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Sep 24, 2018

Canadian Researchers Used 3D Printing to Save a Dachshund Named Patches

Posted by in category: 3D printing

Using a mix of techniques in 3D printing and rapid prototyping, a team of researchers in Canada have successfully replaced about 70 percent of a dachshund name Patches’ skull that had to be removed while excising a tumor. It’s a technique that could some day save human lives as well.

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Sep 24, 2018

From Lifespan to Healthspan

Posted by in category: futurism

This viewpoint discusses increased life expectancy and the initiatives to address the risks and unintended consequences of living longer.

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Sep 24, 2018

Japan has launched a miniature space elevator

Posted by in category: space

The Japanese space agency just launched a prototype space elevator to the International Space Station to test motion along a taut cable in space.

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Sep 24, 2018

When Will We Have Artificial Intelligence As Smart as a Human? Here’s What Experts Think

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Human-level artificial intelligence (HLAI) is a holy grail of AI research. But no one knows how to make it. Here’s when the experts think it’ll happen.

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Sep 24, 2018

Implant helps paralysed man walk again

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Five years after he was paralysed in a snowmobile accident, a man in the US has learned to walk again aided by an electrical implant, in a potential breakthrough for spinal injury sufferers.

A team of doctors at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota say the man, using a front-wheeled walker, was able to cover the equivalent of the length of a football pitch, issuing commands from his brain to transfer weight and maintain balance—all previously thought impossible for .

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Sep 24, 2018

The Truth about Hydrogen

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering

Get 2 months of Skillshare for FREE using this link: https://skl.sh/realengineering13

Errors: I made an off hand comment about adding efficiencies in the video without thinking. This is obviously incorrect, but the final calculation does in fact multiply the efficiencies.

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Sep 24, 2018

Known Drug Might Prove Effective Against Alzheimer’s Disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Apparently, amyloid beta drives its own production in a vicious circle.


In a study at King’s College London, scientists have shown that a vicious circle in which the ill-famed amyloid-beta protein stimulates its own production might be a key factor in the etiology of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease; furthermore, a drug known as fasudil seems to be effective against amyloid-beta in a mice model of the disease [1].

Study abstract

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Sep 24, 2018

New law would give feds the right to shoot down private drones in U.S.

Posted by in categories: drones, law

The FAA bill that goes to the House floor Wednesday also establishes a Syria Study Group to provide the first comprehensive review of U.S. strategy in Syria.

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Sep 24, 2018

Screen-printed, large-area nPERT solar cells surpass 23 percent efficiency

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

At today’s EU PVSEC conference, imec—the world-leading research and innovation hub in nanoelectronics, energy and digital technology and partner in EnergyVille—announced that its latest generation of large-area monofacial screen-printed rear-emitter nPERT cells feature a conversion efficiency of 23.03 percent, certified by Fraunhofer ISE CalLab. The nPERT (n-type Passivated Emitter and Rear Totally diffused) solar cells are made using an industry-compatible screen-printing process that has been designed as an upgrade of conventional pPERC (p-type Passivated Emitter and Rear Cell) processes. According to imec, its nPERT technology is projected to reach 23.5 percent efficiency by the end of this year, and there is a clear technology roadmap to eventually surpass 24 percent.

While p-type PERC solar cells are becoming mainstream in the PV industry, n-type PERT technology is being developed as a cost-effective contender that has a number of inherent advantages: Due to the absence of B-O complexes, n-type cells don’t suffer from light induced degradation (LID) and are less sensitive to metal impurities. That makes for cells that have the potential for a longer-term stability and a higher efficiency. Imec fabricated the M2-sized cells (area: 244.3 cm²) on its pilot line with industry-compatible tools and recipes, in a that is an upgrade of the pPERC fabrication process, using a similar layout of an n+ region (Front Surface Field) on the illuminated side and a p+ region (as rear emitter) on the opposite side and adding a cost-effective boron diffusion.

“Until now, nPERT solar technology has not yet found the traction it deserves in the industry,” says Loic Tous, senior researcher at . “With these ever-improving results, which we achieved by applying knowledge gained from our bifacial nPERT project, we are now demonstrating the potential of nPERT technology. The advantages in stability and efficiency potential over p-type PERC , while using the same equipment with the addition of a Boron diffusion, make this a very promising technology for future manufacturing lines.”

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Sep 24, 2018

Tesla’s massive Powerpack battery in Australia cost $66 million and already made up to ~$17 million

Posted by in category: futurism

We have already seen several pieces of evidence that Tesla’s massive Powerpack battery project in Australia is quite financially successful, but now we get all the numbers as Neoen, Tesla’s partner in the project, files for IPO.

The giant battery cost ~$66 million and it reportedly already made up to $17 million during the first ~6 months of operation.

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