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Oct 27, 2019

Israeli Technology Converts Air Into Water for Residents in Northern Colombia

Posted by in categories: innovation, sustainability

Residents of El Talento, a small town in Colombia adjacent to the city of Cúcuta, have been introduced to the GEN-M, Watergen’s medium-scale atmospheric generator that produces water out of air, October 2019. Photo: Courtesy.

JNS.org – Residents of El Talento, a small town in Colombia adjacent to the city of Cúcuta, have been introduced to the GEN-M, Watergen’s medium-scale atmospheric generator (AWG) that produces water out of air.

The machine, a technological innovation of the Israel-based company, arrived in Cúcuta at the beginning of October thanks to Andrés Suárez, pastor of the Christian Center and general manager of the alliance project with the State of Israel in Colombia.

Oct 27, 2019

Drone-like taxi whizzes over Singapore, firm eyes Asian push

Posted by in category: drones

A drone-like flying taxi whirred over Singapore’s waterfront Tuesday, with the firm behind the test hoping the aircraft will revolutionize travel in traffic-choked Asian cities.

The 18 propeller vehicle, developed by German firm Volocopter and with a pilot onboard for safety during the test flight, took off from a promontory and flew for about two minutes and 30 seconds around the Marina Bay district.

Heavy rains in the morning almost delayed the flight, but the skies cleared in time for the battery-operated, two-seater taxi to quietly fly past skyscrapers.

Oct 27, 2019

Rare Diseases! — University of Pennsylvania’s Dr. David Fajgenbaum, MD — ideaXme — Ira Pastor

Posted by in categories: aging, bioengineering, biotech/medical, business, DNA, genetics, health, life extension, science, transhumanism

Oct 27, 2019

Spinal Cord Injuries and Treatment — Rutgers University’s Dr. Wise Young MD, PhD. — ideaXme — Ira Pastor

Posted by in categories: aging, bioengineering, biotech/medical, business, health, life extension, neuroscience, posthumanism, science, transhumanism

Oct 27, 2019

Quantum computing’s ‘Hello World’ moment

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Does quantum computing really exist? It’s fitting that for decades this field has been haunted by the fundamental uncertainty of whether it would, eventually, prove to be a wild goose chase. But Google has collapsed this nagging superposition with research not just demonstrating what’s called “quantum supremacy,” but more importantly showing that this also is only the very beginning of what quantum computers will eventually be capable of.

This is by all indications an important point in computing, but it is also very esoteric and technical in many ways. Consider, however, that in the 60s, the decision to build computers with electronic transistors must have seemed rather an esoteric point as well. Yet that was in a way the catalyst for the entire Information Age.

Most of us were not lucky enough to be involved with that decision or to understand why it was important at the time. We are lucky enough to be here now — but understanding takes a bit of explanation. The best place to start is perhaps with computing and physics pioneers Alan Turing and Richard Feynman.

Oct 27, 2019

The Universe as Informavore

Posted by in category: space

Even if the universe has some kind of mentality, it need not be conscious.

Oct 27, 2019

This Week in Tech: WeWork and S9 Architecture Inaugurate the Flood-Resilient Dock 72 in Brooklyn

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Plus, the first-ever WELL Conference, MIT robots that assemble lunar settlements, and more design-tech news this week.

Oct 27, 2019

Space: The Final Business Frontier | GIANT LEAP Ep. 1

Posted by in categories: business, space

In the not-too-distant future, entirely new industries will be developed in space. But for these endeavors to be viable, we need to first get the necessary tools into orbit. That’s where one of the most crowded new sectors has developed. More than 100 privately-backed launch companies are in fierce competition to get payloads into space as fast, often and cheaply as possible.

For more Giant Leap episodes: &list=PLqq4LnWs3olWR-zshlDHm6Avj0oURtc1X

Continue reading “Space: The Final Business Frontier | GIANT LEAP Ep. 1” »

Oct 27, 2019

The five: ways to slow the onset of Alzheimer’s

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Scientists have conducted a series of trials that point to various ways to check the progress of the disease.

Oct 27, 2019

There’s a chance the black hole at the center of our galaxy is actually a wormhole

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Science fiction writers love wormholes because they make the impossible possible, linking otherwise unreachable places together. Enter one, and it’ll spit you back out in another locale—typically one that’s convenient for the plot. And no matter how unlikely these exotic black hole relatives are to exist in reality, they tend to fascinate physicists for exactly the same reason. Recently, some of those physicists took the time to ponder what such a cosmic shortcut might look like in real life, and even make a case that there could be one at the center of our galaxy.