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Dec 22, 2024

Gene and Cell Therapies Take Aim at Parkinson’s Disease

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

New therapies that are less intrusive but more lasting than current interventions promise to arrest and even reverse neurodegeneration.

Dec 22, 2024

Cyanobacteria research unlocks potential for renewable plastics from carbon dioxide

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

Scientists at The University of Manchester have achieved a significant breakthrough in using cyanobacteria—commonly known as “blue-green algae”—to convert carbon dioxide (CO2) into valuable bio-based materials.

Their work, published in Biotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts, could accelerate the development of sustainable alternatives to fossil fuel-derived products like plastics, helping pave the way for a carbon-neutral circular bioeconomy.

The research, led by Dr. Matthew Faulkner, working alongside Dr. Fraser Andrews, and Professor Nigel Scrutton, focused on improving the production of citramalate, a compound that serves as a precursor for renewable plastics such as Perspex or Plexiglas. Using an innovative approach called “design of experiment,” the team achieved a remarkable 23-fold increase in citramalate production by optimizing key process parameters.

Dec 22, 2024

Charter school is replacing teachers with AI

Posted by in categories: education, robotics/AI

This will really start to pick up now.

Continue reading “Charter school is replacing teachers with AI” »

Dec 22, 2024

OpenAI O3 Breakthrough High Score on ARC-AGI-Pub

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

OpenAI O3 scores 75.7% on ARC-AGI public leaderboard.

Dec 21, 2024

Early universe’s monstruous black hole caught in a post-meal nap

Posted by in category: cosmology

Sleeping after eating!

Dec 21, 2024

3D printing technique traps CO2 in concrete, boosts strength by 45%

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, sustainability

Scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have pioneered a 3D concrete printing method that captures and stores carbon dioxide, marking a major step toward reducing the construction industry’s environmental footprint.

The innovative technique offers a promising solution to mitigate cement’s massive carbon emissions.

The process works by integrating CO₂ and steam—byproducts of industrial processes—into the concrete mix during 3D printing. As the material is printed, CO₂ reacts with components in the concrete, forming a solid, stable compound that remains locked within the structure.

Dec 21, 2024

TIMELAPSE OF FUTURE TECHNOLOGY 3 (Sci-Fi Documentary)

Posted by in categories: bioprinting, education, environmental, robotics/AI, space

This timelapse of future technology, the 3rd year of the video series, goes on a journey exploring the human mind becoming digital. Brain chips turn memories and thoughts into data; could this data be sent out into space to live in the cosmos encoded into the magnetic fields between stars.

Other topics covered in this sci-fi documentary video include: bio-printing, asteroid habitats, terraforming Mars, the future of Teslabots, lucid dreaming, and the future of artificial intelligence and brain to computer interfaces (BCI — brain chips).

Continue reading “TIMELAPSE OF FUTURE TECHNOLOGY 3 (Sci-Fi Documentary)” »

Dec 21, 2024

Ask Ethan: Do gravitons need to exist?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, evolution, particle physics, quantum physics

Which brings us to the big question: what about gravity?

This is something where we can’t be certain, as gravitation remains the only known force for which we don’t have a full quantum description. Instead, we have Einstein’s general relativity as our theory of gravity, which relies on a purely classical (i.e., non-quantum) formalism for describing it. According to Einstein, spacetime behaves as a four-dimensional fabric, and it’s the curvature and evolution of that fabric that determines how matter-and-energy move through it. Similarly it’s the presence and distribution of matter-and-energy that determine the curvature and evolution of spacetime itself: the two notions are linked together in an inextricable way.

Now, over on the quantum side, our other fundamental forces and interactions have both a quantum description for particles and a quantum description for the fields themselves. All calculations performed within all quantum field theories are calculated within spacetime, and while most of the calculations we perform are undertaken with the assumption that the underlying background of spacetime is flat and uncurved, we can also insert more complex spacetime backgrounds where necessary. It was such a calculation, for example, that led Stephen Hawking to predict the emission of the radiation that bears his name from black holes: Hawking radiation. Combining quantum field theory (in that case, for electromagnetism) with the background of curved spacetime inevitably leads to such a prediction.

Dec 21, 2024

“Life Will Get Weird The Next 3 Years!” — Future of AI, Humanity & Utopia vs Dystopia | Nick Bostrom

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

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Welcome to Impact Theory, I’m Tom Bilyeu and in today’s episode, Nick Bostrom and I dive into the moral and societal implications of AI as it becomes increasingly advanced.

Continue reading “‘Life Will Get Weird The Next 3 Years!’ — Future of AI, Humanity & Utopia vs Dystopia | Nick Bostrom” »

Dec 21, 2024

Future robots could one day tell how you’re feeling by measuring your sweat, scientists say

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Scientists say a phenomenon called “skin conductance,” which changes when you sweat, is a surprisingly accurate method for detecting emotions — with future robots that detect this able to tell your emotions.

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