So this is what astronauts get up to in space! đ.
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May 17, 2020
Intriguing Genetics That Flipped the Food Chain to Allow Carnivorous Plants to Hunt Animals
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, food, genetics
Plants can produce energy-rich biomass with the help of light, water and carbon dioxide. This is why they are at the beginning of the food chains. But the carnivorous plants have turned the tables and hunt animals. Insects are their main food source.
A publication in the journal Current Biology now sheds light on the secret life of the green carnivores. The plant scientist Rainer Hedrich and the evolutionary bioinformatician Jörg Schultz, both from Julius-Maximilians-UniversitĂ€t (JMU) WĂŒrzburg in Bavaria, Germany, and their colleague Mitsujasu Hasebe from the University of Okazaki (Japan) have deciphered and analyzed the genomes of three carnivorous plant species.
They studied the Venus flytrap Dionaea muscipula, which originates from North America, the globally occurring waterwheel plant Aldrovanda vesiculosa and the spoon-leaved sundew Drosera spatulata, which is widely distributed in Asia.
May 17, 2020
Clean Audio with CrumplePops RustleRemover AI and Levelmatic
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
CrumplePop RustleRemover AI and Levelmatic Audio Plugins, two plugins for audio cleanup we have a look at how they can clean up audio from anything to unwanted mic noises, to fixing levels in podcasts and interview audio.
CrumplePop makes some very clever and useful plugins for Mac-based editors. These include audio tools to fix and enhance sound and video tools for grading and stabilizing. The company has now announced two new audio plugins, RustleRemover AI and Levelmatic the former aimed at fixing a specific issue, and the latter leveling audio.
May 17, 2020
First Observation of a Pauli Quantum Crystal
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: quantum physics
Quantum physicists predicted the Pauli exclusion principle should create spectacular crystals. Now theyâve found them for the first time.
May 17, 2020
FDA approves at-home nasal swab test kit for COVID-19
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted emergency clearance for a coronavirus testing kit that allows people to take a nasal sample in their own homes and send it to a laboratory for diagnostic testing.
The FDA granted the clearance to the company Everlywell, Inc.
Christina Song, an Everlywell spokeswoman told The New York Times, âFrom the moment that you hit the order button, to the moment that you get the test results on your phone or device, that process is designed to take three to five days.â
May 17, 2020
Astronomers in Hawaii capture high resolution images of Jupiter using âlucky imagingâ technique
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
The images showed the warm, deep layers of Jupiterâs atmosphere glowing through gaps in thick cloud cover.
May 17, 2020
Ramsay Malware Steals Sensitive Files from Air-Gapped Computers
Posted by SaĂșl Morales RodriguĂ©z in categories: cybercrime/malcode, internet
https://youtube.com/watch?v=cU2EMupJDZs
Security researchers from ESET recently discovered a new cyber espionage campaign codenamed âRamsayâ which is designed to steal sensitive documents from airâgapped networks. Ramsay can infect air-gapped computers, collect Word, PDF, and ZIP files in a hidden folder, and then exfiltrate them, researchers said. An air-gap is a security measure to ensure computer networks are physically isolated from the rest of the companyâs networks and from potentially unsecured networks like public internet.
âWe initially found an instance of Ramsay in VirusTotal. That sample was uploaded from Japan and led us to the discovery of further components and versions of the framework, along with substantial evidence to conclude that this framework is at a developmental stage, with its delivery vectors still undergoing fine-tuning,â the researchers said in an official post.
Continue reading “Ramsay Malware Steals Sensitive Files from Air-Gapped Computers” »
May 17, 2020
Oracle Cloud Preparing To Introduce Nvidiaâs New A100s
Posted by SaĂșl Morales RodriguĂ©z in category: futurism
May 17, 2020
Samsung Galaxy A Quantum announced with quantum encryption technology
Posted by SaĂșl Morales RodriguĂ©z in categories: encryption, internet, mobile phones, quantum physics, security
Samsung and South Korean carrier SK Telecom today announced a new 5G smartphone dubbed Galaxy A Quantum.
The Samsung Galaxy A Quantum is the worldâs first 5G smartphone equipped with a quantum random number generator (QRNG) chipset, which is developed by SK Telecomâs Switzerland-based subsidiary ID Quantique.
The QRNG chipset is the SKT IDQ S2Q000 and it enhances the security of the phoneâs data by using quantum encryption technology to generate random numbers and create unpredictable secure keys.
May 17, 2020
Quantum Brakes to Learn About the Forces Within Molecules
Posted by SaĂșl Morales RodriguĂ©z in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Physicists have measured the flight times of electrons emitted from a specific atom in a molecule upon excitation with laser light. This has enabled them to measure the influence of the molecule itself on the kinetics of emission.
Photoemission â the release of electrons in response to excitation by light â is one of the most fundamental processes in the microcosm. The kinetic energy of the emitted electron is characteristic for the atom concerned, and depends on the wavelength of the light employed. But how long does the process take? And does it always take the same amount of time, irrespective of whether the electron is emitted from an individual atom or from an atom that is part of a molecule? An international team of researchers led by laser physicists in the Laboratory for Attosecond Physics (LAP) at LMU Munich and the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics (MPQ) in Garching has now probed the influence of the molecule on photoemission time.
The theoretical description of photoemission in 1905 by Albert Einstein marked a breakthrough in quantum physics, and the details of the process are of continuing interest in the world of science and beyond. How the motions of an elementary quantum particle such as the electron are affected within a molecular environment has a significant bearing on our understanding of the process of photoemission and the forces that hold molecules together.