Menu

Blog

Page 7193

Aug 21, 2020

Mounting Climate Impacts Threaten U.S. Nuclear Reactors

Posted by in categories: climatology, nuclear energy, sustainability

Soaring temperatures, intensified flood risks and heightened water stress will threaten 57 U.S. nuclear plants over the next 20 years, forcing operators to take additional resiliency measures, according to a new report.

“The consequences of climate change can affect every aspect of nuclear plant operations—from fuel handling and power and steam generation to maintenance, safety systems and waste processing,” said the analysis, which was published yesterday by Moody’s Investors Service.

Aug 21, 2020

Age Reduction Breakthrough

Posted by in categories: innovation, life extension

If you eschew hyperbole and hang in for the long haul, maintaining a discipline of understatement in the midst of a flashy neon world, you may be offered a modicum of credence when you make an extraordinary announcement. No one is entitled to this courtesy twice. If the news that you trumpet to the moon does not pan out, your readers will be justified in discounting everything you say thereafter.

Here goes.

Continue reading “Age Reduction Breakthrough” »

Aug 21, 2020

Guest: Gennady Stolyarov, USA

Posted by in category: futurism

Comments shown at the moment when they appeared in the video.

Aug 21, 2020

‘Mona Lisa’ of Dinosaur Fossils Found Unbelievably Well-Preserved

Posted by in category: futurism

The specimen is so well preserved, entombed as it was in pure mud, that it is the best, most complete dinosaur fossil ever found — anywhere. We can even see what its last meal was!


Canada’s western provinces are famous for many things: dinosaur fossils, the Rocky Mountains, helicopter skiing in Banff, and one of the world’s best and most famous dinosaur museums, the Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology in Drumheller, Alberta. One of the museum’s finest fossils belongs to a plant eating dinosaur called a “nodosaur,” a creature archaeologists say was almost 20 feet long and weighed in at close to 3,000 pounds when it lived 110 million years ago during the Early Cretaceous period.

A particularly unusual feature of this dinosaur was the way in which it expired; after eating a full dinner, it simply passed away while lying in a river bed, ultimately making its way out to sea. Perhaps a rain storm washed it away, or perhaps some other climactic event; no matter how it ended up there, the consequence was that the fossil survived in almost perfect form. It was discovered in 2011 by an oil sands worker in northern Alberta.

Continue reading “‘Mona Lisa’ of Dinosaur Fossils Found Unbelievably Well-Preserved” »

Aug 20, 2020

The robot revolution has arrived

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

Even before the COVID crisis added its impetus, technological trends were accelerating the creation of robots that could fan out into our lives. Mechanical parts got lighter, cheaper, and sturdier. Electronics packed more computing power into smaller packages. Breakthroughs let engineers put powerful data-crunching tools into robot bodies. Better digital communications let them keep some robot “brains” in a computer elsewhere—or connect a simple robot to hundreds of others, letting them share a collective intelligence, like a beehive’s.


Machines now perform all sorts of tasks: They clean big stores, patrol borders, and help autistic children. But will they make life better for humans?

Aug 20, 2020

Artificial Intelligence Defeats Human F-16 Pilot In Virtual Dogfight

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

The plan in the next big war will probably be to let waves of AI fighters wipe out all the enemies targets, Anti aircraft systems, enemy fighters, enemy air fields etc…, however many waves that takes. And, then human pilots come in behind that.


An artificial intelligence algorithm defeated a human F-16 fighter pilot in a virtual dogfight sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Thursday.

Aug 20, 2020

Harvard Medical School Healthcare Innovation Bootcamp

Posted by in categories: business, education

The MIT-Harvard Medical School Healthcare Innovation Bootcamp brings the rigorous, collaborative, action-learning experience of our in-person Healthcare Innovation Bootcamps online. Over 10 weeks, you’ll have the opportunity to work with a global team of innovators selected by MIT Bootcamps to build the foundations of a new healthcare venture. You will learn principles… See More.


The MIT — Harvard Medical School Healthcare Innovation Bootcamp will be different than most online courses you can take. A combination of live teaching sessions and workshops (which are recorded for your flexibility), office hours, building the foundations of a venture with your global team, and receiving regular team-based coaching, the Bootcamp is a hands-on, immersive, and rigorous learning experience. In 10 weeks, you’ll learn to identify an innovation opportunity, develop a superior solution, and select a business model for the venture you build with your global team. Expect to spend 10–15 hours per week on live sessions, individual, and team work.

Aug 20, 2020

IBM reveals next-generation processor

Posted by in category: computing

IBM has revealed the 10th generation of its IBM POWER central processing unit (CPU) family: the IBM POWER10.

Aug 20, 2020

Liz Parrish: Could Gene Therapy deliver the cure for ageing? How to test for your REAL Biological age and how it could help improve the signs of ageing

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

*** Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/renatoautore/?hl=en *** Follow Bioviva on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/biovivasciences/

Aug 20, 2020

Cannabis Customers Can Now Buy Marijuana From Vending Machines In Colorado

Posted by in category: futurism

There are now four pot vending machines operating at one location in Pueblo — and there are plans to install one at a dispensary in Aurora.