offers is a chance for workers in different locations to share what they see and hear in real-time.

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Nov 7, 2022

AI could help cancer patients avoid a deadly recurrence

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

AI could help doctors identify which skin cancer patients are at high-risk of a melanoma recurrence before their initial cancer is even treated — giving them…

Nov 7, 2022

This stunning timelapse reveals how the universe has changed in just 12 years

Posted by in category: space

NASA combined 18 all-sky images to create a timelapse of the night sky.


The Universe is over 13 billion years old, so a 12-year slice of that time might seem uneventful. But a timelapse movie from NASA shows how much can change in just over a decade.

Nov 7, 2022

New smart contact lens monitors for glaucoma 24/7

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

There’s a certain insidiousness to the way glaucoma — a group of eye diseases that damage the optic nerve — can snatch away a person’s vision.

That damage can be so slow that people may never notice until it is too late, and the long term impacts, like loss of peripheral vision, blind spots, and blindness, have set in.

Glaucoma impacts tens of millions of people globally, and is the second leading cause of blindness, after cataracts. Now, Purdue University researchers have developed smart contact lenses that may help save people’s sight.

Nov 7, 2022

Scientist claims he has made the ultimate unhackable voting machine

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Experts do not want to hack it.

Juan Gilbert, a professor of computer science at the University of Florida, has claimed that he has built the ultimate unhackable voting machine that can put concerns to rest over machine-related voting, Undark.

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Nov 7, 2022

This company built a 3D-printed net zero house to decrease carbon dioxide

Posted by in categories: climatology, economics, habitats, sustainability

“We face two global crises in housing and climate change.”

Southern California met its first-in-the-world 3D-printed zero net home thanks to Mighty Buildings. As part of a 40-unit community in Desert Hot Springs, these 3D-printed houses also draw attention to environmental and economic strategies.

“We are excited to be the first company in the world to complete what we believe to be the sustainable housing standard of the future,” said Mighty Buildings CEO Slava Solonitsyn, as per Dezeen.

Continue reading “This company built a 3D-printed net zero house to decrease carbon dioxide” »

Nov 7, 2022

Ghost particles detected from the South Pole could reveal the inner workings of black holes

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

The latest findings are “the next big step towards the realization of neutrino astronomy.”

A black hole roughly 47 million light-years away, called NGC 1,068, is spewing out mysterious and elusive “ghost particles”, or neutrinos.

Neutrinos are notoriously difficult to detect as they require precise instruments deep below the Earth’s surface to avoid any interference from cosmic rays and background radiation.

Nov 7, 2022

Quantum engineers improved the silicon chip performance by 100 times setting a new standard

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Their quantum computing processors can store information up to two milliseconds.

Researchers from the University of New South Wales have broken new ground in quantum computing by demonstrating that ‘spin qubits’- qubits where the information is stored in the spin momentum of an electron-can store data for up to two milliseconds, 100 times longer than previous benchmarks in the same quantum processor.

Classical computers work with bits—consisting of ones and zeroes—but a quantum computer uses quantum bits or qubits, which, on top of the ones and zeroes, also has a superposition where it can be a one and a zero at the same time.

Continue reading “Quantum engineers improved the silicon chip performance by 100 times setting a new standard” »

Nov 7, 2022

550-million-year-old Fossils Just Solved a Centuries-Old ‘Skeleton’ Mystery

Posted by in category: futurism

Determining the appearance of the earliest creatures to develop skeletons was impossible — until now.

Scientists have resolved a centuries-old mystery by determining the appearance of the earliest animals to create skeletons — thanks to an extremely well-preserved collection of fossils found in eastern Yunnan Province, China.

“This really is a one-in-million discovery”

Continue reading “550-million-year-old Fossils Just Solved a Centuries-Old ‘Skeleton’ Mystery” »

Nov 7, 2022

This breakthrough AI can detect lung diseases with 98% accuracy

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

Researchers at the University of West Scotland (UWS) believe that groundbreaking artificial intelligence (AI) could help reduce winter stresses and demands on hospitals. The innovative approach, using AI, would automatically diagnose lung diseases, such as pneumonia and tuberculosis.

The research was published in the journal Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine.