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Mar 16, 2022

Icy Antimatter Experiment Surprises Physicists

Posted by in category: particle physics

An experiment conducted on hybrid matter-antimatter atoms has defied researchers’ expectations.

Mar 16, 2022

James Webb: ‘Fully focused’ telescope beats expectations

Posted by in category: space

Engineers align the mirrors of the $10bn observatory to produce a pin-sharp image of a star.

Mar 16, 2022

NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei breaks record for longest US spaceflight

Posted by in category: space travel

When NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei launched into space 11 months ago, he did not know how long he would be off the planet, let alone that he would be up there long enough to set any records.

But when the clock strikes 12:24 p.m. EDT (1624 GMT) today (March 15), Vande Hei will claim the title of the U.S. astronaut with the single longest spaceflight in history. At a mission elapsed time of 340 days, 8 hours and 42 minutes, Vande Hei will surpass the duration logged by NASA astronaut Scott Kelly on March 2, 2013.

Mar 16, 2022

Is Elon Musk serious about beating up Putin?

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, internet, sustainability

Tesla inflates, SpaceX launches, Elon Musk gets mad.


Tesla talks about nationwide inflation, SpaceX launches Starlink and celebrates its 20th birthday, Musk gets mad at Putin on Twitter about Ukraine.

Mar 16, 2022

Russia now faces critical digital crisis with only limited time left

Posted by in categories: business, computing, economics, government

The Russian government is now facing a digital storage crisis as Western cloud services have pulled their services from the country.

Western cloud storage providers have pulled out of Russia following heavy Western sanctions designed to cripple the Russian economy. According to reports, the Russian government is looking at several different ways to solve the problem of finding hosts for Russia’s data, and some of those solutions include leasing all available data storage across Russia or seizing all data storage from Russian businesses that have left the country.

Mar 16, 2022

DocGo unveils first all-electric, zero-emission ambulance in the U.S.

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, transportation

The last-mile mobile health services provider, DocGo, has announced the delivery of its new all-electric, zero-emissions ambulance that eliminates the pollution of a standard gasoline ambulance.

The all–electric vehicle will be the first of its kind to be registered in the U.S. The new vehicle has been developed in partnership with Leader Emergency Vehicles in South El Monte, CA, and marks the first step towards “Zero Emission,” the company’s latest sustainability mission to have an all-electric fleet by 2032.

DocGo stated that its new vehicle produces 1/10th of the pollutants expelled by a standard gas-powered ambulance. In addition to being less harmful to the planet, the electric ambulance has the potential to lower patient transportation costs due to lower fuel costs and maintenance needs.

Mar 16, 2022

China tech stocks plummet in light of a possible aid to Russia

Posted by in category: futurism

The sell-off in technology stocks continues in China. It’s affecting big companies like Tencent in light of a possible help to Russia.

Mar 16, 2022

‘No-Code’ Brings the Power of A.I. to the Masses

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A growing number of new products allow anyone to apply artificial intelligence without having to write a line of computer code. Proponents believe the “no-code” movement will change the world.

Mar 16, 2022

Bacterial enzyme that copies DNA might make more mistakes in zero gravity

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical

(Inside Science) — An enzyme in the bacterium E. coli made more errors copying synthetic DNA when exposed to zero gravity than the same enzyme did in normal gravity, a recent study finds.

The paper raises the possibility that some enzymes work differently in space compared to on Earth. “It gives us an idea that enzymes, like polymerases or others that are involved in maintaining the integrity of our DNA, may be influenced by spaceflight,” said Susan Bailey, a radiation cancer biologist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins who has studied DNA damage caused by space radiation and did not contribute to the new paper.

Aaron Rosenstein, lead author of the paper and a bioengineering graduate student at the University of Toronto, said the finding “warrants further investigation into other enzymes that are involved in crucial pathways that are inherent to life and survival.”

Mar 16, 2022

LEAKED Artificial Intelligence News | Weekly Update #4

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

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