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Nov 16, 2021

Blood Moon Eclipse 2021: Why You Need To Wake-Up Early On Thursday To See The ‘Giant Japanese Lantern’ Moon Glow

Posted by in category: space

A great celestial event is coming for North America, but you’re going to have to get up early to see it.

Taking place on the night of November 18–19, 2021 is the longest partial eclipse of the Moon this century.

That in itself is not a huge claim. After all, a total lunar eclipse is the “best” kind of lunar eclipse. However, what happens later this week will be, and look, rather strange.

Continue reading “Blood Moon Eclipse 2021: Why You Need To Wake-Up Early On Thursday To See The ‘Giant Japanese Lantern’ Moon Glow” »

Nov 16, 2021

Artificial Intelligence Can Predict New Designer Drugs With 90% Accuracy

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

This is why researchers trained computers to predict what designer drugs will emerge onto the scene before they hit the market, according to a recent study published in the journal Nature Machine Intelligence.

With highly-addictive drugs flooding regions throughout the U.S., this program could save countless lives. But it could also unlock an entire “dark matter” world of unknown psychoactive possibilities.

Nov 16, 2021

Could Solar Gardens Boost Traditional Farming with Renewable Energy?

Posted by in categories: food, solar power, sustainability

This solar farm in Colorado thinks so.

The farming industry is using way too much energy both for its own and the Earth’s sake. To put it in numbers, agriculture uses approximately 21 percent of food production energy, which equals 2.2 quadrillions of kilojoules of energy each year. What’s more, about 60 percent of the energy used in agriculture goes toward gasoline, diesel, electricity, and natural gas.

That’s where agrivoltaics come in. A system where solar panels are in… See more.

Nov 16, 2021

Hubble Space Telescope Captures a Majestic Spiral Galaxy 230 Million Light-Years Away

Posted by in categories: government, space

This astronomical portrait from the NASA

Established in 1958, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is an independent agency of the United States Federal Government that succeeded the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). It is responsible for the civilian space program, as well as aeronautics and aerospace research. It’s vision is “To discover and expand knowledge for the benefit of humanity.”

Nov 16, 2021

Unity moves robotics design and training to the metaverse

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Unity, the San Francisco-based platform for creating and operating games and other 3D content, on November 10 announced the launch of Unity Simulation Pro and Unity SystemGraph to improve modeling, testing, and training complex systems through AI.

With robotics usage in supply chains and manufacturing increasing, such software is critical to ensuring efficient and safe operations.

Danny Lange, senior vice president of artificial intelligence for Unity, told VentureBeat via email that the Unity SystemGraph uses a node-based approach to model the complex logic typically found in electrical and mechanical systems. “This makes it easier for roboticists and engineers to model small systems, and allows grouping those into larger, more complex ones — enabling them to prototype systems, test and analyze their behavior, and make optimal design decisions without requiring access to the actual hardware,” said Lange.

Nov 16, 2021

Scientists discover ‘superionic ice,’ a new form of water may lurk inside alien planets

Posted by in category: space

To create the ice, the scientists had to squeeze a water droplet to 3.5 million times Earth’s atmospheric pressure and heat it hotter than the sun.

Nov 16, 2021

From Artificial Intelligence to Superintelligence: Nick Bostrom on AI & The Future of Humanity

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI

Artificial Superintelligence or ASI, sometimes referred to as digital superintelligence is the advent of a hypothetical agent that possesses intelligence far surpassing that of the smartest and most gifted human minds. AI is a rapidly growing field of technology with the potential to make huge improvements in human wellbeing. However, the development of machines with intelligence vastly superior to humans will pose special, perhaps even unique risks.

Most surveyed AI researchers expect machines to eventually be able to rival humans in intelligence, though there is little consensus on when or how this will happen.

Continue reading “From Artificial Intelligence to Superintelligence: Nick Bostrom on AI & The Future of Humanity” »

Nov 16, 2021

How Designers Use Nature To Solve Problems | Answers With Joe

Posted by in categories: habitats, sustainability

A lot of our great technological achievements were copied from nature. And we are still copying.


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Humans have been designing and innovating for 100,000 years, but nature has been doing so for 4.5 billion years. Turns out we still have a lot to learn from nature, and biomimicry is the science of using nature to inform innovative design. Here are some great examples of this new and maybe world-changing design philosophy.

Continue reading “How Designers Use Nature To Solve Problems | Answers With Joe” »

Nov 16, 2021

Scientists report finding a second person ‘naturally’ cured of HIV

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

As the scientists reported Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine, they didn’t find any. Which means that the woman, who they are calling the “Esperanza Patient” to protect her privacy, appears to have eradicated the deadly virus from her body without the help of drugs or a bone marrow transplant — which would make her only the second person believed to have cured herself of HIV, without drugs or any other treatment.

“This gives us hope that the human immune system is powerful enough to control HIV and eliminate all the functional virus,” said Xu Yu, an immunologist at the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard and senior author on the new report. “Time will tell, but we believe she has reached a sterilizing cure.” The discovery, which was previously announced at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in March, could help identify possible treatments, researchers said.

Nov 16, 2021

The metaverse is investable — and it’s going to be big, says tech billionaire

Posted by in category: business

The so-called metaverse has a “big time” investment case, according to Puerto Rican billionaire businessman Orlando Bravo.

Bravo, co-founder and managing partner of private equity firm Thoma Bravo, told CNBC that he thinks “metaverse” is the big word of 2021.

Continue reading “The metaverse is investable — and it’s going to be big, says tech billionaire” »