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Nov 25, 2018

How high-tech toilets could soon be tracking your every movement

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, mobile phones

The bathroom is arguably the last bastion of privacy, but soon a new high-tech lavatory could be tracking your every movement.

Researchers at the European Space Agency (ESA) and MIT have teamed up with sanitation specialists to create the ‘FitLoo’ which screens human waste for early signs of disease.

Data gathered by the sensors in the toilet bowl could be beamed to the users mobile phone so they can see how their health is changing or even directly to the GP so they could keep a remote eye on patients.

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Nov 25, 2018

Is it time to re-open the genetic modification debate?

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, genetics

The genetic engineering debate is heating up again, 15 years after mass protests curbed the use of the technology.

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Nov 25, 2018

The Disruptors — What will the doctor order?

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Could advances in tech and medicine provide the key to finding solutions to some of humanity’s most devastating diseases?

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Nov 25, 2018

Could we ever detect other universes?

Posted by in category: futurism

In another universe is there an identical you sat at an identical desk, reading this identical question?

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Nov 25, 2018

An intermediary between qubits provides basis for control and scaling

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Linking qubits via an intermediary protects quantum information for longer.

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Nov 25, 2018

Unexpectedly Vanishing Quasars Are Mystifying Scientists

Posted by in category: cosmology

Quasars powered by supermassive black holes have been unexpectedly vanishing. Scientists have started to figure out why.

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Nov 25, 2018

The human brain has two internal clocks that allow you to see the future, new research says

Posted by in categories: futurism, neuroscience

Our results suggest at least two different ways in which the brain has evolved to anticipate the future.


Go ahead and add ‘seeing the future’ to the growing list of amazing things your brain can do.

Well, almost, at least. According to new research from the University of California, Berkeley, it turns out that humans have the innate skill to somewhat predict or anticipate some things moments before they actually happen.

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Nov 25, 2018

A Giant Leap Forward For

Posted by in category: futurism

SOLAR TECH

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Nov 25, 2018

A Bold New Strategy for Stopping the Rise of Superbugs

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution

Over the past 90 years, scientists have discovered hundreds of antibiotics—microbe-killing drugs that have brought many pernicious diseases to heel. But every time researchers identify a new drug, bacteria inevitably evolve to resist it within a matter of years. We thrust; they parry. Now, with the flow of new antibiotics having dried up for decades, our stalemated duel with infectious bacteria threatens to end in outright defeat. Superbugs are ascendant around the world, including those that resist all commonly used drugs.


Scientists have pinpointed a molecule that accelerates the evolution of drug-resistant microbes. Now they’re trying to find a way to block it.

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Nov 25, 2018

See How AI Can Turn Almost Any Surface Into a User Interface

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

A startup called HyperSurfaces wants to completely change how you interact with the physical world — and based on some recently released demo videos, it might just meet that lofty goal.

The London-based startup recently unveiled a new technology that can transform any object into a user interface. Essentially, this tech lets you communicate with a computing system using virtually anything you like as a conduit — a glass wall, a car door, even a metal clothes rack — and it has the potential to end our reliance on keyboards, buttons, and touch screens forever.

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