Menu

Blog

Page 5051

Feb 20, 2022

Canadians Wary Of EVs Because Of Cold-Ass Weather

Posted by in category: futurism

A study shows that Canadians have concerns about how extreme temps will affect EVs.

Feb 20, 2022

Reverse Engineering A 900 MHz RC Transmitter And Receiver

Posted by in categories: drones, engineering

For those building their own remote controlled devices like RC boats and quadcopter drones, having a good transmitter-receiver setup is a significant factor in the eventual usability of their build. Many transmitters are available in the 2.4 GHz band, but some operate at different frequencies, like the 868/915 MHz band. The TBS Crossfire is one such transmitter, and it’s become a popular model thanks to its long-range performance.

When [g3gg0] bought a Crossfire set for his drone, he discovered that the receiver module consisted of not much more than a PIC32 microcontroller and an SX1272 LoRa modem. This led him to ponder if the RF protocol would be easy to decode. As it turns out, it was not trivial, but not impossible either. First, he built his own SPI sniffer using a CYC1000 FPGA board to reveal the exact register settings that the PIC32 sent to the SX1272. The Crossfire uses channel hopping, and by simply looking at the register settings it was easy to figure out the hopping sequence.

Continue reading “Reverse Engineering A 900 MHz RC Transmitter And Receiver” »

Feb 20, 2022

An entire lizard trapped in amber is gazing back at us from 110 million years ago

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

The unsung star of Jurassic Park was a mosquito frozen in amber. While you can’t really extract blood from specimens like that, you could be transported back in time if you looked at a specimen of fossilized tree sap and found a 110 million-year-old lizard staring back at you.

Creatures get trapped in amber all the time, but most prehistoric finds are insects. Amber is a great material for preserving arthropods because of their already tough shells that will hold on even if the insides disintegrate. But what about a lizard? Retinosaurus hkamentiensis is a new extinct species of lizard that was unexpectedly found trapped in Burmese amber. No one expected an entire reptile to be preserved so well, from its scaly skin down to its skeleton.

What are now the empty eyes of Retinosaurus may have once seen dinosaurs or giant ferns or dragonflies the size of your head. It was determined to be a juvenile that ran into a sticky situation when it ran into a glob of tree amber that it couldn’t escape. It was so well preserved that paleontologist Andrej Čerňanský of Comenius University and his team, who recently published a study in Scientific Reports, approached the prehistoric lizard almost as if it were alive.

Feb 20, 2022

Best Eye Vitamins

Posted by in category: life extension

It’s not a new fact that with age comes several problems, especially if you don’t take care of yourself. This applies to eyesight as well; as you grow old, the chances of you facing vision-related problems are high. And unfortunately, some people do suffer from one or more vision-related issues.

But there is a way in which this problem can be overcome. Several supplements are available to help you improve your vision, and they can help you address vision-related issues in a much more efficient manner. There are several vision-related problems, and likewise, there are supplements that tackle multiple vision problems and provide you with relief.

But the harsh truth is that not every supplement is made the same, meaning not all supplements are safe to use. This is the main reason why people are a little skeptical about purchasing any kind of dietary supplement.

Feb 20, 2022

Changing diet can add more than a decade to life expectancy

Posted by in category: futurism

A new model, available as an online calculator, estimates the impact of dietary changes on life expectancy.

Feb 20, 2022

Pushing The Boundaries Of AI Ethics Into The Topsy-Turvy World Of Radical Ethical AI, Potentially Exemplified Via The Use Case Of Vaunted AI-Based Self-Driving Cars

Posted by in categories: ethics, robotics/AI, transportation

The rising visibility of Ethical AI or AI Ethics is doing great good, meanwhile some believe it isn’t enough and a semblance of embracing Radical Ethical AI is appearing. This is closely examined, including for AI-based self-driving cars.

Has the prevailing tenor and attention of today’s widely emerging semblance of AI Ethics gotten into a veritable rut? Some seem to decidedly think so.

Let’s unpack this. You might generally be aware that there has been a rising tide of interest in the ethical ramifications of AI. This is often referred to as either AI Ethics or Ethical AI, which we’ll consider herein those two monikers as predominantly equivalent and interchangeable (I suppose some might quibble about that assumption, but I’d like to suggest that we not get distracted by the potential differences, if any, for the purposes of this discussion).

Feb 20, 2022

New Research Explores The Mental Health Consequences Of Being Obsessively Passionate About Your Job

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Feb 20, 2022

AI-synthesized faces are indistinguishable from real faces and more trustworthy

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Feb 20, 2022

This rare Frankenstein star wears the skin of its dead companion

Posted by in category: futurism

This kind of “merger” is so rare that only two stars of this type are known.


This merger takes a pretty exact mass range of two white dwarves, one that causes one star to thrash the other and pull its gas on top.

Feb 20, 2022

Physicists measure gravitational time warp to within one millimeter

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

The flow of time isn’t as consistent as we might think – gravity slows it down, so clocks on the surface of Earth tick slower than those in space. Now researchers have measured time passing at different speeds across just one millimeter, the smallest distance yet.

The idea that time would be affected by gravity was first proposed by Albert Einstein in 1915, as part of his theory of general relativity. Space and time are inextricably linked, and large masses warp the fabric of spacetime with their immense gravitational influence. This has the effect of making time pass more slowly closer to a large mass like a planet, star, or, in the most extreme example, a black hole. This phenomenon is known as time dilation.

Continue reading “Physicists measure gravitational time warp to within one millimeter” »