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Dec 29, 2018

Australian researchers have developed a test that can detect cancer cells in 10 minutes

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

A quick and easy test devised by scientists from the University of Queensland could transform cancer diagnosis as we know it.

Cancer is a difficult disease to diagnose because different types are characterised by different signatures. Until now, scientists have been unable to find a unique signature common to all forms of cancer that would set it apart from healthy cells.

That’s what University of Queensland researchers Dr Laura Carrascosa, Dr Abu Sina and Professor Matt Trau have addressed. They have discovered a unique DNA nanostructure that seems to be common to all types of cancer and is visible when cancer cells are placed in water.

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Dec 29, 2018

It’s time to protect the blockchain from quantum-enabled hackers

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, quantum physics

To save the tamper-proof ledger from quantum-enabled hackers, the two technologies will join forces. If they don’t, data is at risk.

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Dec 29, 2018

New Calculations May Finally Make Fusion Energy a Reality

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

But despite all our advances, we’re not a whole lot closer to creating net-positive nuclear fusion. Put simply, that’s because these machines just take so much energy to generate plasma.

In fact, Wendelstein 7-X isn’t even intended to generate usable amounts of energy, ever. It’s just a proof of concept.

But for years, Hora and her team have been working on alternative designs. And in this study, they tested them out experimentally as well as through simulations.

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Dec 29, 2018

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Elon Musk “Will Transform Civilization As We Know It”

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

The eccentric SpaceX CEO gets some flak — but not from Neil deGrasse Tyson.

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Dec 29, 2018

Earthquake of 6.9 strikes off Philippines, small tsunami possible

Posted by in category: futurism

A strong earthquake of 6.9 magnitude struck off the southern Philippine island of Mindanao on Saturday and small tsunami waves were possible along its coast as well as in parts of Indonesia and Palau, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said.

There were no reports of casualties or damage, from the earthquake, which the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said struck 193 km (120 miles) east of the Philippine city of General Santos, at a depth of 60 km (37 miles).

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center initially said “hazardous tsunami waves” were possible within 300 km (186 miles) of the epicenter along the coasts of Indonesia and the Philippines.

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Dec 29, 2018

Our Cellphones Aren’t Safe

Posted by in category: security

The international mobile communications system is built on top of several layers of technology, parts of which are more than 40 years old. Some of these old technologies are insecure, others have never had a proper audit and many simply haven’t received the attention needed to secure them properly. The protocols that form the underpinnings of the mobile system weren’t built with security in mind.


Security flaws threaten our privacy and bank accounts. So why aren’t we fixing them?

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Dec 29, 2018

This inventor applied game theory to machine learning to make computers smarter

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Most read of 2018: A scientist at Google Brain devised a way for a machine-learning system to teach itself about how the world works.


Invented a way for neural networks to get better by working together.

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Dec 28, 2018

New Fiber Could Be the Foundation for Futuristic Smart Garments

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

Self-assembling silver tubes might someday wire up your clothes.


Inspired by blood vessels, the silver nanowires practically manufacture themselves.

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Dec 28, 2018

Nuclear Scientists Continue to Search for Undiscovered Isotopes

Posted by in category: futurism

Nuclear researchers suspect that there are nearly 4,000 undiscovered nuclei that may help lead us to new machines and practices that benefit human life.

Author: Artemis SpyrouPublish date:

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Dec 28, 2018

Remembering Nancy Grace Roman, “Mother of Hubble”

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, finance, space travel

In 1961, Nancy Grace Roman was already the first Chief of Astronomy in NASA’s Office of Space Science. She developed that program in a time before the second wave of the Women’s Movement in the United States began, when banks often refused women credit in their own names and there was still an active medical debate about whether women could ever physically endure spaceflight someday. But Roman opened the skies to humanity in new ways without ever leaving the ground.

She earned her Ph.D. in astronomy at the University of Chicago in 1949 and worked at the Yerkes Observatory there for six years afterward. She joined the radio astronomy group at the Naval Research Laboratory, becoming the head of the microwave spectroscopy section. As she recalled in 1980 in an oral history interview with National Air and Space Museum curator David DeVorkin, when she heard that NASA might set up a space astronomy program, she wanted to lead it: “The idea of coming in with an absolutely clean slate to set up a program that I thought was likely to influence astronomy for 50 years was just a challenge that I couldn’t turn down. That’s all there is to it.” She joined NASA in 1959, just after the agency’s founding.

Roman opened the skies to humanity in new ways without ever leaving the ground.

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