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Feb 12, 2021

Observations inspect radio emission from two magnetars

Posted by in category: space

Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), astronomers have conducted a study of two magnetars known as PSR J1622−4950 and 1E 1547.0−5408. Results of this investigation, published February 4 on arXiv.org, provide important information about radio emission from these two sources.

Feb 12, 2021

Bladeless Turbines For Renewable Energy

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Bladeless turbines for wind energy. 😃

Feb 12, 2021

The cinemas now hiring out their screens to gamers

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, entertainment

With cinemas badly hit by Covid-19 restrictions they are looking for new revenue streams. 🎮

Feb 11, 2021

The man behind Fortnite is making the riskiest bet of his career. The payoff could be huge

Posted by in categories: economics, law

Now Sweeney, 50, is embarking on the biggest battle in his company’s 30-year history: Epic is suing Apple and Google in a legal challenge that could remake the future of the digital economy.


Over the course of his career Tim Sweeney has been unafraid to take on tech industry giants.

Feb 11, 2021

Pigs can play video games with their snouts, scientists find

Posted by in category: futurism

Despite poor vision and a severe lack of thumbs, Hamlet and other pigs could learn to be gamers.

Feb 11, 2021

Why Computers Will Never Write Good Novels

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

You’ve been hoaxed.

The hoax seems harmless enough. A few thousand AI researchers have claimed that computers can read and write literature. They’ve alleged that algorithms can unearth the secret formulas of fiction and film. That Bayesian software can map the plots of memoirs and comic books. That digital brains can pen primitive lyrics1 and short stories—wooden and weird, to be sure, yet evidence that computers are capable of more.

But the hoax is not harmless. If it were possible to build a digital novelist or poetry analyst, then computers would be far more powerful than they are now. They would in fact be the most powerful beings in the history of Earth. Their power would be the power of literature, which although it seems now, in today’s glittering silicon age, to be a rather unimpressive old thing, springs from the same neural root that enables human brains to create, to imagine, to dream up tomorrows. It was the literary fictions of H.G. Wells that sparked Robert Goddard to devise the liquid-fueled rocket, launching the space epoch; and it was poets and playwrights—Homer in The Iliad, Karel Čapek in Rossumovi Univerzální Roboti—who first hatched the notion of a self-propelled metal robot, ushering in the wonder-horror of our modern world of automata.

Feb 11, 2021

This Is The Perfectly Evolved Human

Posted by in category: neuroscience

What if our bodies kept evolving? And are there body parts that will disappear one day?
The First 1000 people to click this link get a FREE SKILLSHARE PREMIUM MEMBERSHIP: https://skl.sh/asapscience01211

Our backs hurt, ankles break and feet are busted! Not to mention having a baby is dangerous and our eyes are built backwards. There is a lot that doesn’t work in our bodies, so today we are going to explain the perfectly evolved human. Evolutionary biologists have been battling this scenario for years so we explain it all. Including the need for ostrich feet, bipedal bodies, bilateral symmetry, rewiring neurons in the eye and having dog ears! Let us know if you would want this body!?

Continue reading “This Is The Perfectly Evolved Human” »

Feb 11, 2021

Bitcoin consumes ‘more electricity than Argentina’

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, computing, cryptocurrencies

“Mining” for the cryptocurrency is power-hungry, involving heavy computer calculations to verify transactions.


Like.

Feb 11, 2021

Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, is about to get a whole lot richer

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

If it was any other plutocrat I’d be disgusted. But Musk is pumping HIS OWN MONEY into SpaceX (and the space sector in general).

After SO MANY YEARS of INEXCUSABLY low levels of funding for human space flight — and for the creation of absolutely critical space infrastructure — I am EXTACTIC at the news!

I don’t always agree with the guy, but I DO deeply believe in what he’s trying to accomplish. I believe in his aspirations for our species. MOST IMPORTANTLY, unlike most of his peers with vaguely similar aims, I believe he can ACTUALLY ACOMPLISH his goals.

Continue reading “Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, is about to get a whole lot richer” »

Feb 11, 2021

Electricity-free radiative system cools buildings and heats water

Posted by in categories: solar power, space, sustainability

Air conditioners and other cooling systems are among our biggest consumers of electricity, so finding ways to passively cool buildings will be important in our increasingly warmer future. Now, researchers at the University at Buffalo have developed a prototype hybrid device that can not only cool buildings drastically without using electricity, it can capture solar energy to heat water.

Created in many forms over the years, radiative cooling systems absorb heat from inside a room or building, and emit it in infrared waves towards the sky. At those wavelengths, the Earth’s atmosphere is “invisible” to the radiation, meaning there’s nothing stopping the heat from venting directly into the cold of outer space.

These devices use panels made of materials that can absorb and emit the heat. The logical way to orient these thermal emitter panels is to have one face pointing towards the sky, like a solar panel, but the team on the new study says that’s not the most efficient method. The panels emit heat from both sides, so in that position some of the heat is being emitted back towards the ground.