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Mar 9, 2020
Crystal creates a supercontinuum breakthrough
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: innovation, materials
Researchers have generated a wide range of colors from a single laser after discovering a new process for achieving so-called “supercontinuum generation.”
Supercontinuum generation is when intense laser light of one color travels within a material, like glass, and broadens into a spectrum of colors.
The effect lets scientists produce light at colors tailored to particular applications in sectors like bioimaging, optical communications and fundamental studies of materials.
Mar 9, 2020
Brain-Computer Interface Technology: Helping Or Hacking?
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: cybercrime/malcode, neuroscience, virtual reality
Brain Computer Interface (BCI)
Brain-computer interface (BCI) is a technology that agree to communicate between a human-brain with an external technology. The term can be referred to an interface that takes signals from the brain to an external piece of hardware that sends signals to the brain. There are different brain-computer interface technologies developed, through different methods and for diversified purposes, including in virtual reality technology.
Benefits of Brain Computer Interface
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Mar 9, 2020
Chip Walter talks “Immortality, Inc.” & the science behind human immortality
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: computing, life extension, science
Journalist Chip Walter visited our friends at Willoughby-Eastlake Public Library earlier this month to discuss his new book, “Immortality, Inc.” Walter discusses the resources (both the brilliant people and astonishing amount of money) being dedicated to seeing if people do, in fact, have to die.
In true ‘Blade Runner’ fashion, a child-like robot was taught to wince every time it ‘feels’ pain.
Mar 9, 2020
Andrew Yang creates new organization focused on data privacy, UBI, and the future of work
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: economics, futurism
Andrew Yang today announced the creation of Humanity First, an organization that will fund programs for universal basic income and data as a property right.
Mar 9, 2020
Custom-Made Bones Are Being 3D Printed in a Lab Then Implanted in People
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical, health, space
But using porous TCP to print bones does have some drawbacks. Its compressive strength is much lower than that of some human load-bearing bones, such as our thighbones. Compressive strength would rise over time, but it could be years before it would match pre-operation strength levels.
3D Printing Bones for Mars?
Several other groups are working on similar approaches. At NYU School of Medicine and NYU Langone Health, scientists have been developing 3D printed scaffold implants that could help patient groups such as children with skull deform ities. Early research results show that up to 77 percent of the bone scaffolding had been absorbed and replaced by natural bone 6 months after surgery, and that the newly-grown bone was just as strong as the original.
Mar 9, 2020
China firm develops system to recognize faces behind coronavirus masks
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
BEIJING (Reuters) — A Chinese company says it has developed the country’s first facial recognition technology that can identify people when they are wearing a mask, as most are these days because of the coronavirus, and help in the fight against the disease.
Mar 9, 2020
Three Articles of Posthuman Modernism: The Meta-Cinema of Marcel L’Herbier (and Friends)
Posted by Steve Nichols in categories: entertainment, media & arts
On October 4, 1923, the American composer George Antheil made his highly anticipated Paris debut at the Champs Elysées Theatre, in front of a rioting audience. A few minutes into the recital the crowd became unsettled; members of the audience started to protest the offensive nature of the music, others jumped to the musician’s defence, and before long the house was out of control. Unbeknownst to Antheil, the riot was in fact staged by his friends Marcel L’Herbier and Georgette Leblanc, who needed to film just such a scene for their upcoming movie, The Inhuman Woman. The ruse would only be revealed to him about a year after the incident. As he recalls:
I went to see a movie called L’Inhumaine, featuring Georgette LeBlanc. In this silent movie (still preserved by our New York Museum of Modern Art) you can if you wish see a vast rioting public… However, most curiously, this riot is no fake one. It is an actual riot, the same riot through which I played and lived that night. [1]
Mar 9, 2020
UK Cryonics and Cryopreservation Research Network
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, life extension
The UK Cryonics and Cryopreservation Research Network is a group of UK researchers who, together with international advisors, aim to advance research in cryopreservation and its applications.
Although we are a small group, we hope to promote academic and industrial activity on cryopreservation, and discuss its potential applications, including the idea of cryopreserving whole humans, commonly known as cryonics. We acknowledge that cryonics is a controversial topic, but like any unprovable approach we think its scientific discussion is necessary to permit its understanding by the public and by the wider scientific community, and it allows us to address many of the misunderstandings surrounding cryonics. We also think that cryopreservation, cryogenics and cryonics are fields with a huge potential impact on human medicine whose societal implications should be considered and debated.
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