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Dec 15, 2018

Breathing in Moon Dust Could be Even More Toxic Than We Thought

Posted by in categories: health, space

Space agencies are working hard to get humans back to the surface of the Moon. But it’s not exactly the most inviting place.

Astronauts during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969 may not have had any health incidents while they were gleefully bouncing around on the lunar surface, as a NASA mission report from the time points out. But they knew that lunar dust wasn’t their friend — it could irritate their lungs, cause their Moon buggies to overheat — it even started degrading their spacesuits.

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Dec 15, 2018

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope spotted a… — NASA — National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Posted by in category: space

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope spotted a rare, medium-size “hot Neptune” planet in a solar system far beyond our own. Why are there so few exoplanets of this size? Some clues: the planet orbits very close to a young star, and its atmosphere is evaporating rapidly from the blistering radiation. https://go.nasa.gov/2rBCwW4

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Dec 15, 2018

Royal Statistical Society Christmas quiz: 25th anniversary edition

Posted by in category: futurism

Solving the RSS’s fiendishly tricky festive quiz will require general knowledge, logic and lateral thinking.

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Dec 15, 2018

Facebook apologizes after security flaw exposes unpublished photos

Posted by in category: security

“We’re sorry this happened,” Tomer Bar, engineering director at Facebook, wrote in a blog post about the flaw.

The flaw allowed apps that users accessed through the social network’s “Facebook Login” system to see photos that had been uploaded but not published on Facebook, as well as photos published to Facebook’s “Marketplace” and to its Stories feature.

“The bug also impacted photos that people uploaded to Facebook but chose not to post,” Bar wrote.

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Dec 15, 2018

Sci-Fi Promised Us Home Robots. So Where Are They?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Science fiction has promised us a whole lot of technology that it’s rudely failed to deliver—jetpacks, flying cars, teleportation. The most useful one might be the robot companion, à la Rosie from The Jetsons, a machine that watches over the home.

It seemed like 2018 was going to be the year when robots made a big leap in that direction. Two machines in particular surfaced to much fanfare: Kuri, an adorable R2D2 analog that can follow you around and take pictures of your dinner parties, and Jibo, a desktop robot with a screen for a face that works a bit like Alexa, only it can dance.

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Dec 15, 2018

Scientists design custom nanoparticles with new ‘stencil’ method

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

Nano-sized particles already make bicycles and tennis rackets lighter and stronger, protect eyeglasses from scratches, and help direct chemotherapy drugs to cancer cells. But their usefulness depends on being able to precisely sculpt them into the right configurations—no easy task when they’re so tiny that thousands of them could fit into the thickness of a sheet of paper.

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Dec 15, 2018

Bioquark — Bustle — 7 Creepy Things A Dead Body Can Do — Ira Pastor

Posted by in categories: aging, biological, biotech/medical, complex systems, cryonics, fun, futurism, genetics, health, homo sapiens

https://www.bustle.com/p/7-creepy-things-a-dead-body-can-do-…e-13550864

Dec 15, 2018

Proof-of-power and Pseudonym Pairs whitepaper, now on https://panarchy.app/ #BitLattice #BITNATION

Posted by in category: energy

Click on photo to start video.

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Dec 15, 2018

SEC’s Crypto Czar Signals Some Flexibility on Token Offerings

Posted by in category: cryptocurrencies

Finally some regulatory clarity. We can build something and ask the SEC if it’s going to be enforced.


No-action letters may be a way forward for crypto startups hoping to avoid securities classifications.


Dec 15, 2018

At least 15 central banks are serious about getting into digital currency

Posted by in category: finance

Digital cash may soon start replacing the physical kind.

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