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Feb 14, 2022

This robot named “ANYmal” can hike as fast as a human

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Learn more ➡ https://fcld.ly/lng297f

Feb 14, 2022

Video filmed in the city of Guangzhou in China’s Guangdong Province on Jan. 30 shows 1,000 drones flying in the sky to form Bing Dwen Dwen, the mascot of the 2022 Winter Olympics

Posted by in category: drones

The drones also formed a tiger’s head to celebrate the coming of the Year of the Tiger.

Feb 14, 2022

This company makes some of the most lifelike looking robots we’ve ever seen 🤖 👏

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Click on photo to start video.

Feb 14, 2022

A 200-million-year-old giant was found off the coast of England! 😲

Posted by in category: futurism

Originally published on BBC Earth Facebook, January 2018.

Feb 14, 2022

Tesla Cybertruck Will Be the Death of Traditional Auto Pickup Trucks!

Posted by in categories: space, weapons

Classic pickup trucks have been wiped out by Tesla, according to Dave Lee. The Cybertruck design is so much superior to any other pickup truck design that it is almost unavoidable that the traditional pickup truck will die a slow death. Let us take a closer look at what he has to say about it.

Since Tesla’s Cybertruck is their most innovative vehicle design yet, any other firm will have a tough time emulating its design. In a recent interview, Tesla’s principal designer discussed the Cybertruck: “It is a return to the fundamentals. Is a pickup vehicle what you are looking for? Do you have any ideas? What would you look for if you arrived from Mars?”

Continue reading “Tesla Cybertruck Will Be the Death of Traditional Auto Pickup Trucks!” »

Feb 14, 2022

Making Scientific Discoveries Open to All

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education

University associations are looking to make research papers and publications open to all by dropping paywalls.


The European University Association (EUA) consists of 850 academic institutions covering 48 countries. Created in 2001 they are responsible for the education and training of more than 17 million students across Europe. In creating the Association, European academics have endeavoured to create a common educational standard and policies related to educational and research accountability and processes. They are not alone in doing this, joined by like-minded organizations such as OA2020, the Max Planck Society open access initiative, and the IFLA, the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, the need to accelerate research and development of new vaccines and medications has fostered a move for greater openness in publishing and sharing research. This has spirited a recently unveiled strategy, the EUA Open Science Agenda 2025 promoting open access to research and scholarly publications, and the removal of paywalls from scientific and academic journals and publications of European origin.

Continue reading “Making Scientific Discoveries Open to All” »

Feb 14, 2022

Singapore consortium to use drones for shore-to-ship parcel delivery

Posted by in categories: drones, engineering

A nine-month drone delivery pilot in Singapore will explire the use of drones for shore-to-ship parcel delivery of maritime essentials.


Singapore-based ST Engineering, Sumitomo Corporation, and Skyports are joining forces for a nine-month drone delivery pilot, wherein drones will be used for shore-to-ship parcel delivery of maritime essentials.

Continue reading “Singapore consortium to use drones for shore-to-ship parcel delivery” »

Feb 14, 2022

The Morning After: European fusion reactor shatters energy production record

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics

The Joint European Torus (JET) fusion reactor in the UK has generated the highest level of sustained energy ever from atom fusion. On December 21st, 2021, the “tokamak” reactor produced 59 megajoules of energy during a five-second fusion pulse. That’s double what it created back in 1997. (Yes, I know energy is not created or destroyed, but you get what I mean!)

The JET reactor is the flagship experimental device of the European Fusion Program, funded by the EU. It’s mainly designed to prove scientists’ modeling efforts, with an eye on future, bigger experiments with a much larger ITER reactor in France, set to start fusion testing in 2025.

JET hit a Q value of 0.33, meaning it produced about a third of the energy put in. The highest Q value achieved so far is 0.7 by the US Department of Energy’s National Ignition Facility, but it only hit that figure for 4 billionths of a second. The goal with ITER is to reach a Q factor of 10 or greater. Fun fact: ITER isn’t an acronym but means “the path” in Latin. And now you know.

Feb 14, 2022

Tesla plans to build new design center in Beijing this year, Chinese government says

Posted by in categories: engineering, government, sustainability, transportation

Tesla is planning to build its new design center in Beijing later this year, according to a new document released by the Chinese government.

Shortly after announcing Gigafactory Shanghai, Tesla made it clear that it not only wants to tap into China’s incredible capacity in manufacturing, but it also wants to take advantage of the country’s incredible engineering and design talent.

In early 2020, Tesla announced plans to establish a new R&D center and a new design center in China to build “a Chinese-style” electric car.

Feb 14, 2022

The true dangers of AI are closer than we think

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

As long as humans have built machines, we’ve feared the day they could destroy us. Stephen Hawking famously warned that AI could spell an end to civilization. But to many AI researchers, these conversations feel unmoored. It’s not that they don’t fear AI running amok—it’s that they see it already happening, just not in the ways most people would expect.

AI is now screening job candidates, diagnosing disease, and identifying criminal suspects. But instead of making these decisions more efficient or fair, it’s often perpetuating the biases of the humans on whose decisions it was trained.