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Mar 20, 2021

A new global rivalry? Airbus, Boeing, Comac and the future of aviation

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

The future of aviation, planes of the future.


As the aviation industry attempts to recover from the devastating effects of the pandemic, we take a in depth look at the future of flying. Will we soon be boarding commercial jets made in China? Or flying faster than the speed of sound? And what will the planes actually look like? Answers to these questions and more as Rob Watts reports on the future of flight.

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Mar 20, 2021

Tiny Gravitational-Wave Detector Could Search Anywhere in the Sky

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

One of the biggest challenges will be to create superpositions of diamonds that can remain stable over distances of a meter. More than four years ago researchers at Stanford University managed to separate a superposition consisting of 10000 atoms by about half a meter—the current record. “But we’re talking about doing it with diamonds that would have a billion or 10 billion atoms, and that is way more difficult,” Mazumdar says.

Many of the other technologies needed for the device—high vacuums, ultralow temperatures, precisely controlled magnetic fields—have all been achieved separately by various groups. But bringing them together will not be easy. “Just because you can juggle and ride a bike doesn’t mean you can do both at once,” Morley says.

If the device is ever built, it could transform gravitational-wave astronomy. The world’s current gravitational-wave detectors are all firmly anchored to the ground. “The only orientation LIGO can have is due to Earth’s rotation,” Bose says. A small detector such as MIMAC, on the other hand, could be pointed at any direction in the sky. And any physics lab in the world could house it. “The challenge is to get one of them working,” Bose says. “If one of them works, it would be very easy to make several more.”

Mar 20, 2021

U.S. Transhumanist Party Virtual Enlightenment Salon with Aubrey de Grey

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, geopolitics, life extension, transhumanism

Today at 1 PM PST.


On Sunday, February 212021, at 1 p.m. U.S. Pacific Time, the U.S. Transhumanist Party invites Dr. Aubrey de Grey of the SENS Research Foundation, for an in-depth conversation about recent developments in the quest to reverse the damage of biological aging. The discussion will cover current in rejuvenation research and advocacy, as well as delve into how the prospects for reaching longevity escape velocity have changed since Dr. de Grey’s remarks at the U.S. Transhumanist Party Discussion Panel on Life Extension nearly 4 years ago in 2017.

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Mar 20, 2021

Humans still similar to first animals without heads, arms, or skeletons

Posted by in category: futurism

555-million-year-old oceanic creatures share genes with today’s humans, finds a new study.


As complex as modern humans can get, they still retain some features of the earliest animals on Earth. According to new research, we are not as different as we might think from strange prehistoric organisms that didn’t have any heads, arms, legs, or skeletons.

A study from UC Riverside identified 555-million-year-old oceanic creatures that share genes with humans and other contemporary animals.

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Mar 20, 2021

An End To Aging — The Mother Of All Disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience

I will look at the idea that all disease could be almost stopped in its tracks with a universal treatment for aging. A lot of people ask when we will cure aging and the answer is it may well be here sooner than many realise.

It doesn’t matter how good the treatments are that we develop for cancer, heart disease, alzheimers, and any other of a number of the most common ways we finally die, it is really just a game of whack a mole. If you survive one, just wait a few years and another will get you.

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Mar 20, 2021

Thought-detection: AI has infiltrated our last bastion of privacy

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, food, internet, robotics/AI

“Ahsan Noor Khan, a PhD student and first author of the study, said: “We’re now looking to investigate how we could use low-cost existing systems, such as Wi-Fi routers, to detect emotions of a large number of people gathered, for instance in an office or work environment.” Among other things, this could be useful for HR departments to assess how new policies introduced in a meeting are being received, regardless of what the recipients might say. Outside of an office, police could use this technology to look for emotional changes in a crowd that might lead to violence.”


Research from the UK and an update from Elon Musk on human trials at his brain interface company show software is now eating the mind.

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Mar 20, 2021

Strange creatures accidentally discovered beneath Antarctica’s ice shelves

Posted by in category: futurism

Far underneath the ice shelves of the Antarctic, there’s more life than expected, finds a recent study in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science.

Mar 20, 2021

WATCH: Two Moons Appear In Sky Over Dubai, Frightening Confused Residents

Posted by in category: space

Dozens of videos of the bizarre sight were posted to social media by scared citizens unsure of what was going on.

Mar 20, 2021

New Video Shows Beverly Hills Cops Playing Beatles to Trigger Instagram Copyright Filter

Posted by in category: media & arts

In comments to City Council last year about APD’s intellectual property enforcement grant, I warned council that one thing I was concerned about was that APD might try to confiscate/remove activist videos by issuing takedown notices for copyrighted music playing in the background of the videos. Looks like I was right to be worried.


In at least three cases, Beverly Hills Cops have started playing music seemingly to prevent themselves from being filmed by an activist.

Mar 20, 2021

The Case (or Not) for Life in the Venusian Clouds

Posted by in category: alien life

The case (or not) for life in the clouds of Venus, re-evaluated 7 months after the initial claimed detection of phosphine in its atmosphere.


The possible detection of the biomarker of phosphine as reported by Greaves et al. in the Venusian atmosphere stirred much excitement in the astrobiology community. While many in the community are adamant that the environmental conditions in the Venusian atmosphere are too extreme for life to exist, others point to the claimed detection of a convincing biomarker, the conjecture that early Venus was doubtlessly habitable, and any Venusian life might have adapted by natural selection to the harsh conditions in the Venusian clouds after the surface became uninhabitable. Here, I first briefly characterize the environmental conditions in the lower Venusian atmosphere and outline what challenges a biosphere would face to thrive there, and how some of these obstacles for life could possibly have been overcome.