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Jul 16, 2022

MIT Professor Wins European Inventor Award for Liquid Metal Batteries

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, sustainability

For his work on liquid metal batteries that could enable the long-term storage of renewable energy, MIT Professor Donald Sadoway has won the 2022 European Inventor Award, in the category for Non-European Patent Office Countries.

Sadoway is a longtime supporter and friend of MIT’s Materials Research Laboratory and is the John F. Elliott Professor of Materials Chemistry in MIT’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering.

“By enabling the large-scale storage of renewable energy, Donald Sadoway’s invention is a huge step towards the deployment of carbon-free electricity generation,” says António Campinos, President of the European Patent Office. “He has spent his career studying electrochemistry and has transformed this expertise into an invention that represents a huge step forward in the transition to green energy.”

Jul 16, 2022

High-Tech Hard Sails Transform Old Cargo Ships Into Racing Yachts

Posted by in categories: climatology, sustainability

Wing-like rigid sails are leaping from the rarified world of yacht racing to the backs of cargo ships.


There they go again. The firm BAR Technologies has roots in the elite environment of the America’s Cup hyper-competitive racing series, and lately it has been applying its know-how to design rigid sails for cargo ships. That’s right, wind power is making a comeback on the high seas, and the global shipping industry is down for it. Well, beginning to be down for it. Rigid sails for cargo ships are still in the tryout phase, but that could change as Russia continues to pinch the global fuel supply and climate goals kick in.

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Jul 16, 2022

Could China take over the Moon? Space security experts explain the reality

Posted by in categories: policy, security, space

Any control of the Moon would be temporary and localized.


In an op/ed space policy experts explain why China is unlikely to try exert power over the Moon.

Jul 16, 2022

MIT’s Raman Lab: At the Forefront of Building With Biology

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

Ritu Raman leads the Raman Lab, where she creates adaptive biological materials for applications in medicine and machines.

It seems that Ritu Raman was born with an aptitude for engineering. You may say it is in her blood since her mother is a chemical engineer, her father is a mechanical engineer, and her grandfather is a civil engineer. Throughout her childhood, she repeatedly witnessed firsthand the beneficial impact that engineering careers could have on communities. In fact, watching her parents build communication towers to connect the rural villages of Kenya to the global infrastructure is one of her earliest memories. She still vividly remembers the excitement she felt watching the emergence of a physical manifestation of innovation that would have a long-lasting positive impact on the community.

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Jul 16, 2022

NASA James Webb Space Telescope Capture Cosmic Bridge Connecting Southern Ring planetary Nebula

Posted by in category: space

https://youtu.be/AmwuYrr4TfY

Jul 16, 2022

Timelapse of Future Gaming Worlds (2030 & Beyond)

Posted by in categories: education, Elon Musk, robotics/AI

The story of future video games starts when artificial intelligence takes over building the games for players — while they play them. And human brains are mapped by virtual reality headsets.

This sci fi documentary also covers A.I. npc characters, Metaverse scoreboards, brain to computer chips and gaming, Elon Musk and Neuralink, and the simulation hypothesis.

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Jul 16, 2022

Cancer Cells Thrive in Body’s Sweet Spots: Study

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Cancer researchers have discovered how mutated cells can sense the Goldilocks sweet spots in a human body.

Led by the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, an international group of researchers has shed new light on how cancer thrives.

Previous studies have shown how cancer cells can sense the stiffness of the environment they are in, from hard bone and tough muscle to soft, fatty tissue.

Jul 16, 2022

Cognitum S2 Episode 6 // Epigenetic Rejuvenation

Posted by in categories: genetics, life extension

Things I learned:

1. Various tissues will have different safe zones of rejuvenation before they become pluripotent but we could make tissue specific treatments and treat them separately without effecting others.

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Jul 16, 2022

Now You Can Rent a Robot Worker—for Less Than Paying a Human

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

Automation is reaching more companies, imperiling some jobs and changing the nature of others.

Jul 16, 2022

CRISPR cattle cleared for the first time

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Beef cattle genetically altered to be less susceptible to heat stress have been cleared for human consumption by the FDA.