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Mar 1, 2021

Neuralink Explained For Dummies [Complete Guide]

Posted by in category: neuroscience

https://youtu.be/RhYccrwziOQ

What it might be like to get a Neuralink!


Hey it’s Han from WrySci HX going through everything(!) you need to know about Neuralink. How it works, what it might be like to get one, what it might be capable of, and more! It’s a complete 2021 guide to Neuralink for dummies, by a dummy. More below ↓↓↓

Continue reading “Neuralink Explained For Dummies [Complete Guide]” »

Mar 1, 2021

The Syntellect Hypothesis: Five Paradigms of the Mind’s Evolution: Vikoulov, Alex M., Tuynman PhD, Antonin: 9781733426145: Amazon.com: Books

Posted by in categories: evolution, space

“At times, it may seem as if the entire prior history of the Universe led us to this pivotal moment of realization that we are the ‘brain cells’ of a larger planetary superorganism, progressively morphing into one Global Mind.”-Alex Vikoulov.

*My magnum opus The Syntellect Hypothesis: Five Paradigms of the Mind’s Evolution (2020), where I share my deepest insights and far-reaching foresights, is now available as eBook, paperback, hardcover, audiobook on Amazon:

#SyntellectHypothesis

Continue reading “The Syntellect Hypothesis: Five Paradigms of the Mind’s Evolution: Vikoulov, Alex M., Tuynman PhD, Antonin: 9781733426145: Amazon.com: Books” »

Mar 1, 2021

Cirugía holográfica

Posted by in category: futurism

Read more

Mar 1, 2021

10 Creative Coding Examples That Are Redefining Programming

Posted by in category: futurism

These creative coding examples explore new, digital forms of artistic expression by merging advanced technology with creativity and inspiration.

Mar 1, 2021

How to Detect Cancer Early: A Guide

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Some really cool advances happening in cancer detection with things like liquid biopsies from companies like Grail and Thrive:


It’s important to detect cancer early to maximize longevity and survival rates. Here are cancer screening tests for 6 deadly cancers.

Mar 1, 2021

Space startup Gitai raises $17.1M to help build the robotic workforce of commercial space

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

Japanese space startup Gitai has raised a $17.1 million funding round, a Series B financing for the robotics startup. This new funding will be used for hiring, as well as funding the development and execution of an on-orbit demonstration mission for the company’s robotic technology, which will show its efficacy in performing in-space satellite servicing work. That mission is currently set to take place in 2023.

Gitai will also be staffing up in the U.S., specifically, as it seeks to expand its stateside presence in a bid to attract more business from that market.

“We are proceeding well in the Japanese market, and we’ve already contracted missions from Japanese companies, but we haven’t expanded to the U.S. market yet,” explained Gitai founder and CEO Sho Nakanose in an interview. So we would like to get missions from U.S. commercial space companies, as a subcontractor first. We’re especially interested in on-orbit servicing, and we would like to provide general-purpose robotic solutions for an orbital service provider in the U.S.”

Mar 1, 2021

Whales and dolphins can resist cancer and their DNA reveals why

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution

Now, Tejada-Martinez and her colleagues have studied the evolution of 1077 tumour suppressor genes (TSGs). In all, they compared the evolution of the genes in 15 mammalian species, including seven cetacean species.

Genes regulating DNA damage, tumour spread and the immune system were positively selected among the cetaceans. The team also found that cetaceans gained and lost TSGs at a rate 2.4 times higher than in other mammals.

It’s not like we’re gonna be taking whale genes and putting them into humans and making humans cancer resistant, says Lynch. But if you can find the genes that play a role in tumour suppression in other animals, and if you could figure out what they’re doing, maybe you can make a drug that mimics that for human treatment…

Mar 1, 2021

OMEGA MART — “Grand Opening”

Posted by in category: futurism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6K9CnywVMA

🛒 Voted #1 supermarket in the worlds.
🌽 Family owned and operated.
🥩 The best prices no matter the cost.
⛓ Omegamart is now open at Area15, Las Vegas!

Tickets now on sale: http://www.omegamart.com

Mar 1, 2021

Surprise in Solid-State Physics: Magnetic Effect Without a Magnet

Posted by in categories: materials, physics

Surprise in solid-state physics: The Hall effect, which normally requires magnetic fields, can also be generated in a completely different way – with extreme strength.

Electric current is deflected by a magnetic field – in conducting materials this leads to the so-called Hall effect. This effect is often used to measure magnetic fields. A surprising discovery has now been made at TU Wien, in collaboration with scientists from the Paul Scherrer Institute (Switzerland), McMater University (Canada), and Rice University (USA): an exotic metal made of cerium, bismuth, and palladium was examined and a giant Hall effect was found to be produced by the material, in the total absence of any magnetic field. The reason for this unexpected result lies in the unusual properties of the electrons: They behave as if magnetic monopoles were present in the material. These discoveries have now been published in the scientific magazine PNAS.

A voltage perpendicular to the current.

Mar 1, 2021

Clocking the Movement of Electrons Inside an Atom – Down to a Millionth of a Billionth of a Second

Posted by in categories: biological, particle physics

Scientists get dramatically better resolution at X-ray free-electron lasers with a new technique.

Intense, ultrashort X-ray pulses from hard X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) can capture images of biological structures down to the atomic scale and shed light on the fastest processes in nature with a shutter speed of just one femtosecond, a millionth of a billionth of a second.

However, on these miniscule time scales, it is extremely difficult to synchronize the X-ray pulse that sparks a reaction in the sample with the follow-up pulse that observes the reaction. This problem, called timing jitter, is a major hurdle in performing these XFEL experiments with ever-better resolution.