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Aug 23, 2020

What people in 1900 thought life would be like in the technological paradise of 2000

Posted by in category: futurism

Well, they were right about the North Pole being warmer.

Aug 23, 2020

FBI and CISA warn of major wave of phishing attacks targeting teleworkers

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Hackers are calling employees working from home and tricking them into accessing phishing pages for corporate domains.

Aug 23, 2020

Follow me on my journey to Mars with NASA’s Eyes on the Solar System

Posted by in categories: internet, space

The web app provides you with the precise location of my whereabouts in real-time, using real data. I’m learning space is a big place and I’m delighted to have you see how my team and I navigate it. http://go.nasa.gov/2YmfBz5

Aug 23, 2020

How You Speak Reflects Who You Are: The Way We Talk Both Unites and Divides Us

Posted by in category: futurism

In new book, Prof. Katherine D. Kinzler argues that how you speak reflects who you are.

Have you ever considered that the way you talk may determine who you’re friends with, the job you have, and how you see the world? Even if you don’t realize it, “how you speak is, in a very real way, a window into who you are and how other people see you.”

Aug 23, 2020

Stanford Scientists Slow Light Down and Steer It With Resonant Nanoantennas

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, biotech/medical, computing, internet, nanotechnology, quantum physics, virtual reality

Researchers have fashioned ultrathin silicon nanoantennas that trap and redirect light, for applications in quantum computing, LIDAR and even the detection of viruses.

Light is notoriously fast. Its speed is crucial for rapid information exchange, but as light zips through materials, its chances of interacting and exciting atoms and molecules can become very small. If scientists can put the brakes on light particles, or photons, it would open the door to a host of new technology applications.

Now, in a paper published on August 17, 2020, in Nature Nanotechnology, Stanford scientists demonstrate a new approach to slow light significantly, much like an echo chamber holds onto sound, and to direct it at will. Researchers in the lab of Jennifer Dionne, associate professor of materials science and engineering at Stanford, structured ultrathin silicon chips into nanoscale bars to resonantly trap light and then release or redirect it later. These “high-quality-factor” or “high-Q” resonators could lead to novel ways of manipulating and using light, including new applications for quantum computing, virtual reality and augmented reality; light-based WiFi; and even the detection of viruses like SARS-CoV-2.

Aug 23, 2020

Deep Learning on MCUs is the Future of Edge Computing

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Deep learning on MCUs, also known as TinyML, is perfectly possible today but TOPS ratings don’t always tell the full story.

Aug 23, 2020

NASA: An Asteroid Will Come Close To Earth Right Before Election Day

Posted by in categories: asteroid/comet impacts, biotech/medical, existential risks

Amid a pandemic, civil unrest and a divisive US election season, we now have an asteroid zooming toward us.

On the day before the presidential vote, no less.

Yep. The celestial object known as 2018VP1 is projected to come close to Earth on November 2, according to the Center for Near Earth Objects Studies at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Continue reading “NASA: An Asteroid Will Come Close To Earth Right Before Election Day” »

Aug 22, 2020

Meet the Xenobot, the World’s First-Ever “Living” Robot

Posted by in categories: biological, robotics/AI

These researchers paired biology with AI to create the world’s first “living” robots 🤯.

Aug 22, 2020

Why Are Spacesuits So Expensive?

Posted by in category: futurism

Aug 22, 2020

Final Flight: 08/21/2020

Posted by in category: space

This week on #SpaceToGround: a JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) cargo spacecraft leaves the International Space Station.