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Oct 28, 2021

Ginormous New ‘Index’ Shares Data From 100 Million Science Papers For Free

Posted by in categories: computing, science

The general index is a collection of 100+ million scientific papers that can be downloaded in 38 Terabytes. It is structured and can be searched via code.


There’s a vast amount of research out there, with the volume growing rapidly with each passing day. But there’s a problem.

Not only is a lot of the existing literature hidden behind a paywall, but it can also be difficult to parse and make sense of in a comprehensive, logical way. What’s really needed is a super-smart version of Google just for academic papers.

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Oct 28, 2021

Fruit And Vegetable Intake: How Many Servings/Day Is Optimal?

Posted by in category: futurism

Join us on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/MichaelLustgartenPhD

Paper referenced in the video:
Fruit and Vegetable Intake and Mortality Results From 2 Prospective Cohort Studies of US Men and Women and a Meta-Analysis of 26 Cohort Studies.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33641343/

Oct 28, 2021

Facebook is researching AR/VR AI systems that record your activities

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, robotics/AI, virtual reality

Facebook has been putting research into systems that will see, hear, and remember everyday activities and interactions on AR/VR devices.

Oct 28, 2021

Doubt cast on ‘sterile’ particles leaves a neutrino mystery unsolved

Posted by in category: particle physics

MicroBooNE weakens the case for sterile neutrinos, but the mystery that shrouded earlier neutrino experiments remains.

Oct 28, 2021

Serious Concerns That AI Self-Driving Cars Cybersecurity Will Be A Hacker Leak Like An Open Sieve

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, robotics/AI, transportation

The importance of considering the numerous cybersecurity holes likely to be present in AI self-driving cars and seriously seeking to plug them up.

Oct 28, 2021

A New Commercial Hydrogen-Electric Plane Will Boast a 500 Mile Range

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

The emission-free aircraft will carry up to 76 passengers.

A new aviation partnership could see commercial hydrogen-electric airliners take to the skies. The parent company of Alaska Airlines, Alaska Air Group, is partnering with zero-emission aviation firm ZeroAvia to develop a hydrogen-electric powertrain for a 76-seater passenger airliner, a press statement reveals.

Continue reading “A New Commercial Hydrogen-Electric Plane Will Boast a 500 Mile Range” »

Oct 28, 2021

The US Wants to Upgrade Its Biggest Planes With Cruise Missiles

Posted by in categories: government, military

To keep up with China and Russia. The future of warfare builds on previous successes. And throughout conflicts in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, the U.S. military possessed an unrivaled advantage in air superiority. But all things change, and to face the possibility of conflict with new and advanced weapons and aircraft from Russia or China, the Special Operations Command (SOCOM) wants to upgrade some of its largest aircraft with cruise missiles, according to a recent solicitation shared on a government website. Specifically, SOCOM’s plans call for equipping AC-130s with cruise missiles, in addition to transforming the MC-130 into a \.


Equipping AC-130s with cruise missiles could prove superfluous.

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Oct 28, 2021

One autonomous taxi, please

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Self-driving Robots, developed at MIT, set sea in Amsterdam canals.

If you don’t get seasick, an autonomous boat might be the right mode of transportation for you.

Scientists from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and the Senseable City Laboratory, together with Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions (AMS Institute) in the Netherlands, have now created the final project in their self-navigating trilogy: a full-scale, fully autonomous robotic boat that’s ready to be deployed along the canals of Amsterdam.

Continue reading “One autonomous taxi, please” »

Oct 28, 2021

Australian Company Works to Make Energy From Nuclear Fusion — But Without the Fiery Ball of Plasma

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, sustainability

PERHAPS THE MOST PROMISING ROUTE TO FUSION uses Boron instead, reqiring higher temperatures atainable by chirped lasers—using a widely available fuel, and an output which can be turned directly into energy without the need for steam turbines, etc.

“when it’s finally deployed on electric grids, humanity can leave uranium, coal, oil, and gas in the ground. We won’t need to drill for geothermal energy, or line our hills with unrecyclable wind turbines. It won’t matter if the sun isn’t shining or the wind isn’t blowing…”


Using super powerful lasers to create clean, emission-less energy, HB11 Energy is expanding options for commercial nuclear fusion.

Continue reading “Australian Company Works to Make Energy From Nuclear Fusion — But Without the Fiery Ball of Plasma” »

Oct 28, 2021

Scientists Have Made a Massless Structural Battery 10 Times Better Than Before

Posted by in category: energy

In groundbreaking new research, scientists have made a structural battery 10 times better than in any previous experiment.

What’s a structural battery, and why is it such a big deal? The term refers to an energy storage device that can also bear weight as part of a structure—like if the studs in your home were all batteries, or if an electric fence also held up a wall.