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Apr 30, 2019
Asteroid Mining: Getting the first mission off the ground
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: business, engineering, space travel
A fully-contained near-Earth asteroid retrieved to cislunar space can be used as a Research and Development destination for resource extraction and engineering tests as space-native material, unaltered by a radical change in environment, in industrial quantity, and in an accessible orbit.
As a geologist and data manager working in petroleum exploration, I’m not qualified to analyze an all-encompassing view of asteroid mining…but maybe I’m qualified to share what I see from my perspective. Rather than looking at all the reasons why asteroid mining is not currently happening, I’d like to dive deep into how changing decision-making perspectives may make a mission possible.
Continue reading “Asteroid Mining: Getting the first mission off the ground” »
Apr 30, 2019
In 50 years we’ll have ‘robot angels’ and will be able to merge our brains with AI, according to technology experts
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
Business Insider spoke to six technology experts at the Mobile World Congress 2018. They spoke about the future we could experience within the next 50 years.
Apr 30, 2019
Why Space Aliens Might Message Us With Encoded DNA
Posted by Bruce Dorminey in category: alien life
It sounds like bad science fiction, but there are good reasons to think that E.T. may be trying to communicate with us via encoded bacterial DNA.
Apr 30, 2019
How Big Tech is struggling with the ethics of AI
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: ethics, military, robotics/AI, surveillance
The companies that are leading research into AI in the US and China, including Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Baidu, SenseTime and Tencent, have taken very different approaches to AI and whether to develop technology that can ultimately be used for military and surveillance purposes.
Companies criticised for overruling and even dissolving ethics boards.
Apr 29, 2019
Doctors used a drone to deliver a vital kidney transplant in historic flight
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, drones
https://youtube.com/watch?v=RNYCCbCpAlM
Drones might be a favorite toy among adults with significant disposable income, but they’ve also proven to be incredibly useful as tools, and sometimes life-saving ones at that. The latest example of this growing trend comes to us from the University of Maryland Medical Center, where a medical drone delivered a kidney that was subsequently successfully transplanted into a patient.
The delivery, which was documented in a brief YouTube video published by UMMC, is just a small first step in a larger effort to enhance the delivery systems used for vital items like organs and other medical materials.
Continue reading “Doctors used a drone to deliver a vital kidney transplant in historic flight” »
Apr 29, 2019
Astronomers Spot Distant Black Hole Spinning So Fast That It Warps Space-Time
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, physics
Last observed in 2015, the black hole is spewing out ‘wobbly’ plasma jets that move so fast they change orientation within minutes.
Some 8,000 light-years from Earth in the Cygnus constellation (“The Swan”), a small black hole weighing just nine times the mass of Earth’s sun is gobbling up a sun-like star. The black hole and its stellar victim are locked together in what astronomers call a binary system and orbit each other once every 6.5 days – with spectacular effects, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) is reporting.
Continue reading “Astronomers Spot Distant Black Hole Spinning So Fast That It Warps Space-Time” »
Apr 29, 2019
Grain of dust found from dead star that predates the Sun
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
At a glance, meteorites might only be marginally more interesting than regular old rocks, but look closely and they can tell us stories of ancient stars and long-lost planets. One of these stories has now been uncovered in a piece of space rock retrieved from Antarctica, containing grains from a stellar explosion that predates the Sun.
Apr 29, 2019
A Programmer Solved a 20-Year-Old, Forgotten Crypto Puzzle
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: computing
A self-taught coder dedicated a CPU core to performing continuous computations for three years to crack the puzzle, beating a competing team by mere days.