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Aug 14, 2021

Brain-computer interfaces are making big progress this year

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

Eight months in, 2,021 has already become a record year in brain-computer interface (BCI) funding, tripling the $97 million raised in 2019.

Aug 14, 2021

Watch Plus Testing Level 4 Autonomous Truck without a Driver

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

Watch developer Plus testing an autonomous truck on the highway without a driver behind the wheel.


Autonomous tech developer Plus has recently completed a real-world demonstration of its Level 4 autonomous truck technology on a traffic-filled highway. The company tested the truck without a driver behind the wheel, and also without any other remote operator who could take control of the truck if needed. The test took place on the Wufengshan highway in the business hub of the Yangtze Delta region, with Plus being the first company to be granted a special permit to test Level 4 vehicles in the country.

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Aug 14, 2021

Laser mining – the light at the end of the tunnel?

Posted by in categories: chemistry, engineering, government

Laser mining would allow for a no explosive option and not need huge machines increasing output as well. Also lasers could make more precise cuts rather than blades which would never get dull.


The application of the “Graduated Optical Colimator” (GOC) for the mining industry consists of a one-kilowatt optical power fiber laser to selectively spall igneous geological formations containing narrow veins of precious metals.

Continue reading “Laser mining – the light at the end of the tunnel?” »

Aug 14, 2021

Russian space officials try to blame NASA astronaut for Soyuz air leak in 2018: report

Posted by in category: space

NASA says the accusations are baseless.


NASA said the accusations against Expedition 56 flight engineer Serena Auñón-Chancellor are baseless.

Aug 14, 2021

Meet ISAAC, Integrating Robots with the Space Stations of the Future

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

A simulated fault scenario marked the end of the first phase of testing for software designed to enable autonomous operations of a spacecraft’s operating and robotic systems. The software’s name is ISAAC – the Integrated System for Autonomous and Adaptive Caretaking system.

Aug 14, 2021

Asteroid Bennu has 1 in 1,750 chance of smashing into Earth, NASA says

Posted by in category: space

But “we shouldn’t be worried about it very much.”

Aug 14, 2021

Phobos: Why the largest Martian moon may reveal alien life

Posted by in category: alien life

Why an upcoming mission to Phobos may reveal something spectacular.


Both NASA and the European Space Agency are operating or planning major missions to — and back from — the Red Planet in a hunt for signs the once wet planet also hosted microbial life forms.

But it’s possible the best place to look for life on Mars isn’t on Mars at all.

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Aug 14, 2021

Quantum Computing Is Coming. What Can It Do?

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

A guide to the next computer age.

Aug 14, 2021

New Algorithm Trains Drones To Fly Around Obstacles at High Speeds

Posted by in categories: drones, information science, robotics/AI

New algorithm could enable fast, nimble drones for time-critical operations such as search and rescue.

If you follow autonomous drone racing, you likely remember the crashes as much as the wins. In drone racing, teams compete to see which vehicle is better trained to fly fastest through an obstacle course. But the faster drones fly, the more unstable they become, and at high speeds their aerodynamics can be too complicated to predict. Crashes, therefore, are a common and often spectacular occurrence.

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Aug 14, 2021

Cryptomining Botnet Alters CPU Settings to Boost Mining Performance

Posted by in categories: cryptocurrencies, cybercrime/malcode

Uptycs Threat Research Team has discovered malware that not only hijacks vulnerable *nix-based servers and uses them to mine cryptocurrency but actually modifies their CPU configurations in a bid to increase mining performance at the cost of performance in other applications.

Perpetrators use a Golang-based worm to exploit known vulnerabilities like CVE-2020–14882 (Oracle WebLogic) and CVE-2017–11610 (Supervisord) to gain access to Linux systems, reports The Record. Once they hijack a machine, they use model-specific registers (MSR) to disable the hardware prefetcher, a unit that fetches data and instructions from the memory into the L2 cache before they are needed.