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Nov 13, 2020

NASA’s MAVEN Spacecraft Tracks Massive Water Loss From Ancient Mars

Posted by in category: space

Mars’ dust storms have repeatedly triggered rapid water loss from its upper atmosphere over the eons, NASA’s MAVEN orbiter finds.

Nov 12, 2020

Japanese Scientists Create Technology to Control Small Gundam Robots With Their Minds

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI

Japanese researchers have created a mind-controllable Gundam robot, turning one of the anime’s most exciting technological concepts into reality.

The model, based on the mobile suit Zaku, has been available through Bandai’s Zeonic Technics package since last year, but that version requires manual programming on a smartphone app.

Continue reading “Japanese Scientists Create Technology to Control Small Gundam Robots With Their Minds” »

Nov 12, 2020

China Launches 6G Satellite

Posted by in categories: internet, space

https://vimeo.com/478424911

China Launches 6G Satellite and Nokia seals the deal with NASA for 4G moon network.

Nov 12, 2020

Post-pandemic innovation takes centre stage in Shenzhen tech fair

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

The 22nd edition of the China Hi-Tech Fair, with more than 3,300 online and offline exhibitors from the mainland and overseas, has put renewed emphasis on the ways innovative technology could help people better adapt to changes caused by the Covid-19 outbreak.


China Hi-Tech Fair, the country’s biggest technology show, features a range of artificial intelligence, smart city and robotic applications.

Nov 12, 2020

DNS cache poisoning attacks return due to Linux weakness

Posted by in category: computing

Researchers from Tsinghua University and the University of California have identified a new method that can be used to conduct DNS cache poisoning attacks.

The new discovery revives a 2008 bug that had once been thought to have resolved for good.

Nov 12, 2020

Newly-Discovered Deep Sea ‘Mushroom’ Could Re-Write Tree of Life

Posted by in category: genetics

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Most newly-discovered species are easy to classify. They have features that are very consistent with well-known organisms and they fit neatly into one category or another. Every so often, one comes along that leaves scientists wondering, “What the hell is this thing?” Case in point: Dendrogramma. This new genus represents two species of deep-sea animals that resemble mushrooms but don’t really fit in with any other known animals. As a result, this organism could bring fairly large changes to the phylogenetic tree. The research was conducted by a team of researchers from the University of Copenhagen and the paper was published in PLOS ONE.

The 18 specimens were caught during an expedition in the Bass Strait, between Australia and Tasmania back in 1986. Two samples were dredged up from depths of 400 and 1000 meters. The samples had been fixed and preserved, rendering them unable to undergo genetic analysis. However, the preservation process was not done particularly well, causing them to become bleached and shrunken. They turned brittle over time.

Continue reading “Newly-Discovered Deep Sea ‘Mushroom’ Could Re-Write Tree of Life” »

Nov 12, 2020

Physicists Devise a Brilliant Way to Make And Observe Elusive Electron Crystals

Posted by in category: particle physics

In 1934, theoretical physicist Eugene Wigner proposed a new type of crystal.

If the density of negatively charged electrons could be maintained below a certain level, the subatomic particles could be held in a repeating pattern to create a crystal of electrons; this idea came to be known as a Wigner crystal.

The first time a Wigner crystal was experimentally observed was in 1979, when researchers measured an electron-liquid to electron-crystal phase transition using helium; since then, such crystals have been detected numerous times.

Nov 12, 2020

Inside the world’s first AI-powered satellite — and its fight against clouds

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, satellites

Intel, Ubotica, and the ESA recently launched the first AI-enabled satellite into Earth’s orbit. The team told TNW about their hopes for the mission.

Nov 12, 2020

The robots haven’t just landed in the workplace—

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

They’ re expanding skills, moving up the corporate ladder, showing awesome productivity and retention rates, and increasingly shoving aside their human counterparts. One multi-tasker bot, from Momentum Machines, can make (and flip) a gourmet hamburger in 10 seconds and could soon replace an entire McDonalds crew. A manufacturing device from Universal Robots doesn’t just solder, paint, screw, glue, and grasp—it builds new parts for itself on the fly when they wear out or bust.

Its is Obvious that the future is smart and only those who out smart these robots will remain relevant. Although it’s Stated that Artificial Intelligence can be disruptive, there are immense benefits Humanity can derive from them. Join my Boss Kelvin Ogba Dafiaghor as he share with the International community the massive benefits of Artificial Intelligence Robots.

As the CEO and Founder of OEC, it’s his vision to Domesticate AI in Africa and this Vision is shared by all who understand that the Future is now and its smart.

Nov 12, 2020

Apple confirms widespread outages affecting downloads, more

Posted by in category: futurism

MacOS Big Sur downloads are very slow as the next generation Mac software has just launched, at the same time, Apple’s dev site appears to be down.