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Feb 6, 2021

MonoRacer: Fully enclosed motorcycle for long distance travel

Posted by in category: transportation

Freedom of classic motorcycles with the safety of cars.

More info.


MonoRacer is a fully enclosed motorcycle for long distance travel. It offers the freedom of classic motorcycles with the safety of cars.

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Feb 6, 2021

How the 700 mph hyperloop concept could become the fastest way to travel

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, transportation

OEC promoting STEM in Africa.


Elon Musk introduced the concept of the hyperloop in 2013. Here’s where we are in hyperloop development.

Feb 6, 2021

Dr. Rachel Ramoni, Chief R&D Officer, U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs (VA) — Facilitating Innovation

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, military

Facilitating Novel Health-Tech and Bio-Medical Innovations For Over 9 Million Veterans — Dr. Rachel Ramoni, Chief of R&D, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.


Dr. Rachel Ramoni, is the Chief Research and Development Officer of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), where she oversees their nationwide research enterprise, encompassing some 2000 active projects, at more than 100 sites, with a total budget of $2 billion in both direct VA support, and research funding from outside entities such as the National Institutes of Health, other federal agencies, and nonprofit and private organizations.

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Feb 6, 2021

A warp in the Milky Way linked to galactic collision

Posted by in category: space

When most of us picture the shape of the Milky Way, the galaxy that contains our own sun and hundreds of billions of other stars, we think of a central mass surrounded by a flat disc of stars that spiral around it. However, astronomers know that rather than being symmetrical, the disc structure is warped, more like the brim of a fedora, and that the warped edges are constantly moving around the outer rim of the galaxy.

Feb 6, 2021

Machine learning algorithm may be the key to timely, inexpensive cyber-defense

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, information science, robotics/AI

Attacks on vulnerable computer networks and cyber-infrastructure—often called zero-day attacks—can quickly overwhelm traditional defenses, resulting in billions of dollars of damage and requiring weeks of manual patching work to shore up the systems after the intrusion.

Feb 6, 2021

Matt Kaeberlein on the biology of aging. Excerpts from an interview with Brian Kennedy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Excerpts from an enlightening interview / conversation conducted by Brian Kennedy with Matt Kaeberlein on the biology of aging.
The interview took place in November 2020 as the first one under the healthy longevity webinar series organized by Brian Kennedy from the National University of Singapure (NUS).

During the conversation, Matt Kaeberlein makes a nice description about what aging is, as well as about therapies, drugs and other interventions that, at least in animals of various kinds, manage to modulate (delay / reverse) the progress of aging.

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Feb 5, 2021

The Ramanujan Machine: Researchers have developed a ‘conjecture generator’ that creates mathematical conjectures

Posted by in categories: mathematics, robotics/AI

Using AI and computer automation, Technion researchers have developed a ‘conjecture generator’ that creates mathematical conjectures, which are considered to be the starting point for developing mathematical theorems. They have already used it to generate a number of previously unknown formulas. The study, which was published in the journal Nature, was carried out by undergraduates from different faculties under the tutelage of Assistant Professor Ido Kaminer of the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Faculty of Electrical Engineering at the Technion.

Feb 5, 2021

Experimental “blowhole” wave energy generator goes online down under

Posted by in category: energy

A 200-kilowatt demonstration version of Wave Swell Energy’s fascinating “blowhole” power generator has been deployed at Grassy Harbour on King Island, off the Australian island state of Tasmania and will be connected to the grid in the coming months.

Feb 5, 2021

Silicon anode structure generates new potential for lithium-ion batteries

Posted by in categories: materials, nanotechnology

New research conducted by the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) has identified a specific building block that improves the anode in lithium-ion batteries. The unique properties of the structure, which was built using nanoparticle technology, are revealed and explained today in Communications Materials.

Feb 5, 2021

Inductance based on a quantum effect has the potential to miniaturize inductors

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, quantum physics

Mobile-phone chargers and other devices could become much smaller after an all-RIKEN team of physicists successfully shrunk an electrical component known as an inductor to microscale dimensions using a quantum effect.