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Apr 9, 2018
Clinical Trial Shows Promising Results for Age-related Macular Degeneration
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Researchers at the USC Roski Eye Institute, in collaboration with other institutions in California, have shown that a new stem cell-based retinal implant could help people with dry age-related macular degeneration.
The researchers have published the results of their phase 1/2a study in the journal Science Translational Medicine [1].
Apr 9, 2018
Skytran magnetic levitation personal pod transportation gets $32.5 million in funding
Posted by Bill Kemp in categories: computing, transportation
Pod transportation company, Skytran, has received $32.5 million in funding. Skytran is a NASA Space Act company that is developing a pod-based personal rapid transportation system.
Some of the funding is from former CEO of Google Eric Schmidt.
They will have a network of computer-controlled, 2-person jet-like vehicles using SkyTran magnetic levitation technology.
Apr 9, 2018
Cost efficient ET3 Vacuum tube trains will be better than Hyperloop, cars, trains and planes
Posted by Bill Kemp in category: transportation
1) bringing ET3 to maturity, including full-scale commercial deployment (2−5 years); 2) expanding ET3 networks around the globe at national levels (30 years); 3) connecting national ET3 networks into the international network (15 years) and creating one city called Earth.
Apr 9, 2018
Science Is Getting Closer to Understanding What Goes on Inside The Mind When We Dream
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: neuroscience, science
Dreams are so strange and carry so much significance to us that we often feel the need to tell people about our nocturnal adventures, sometimes at tedious length.
But if you understand what goes on inside the brain as dreams take their course, they start to make a lot more sense. And dreams are much more important than you might think.
Here are some common questions answered about the nighttime hallucinations we call dreams.
Apr 9, 2018
Fast, efficient optoelectronic chips to hit market next year
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: computing, security, transportation
MIT spin off company Ayar Labs is combining light and electronics to create faster, more efficient computers. The new optoelectronic chips are designed to speed up data transmission to and from conventional processor chips in a way that will also reduce energy consumption in chip-to-chip communications by 95 percent and could cut overall energy usages by large data firms by up to 50 percent.
Since the invention of the silicon chip 60 years ago, the power of computers has doubled every two years, but the speed at which computer systems work hasn’t shown quite such dramatic progress. The problem is one of data transmission and the bottlenecks that any technology runs into, slowing down the whole to the speed of its most sluggish part.
Think of a computer as like an air passenger system. If you concentrate on the aircraft, airport runway architecture, supply logistics, and air traffic control, it’s easy to speed up travel between, for example, New York and Washington DC to under one hour. That sounds fantastic, but if it takes you two hours to get through security at one hand and another two hours to collect your baggage at the other, then it’s faster to drive.
A new laser-based field instrument developed by a collaborative team of researchers can quantify methane leaks as tiny as 1/4 of a human exhalation from nearly…a mile away. The system, constructed around a dual-frequency comb spectrometer, provides efficient, accurate data collection at a fraction of the cost of previous technologies. The research was partially funded by DARPA’s Spectral Combs from UV to THz (SCOUT) program.
Apr 8, 2018
China Now Has the Most Valuable AI Startup in the World
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
SenseTime Group Ltd. has raised $600 million from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and other investors at a valuation of more than $3 billion, becoming the world’s most valuable artificial intelligence startup.
Big technology companies seem to be waging a war on humankind’s long-standing intellectual tradition, according to author Franklin Foer, who shows us how to fight back.