Menu

Blog

Page 5670

Dec 23, 2020

Covid-19 Vaccines Are Coming—So Are Hackers

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cybercrime/malcode

Covid-19 vaccines are coming—so are hackers.


As drugmakers distribute Covid-19 vaccines, cybersecurity experts are warning against the growing threat of tampering and theft by organized crime networks. WSJ explains how hackers are targeting the vaccine rollout during the pandemic. Illustration: George Downs.

Continue reading “Covid-19 Vaccines Are Coming—So Are Hackers” »

Dec 23, 2020

Magnetic coating gives life to millirobots

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

Researchers in China have developed a biocompatible magnetic coating that actuates inanimate millirobots for biomedical applications.


It is thrilling to live at a time when robots the size of small insects, known as millirobots, can o.

Dec 23, 2020

Made In Space makes ceramic turbine part in orbit in another 3D printing milestone

Posted by in category: space

The bladed disk will come down to Earth aboard a Space Dragon cargo capsule.


Made In Space just built its first ceramic part in orbit, 3D printing a single-piece turbine part onboard the International Space Station.

Dec 23, 2020

HP’s 3D Printers Build Items Not of Plastic but of Steel

Posted by in categories: materials, transportation

For now, the company’s new Metal Jet printers make key fobs and other doodads. But one day they could create car parts.

Dec 23, 2020

Researchers develop new way to break reciprocity law

Posted by in categories: law, materials

An international research team lead by Aalto University has found a new and simple route to break the reciprocity law in the electromagnetic world, by changing a material’s property periodically in time. The breakthrough could help to create efficient nonreciprocal devices, such as compact isolators and circulators, that are needed for the next generation of microwave and optical communications systems.

When we look through a window and see our neighbor on the street, the neighbor can also see us. This is called reciprocity, and it is the most common physical phenomenon in nature. Electromagnetic signals propagating between two sources is always governed by reciprocity law: if the signal from source A can be received by source B, then the signal from source B can also be received by source A with equal efficiency.

Researchers from Aalto University, Stanford University, and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) have successfully demonstrated that the reciprocity law can be broken if the property of the propagation medium periodically changes in time. Propagation medium refers to a material in which light and waves survive and propagate from one point to another.

Dec 23, 2020

Lost Jules Verne Novel Made Startlingly Accurate Predictions of our Modern World

Posted by in category: space travel

Perhaps we need to pay Sci-Fi novels more heed-but which ones?


Nearly 150 years ago, Jules Verne penned a book with remarkably accurate predictions about the world of today. That book, however, was rejected and not brought to light until 1994.

Paris In The 20th Century is a posthumous work by Jules Verne, the legendary writer and traveler. Many consider him the “Father of Science-Fiction” via books such as Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea, Journey To The Centre of the Earth and From The Earth To The Moon. Back To The Future fans will no doubt remember Doc Brown’s passion for the author’s prolific output.

Continue reading “Lost Jules Verne Novel Made Startlingly Accurate Predictions of our Modern World” »

Dec 23, 2020

Holotron presents a full-body exoskeleton for walking in VR

Posted by in categories: computing, cyborgs, neuroscience, virtual reality

The full-body exoskeleton lets you feel and control all the forces your avatar feels.


The Holotron is a full-body exoskeleton, with several possible realizations for life-like control of any humanoid avatar, including implanted brain-computer interfaces.

Continue reading “Holotron presents a full-body exoskeleton for walking in VR” »

Dec 23, 2020

New biosensor armband detects which hand gesture you want to make

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs

The device paves the way for better prosthetic control and seamless interaction with electronic devices.


UC Berkeley researchers have created a new biosensor armband that can recognize hand gestures based on electrical signals detected in the forearm.

Dec 23, 2020

Apple plans to launch its first self-driving car in 2024

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

Apple’s first passenger car could include its own breakthrough battery technology.


Apple is actively working on various automotive projects that could ultimately lead to an “Apple Car” and is targeting 2024 to produce a passenger vehicle.

Dec 23, 2020

Ancient mummified wolf cub in Canada ‘lived 56,000 years ago’

Posted by in category: futurism

Scientists now say the cub, of which the hide, hair and teeth are intact, is “the most complete wolf mummy known”.