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Nov 1, 2020

Are the Brain’s Electromagnetic Fields the Seat of Consciousness?

Posted by in category: neuroscience

“It was a jaw-dropping moment, for us and for every scientist we told about this so far.”

But what if there’s more to the story? What if the electromagnetic fields generated by, but which are not identical to, the neuroanatomy of the brain, are in fact the primary seat of consciousness? The brain’s fields are generated by various physiological processes in the brain, but primarily by trans-membrane currents moving through neurons. These fields are always oscillating and they come in various speeds, clustered around certain bands, from delta on the lower end at 1–2.5 cycles (oscillations) per second (Hertz) up to gamma at 40–120 cycles per second.

Some neuroscientists have long considered the brain’s oscillating electromagnetic fields to be interesting but merely “epiphenomenal” features of the brain—like a train whistle on a steam-powered locomotive. Electromagnetic fields may just be noise that doesn’t affect the workings of the brain. Koch still seems to lean this way.

Nov 1, 2020

3D-printing “error” used to produce high-tech textiles

Posted by in category: materials

If a 3D printer leaves gaps in the plastic that it deposits, it’s usually thought of as an unwanted flaw. Now, however, the process has been harnessed to quickly and cheaply produce pliable polymer textiles.

Ordinarily, commonly used fused deposition modelling (FDM)-type printers create items by extruding successive layers of molten plastic. Once the layers of deposited plastic have cooled and fused together, they form a hardened solid object.

Sometimes, though – due to a flaw in the printer or the programming – not enough plastic is extruded. This is known as under-extrusion, and it results in the finished product being full of small gaps.

Nov 1, 2020

US Navy SEALs Rescue American Hostage in Nigeria

Posted by in category: futurism

😃


U.S. Special Operations Commandos rescued an American hostage during an early morning raid on Saturday, according to Jonathan Hoffman, Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs.

Nov 1, 2020

Tweeting with your MIND? Meet Stentrode: The Neuralink Rival ALREADY in Clinical Trials

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJQcvGALwZY&feature=youtu.be

A closer look at Stentrode, the Brain Computer Interface that interacts with the brain via blood vessels. Recent paper demonstrating it working in 2 ALS patients.


Han from WrySci HX goes through the very interesting brain computer interface called Stentrode that can let you tweet with your mind. As a BCI, it’s a rival to Neuralink, Kernal, and Openwater. Find out about its background, how it works, why it’s the most unique BCI, and some results from its clinical trials. More below ↓↓↓

Continue reading “Tweeting with your MIND? Meet Stentrode: The Neuralink Rival ALREADY in Clinical Trials” »

Nov 1, 2020

Cups made from orange peels

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, sustainability

Biodegradable to serve orange juice.

I think this is an epic example of “nothing goes to waste”. 😃

Vishal Mehta

Continue reading “Cups made from orange peels” »

Nov 1, 2020

The Mystery of The Platypus Deepens With The Discovery of Its Biofluorescent Fur

Posted by in category: futurism

The platypus has gotten a whole lot stranger. Not only does it look like a chimera of different animals, a mammal that lays eggs and has venom, it’s now found to have bioflourescent fur.

It glows green under UV light.


Scientists are seeing the Australian platypus in a whole new light. Under an ultraviolet lamp, this bizarre-looking creature appears even more peculiar than normal, glowing a soft, greenish-blue hue instead of the typical brown we’re used to seeing.

Continue reading “The Mystery of The Platypus Deepens With The Discovery of Its Biofluorescent Fur” »

Nov 1, 2020

Exoskeleton Suits Turn Car Factory Workers Into Human Robots

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

Don’t you wish you had your own robotic exoskeleton?

This would really take away the strain in manual labor.


“In the past, the lifting workers could hardly stay after 2 years as the heavy work would burden them with injuries.”

Continue reading “Exoskeleton Suits Turn Car Factory Workers Into Human Robots” »

Nov 1, 2020

11 Female Astronauts Who Pioneered Spaceflight

Posted by in categories: military, space travel

With a variety of backgrounds and talents, these women have helped push the boundaries of spaceflight.


Cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya.

Spacefacts.de

Continue reading “11 Female Astronauts Who Pioneered Spaceflight” »

Nov 1, 2020

1989: Tomorrow’s World

Posted by in category: futurism

# OnthisDay1989 : Tomorrow’s World visited “Tomorrow’s Home” in the year 2020. Since we’re almost there now, how accurate do you think their predictions were? For more Tomorrow’s World gems, you can visit — https://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/tomorrows-world/zrkpwty.

Nov 1, 2020

Early SpaceX Starlink beta customers say they are ‘Streaming 4K with zero buffering’

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

A few days ago, SpaceX started to offer Starlink satellite broadband internet service in areas located in the northern United States and southern Canada. With approximately 888 internet-beaming satellites in orbit the Starlink network is capable of providing ‘moderate’ broadband coverage. Early Starlink customers have shared photographs via social media of the Starlink Kit that is utilized to receive internet connection from the satellites in space. The Starlink Kit includes: “Dishy McFlatface” which is a 19-inch dish phased-array antenna, a mounting tripod for the dish, and an oddly-shaped Wi-Fi router device, pictured below.