A Science News Aggregator That Covers Stories in the World Of Science And Technology.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Immortality Only 20 Years Away Says Scientist
From The Telegraph:
Scientist Ray Kurzweil claims humans could become immortal in as little as 20 years' time through nanotechnology and an increased understanding of how the body works.
The 61-year-old American, who has predicted new technologies arriving before, says our understanding of genes and computer technology is accelerating at an incredible rate.
He says theoretically, at the rate our understanding is increasing, nanotechnologies capable of replacing many of our vital organs could be available in 20 years time.
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How Facebook Copes With 300 Million Users
Photo: Credit: (portrait) Mozilla (background) facebook
From Technology Review:
VP of Engineering Mike Schroepfer reveals the tricks that keep the world's biggest social network going.
Last week, the world's biggest social network, Facebook, announced that it had reached 300 million users and is making enough money to cover its costs.
The challenge of dealing with such a huge number of users has been highlighted by hiccups suffered by some other social-networking sites. Twitter was beleaguered with scaling problems for some time and became infamous for its "Fail Whale"--the image that appears when the microblogging site's services are unavailable.
Read more ....
From Technology Review:
VP of Engineering Mike Schroepfer reveals the tricks that keep the world's biggest social network going.
Last week, the world's biggest social network, Facebook, announced that it had reached 300 million users and is making enough money to cover its costs.
The challenge of dealing with such a huge number of users has been highlighted by hiccups suffered by some other social-networking sites. Twitter was beleaguered with scaling problems for some time and became infamous for its "Fail Whale"--the image that appears when the microblogging site's services are unavailable.
Read more ....
Weird Stories of Objects Falling From the Sky—Explained
From Popular Mechanics:
The annals of history are full of tales of strange objects falling from the sky. During biblical and medieval times, people typically perceived events such as rains of rats, dead bats, fish and frogs as signs of plague, ill portents or even manna from the benevolent above. Science eventually won out, bringing explanations for many of these seemingly inexplicable episodes. Still others remain unsolved, leaving the affected locals to theorize, and look expectantly to the clouds, for the next meat shower or golf ball storm. In honor of the release of Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs we present a list of the 10 craziest things to rain down on humanity from the heavens.
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Panasonic's Robotic Bed Transforms into a Mobile Chair, Makes Standing Up Obsolete
From Popular Science:
Mobility-impaired patients and layabouts alike can rejoice at the debut of Panasonic's robotic bed that transforms into a wheelchair. Human nurses and hospitals may also breathe a tiny sigh of relief.
The bed-shaped bot morphs upon command to sidestep the usual trouble of moving a bedridden person from bed to wheelchair, or vice versa. Yet unlike the Japanese bear bot nurse that carries patients, a self-controlled bed bot allows humans to regain some independence and dignity.
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2009 Arctic Sea Ice Extent Exceeds 2005 For This Date
From Watts Up With That?:
While 2009 minimum on 09/13 of 5,249, 844 was just 65, 312 sq km below 2005 in minimum extent, which occurred on 9/22/2005 with 5,315,156 sq km, it has now rebounded quickly and is higher by 38,438 sq km, just 2 days before the 9/22/05 minimum. On 9/22/2009 it may very well be close to 60-80,000 sq km higher than the minimum on the same date in 2005.
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In Search Of Dark Asteroids (And Other Sneaky Things)
Artist's concept of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer.
Image credit: (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)
Image credit: (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)
From Science Daily:
ScienceDaily (Sep. 22, 2009) — Ninjas knew how to be stealthy: Be dark. Emit very little light. Move in the shadows between bright places.
In modern warfare, though, ninjas would be sitting ducks. Their black clothes may be hard to see at night with the naked eye, but their warm bodies would be clearly visible to a soldier wearing infrared goggles.
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Why Autumn Begins Tuesday
From Live Science:
The first day of autumn — Sept. 22 this year — is no guarantee of fall-like weather, but officially the season's start comes around at the same time each year nonetheless.
Well, sort of.
The first day of autumn arrives on varying dates in different years for two reasons: Our year is not exactly an even number of days; and Earth's slightly noncircular orbit, plus the gravitational tug of the other planets, constantly changes our planet's orientation to the sun from year to year.
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Discovery Threads Tricky Path Home
From Florida Today:
Navigating a web of clouds and showers, space shuttle Discovery returned home to Kennedy Space Center just after noon Monday atop a 747 jumbo jet, ending a two-day ferry flight from California.
"If it was any greater of a challenge, we wouldn't have landed here," said Charles Justiz, a pilot on the NASA C-9 aircraft that scouted safe routes ahead of the shuttle.
Up to the last minute, more than two hours after departing Barksdale Air Force Base near Shreveport, La., it was uncertain if Discovery might be diverted to MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa or Orlando International Airport to await calmer skies.
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Naked Mole Rats May Help Cure Cancer
From New Scientist:
THEY might be bald and ugly, but naked mole rats never get cancer. If their trick can be copied it could help humans resist cancer too.
It's almost impossible to culture naked mole rat cells in the lab, which made Andrei Seluanov and Vera Gorbunova from Rochester University, New York, wonder if this might be linked to their ability to resist cancer.
They found that a dilute solution of naked mole rat skin cells did start to proliferate, but stopped once the cells reached a certain, relatively low density. Such "contact inhibition" is also used by human cells to inhibit growth, but cancer bypasses this mechanism so cells keep growing.
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Exposure To Sun 'May Help People With Cancer Survive'
Experts say protection from the sun is vital but that some
exposure is necessary for good health. Reuters
exposure is necessary for good health. Reuters
From the Independent:
Sunbathing warnings may have been too simplistic, say scientists.
Sunbathing is known to cause skin cancer – but it may also help people survive when they get it, scientists are reporting.
Two studies published yesterday showed that vitamin D produced by the action of the sun on the skin may help improve survival for patients with skin and bowel cancer.
Read more ....
Where Will The E-Reader Revolution Take Publishing?
A commuter uses a Kindle while riding the subway in New York June 1, 2009. The publishing industry is trying to deal with the growing demand for online content and is looking at the music industry for lessons. Lucas Jackson / Reuters
From The Globe And Mail:
Some experts believe the devices will change our reading habits and throw several industries into turmoil -- that is, just as soon as Apple gets into the game.
Will it or won't it?
The Internet is burning up with speculation about Apple Inc.'s plans for an “iPad,” a potential new entrant in the e-reader market of low-power digital devices whose displays approach paper quality.
Amazon's Kindle and the Sony Reader together cracked the million-unit mark last year, but everyone – especially those in troubled publishing industries – is looking to the iPod maker to potentially bring digital reading into the mainstream, and transform their businesses forever.
Read more ....
Solar System's Coldest Spot May Be On Moon
From The Telegraph:
The coldest spot in our solar system may be on the moon, astronomers claim.
In course of producing the first ever temperature map of the moon, Nasa discovered that at its south pole temperatures are lower than on Pluto, despite being far nearer to the sun.
The moon is about 93 million miles from the sun, while Pluto orbits at an average of around 6 billion miles from the centre of the solar system
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3D TV: Now Leaping Out Of The Cinema And Into A Living Room Near You
From The Daily Mail:
We've only just got used to high-definition TV and now the technology industry is moving the goalposts again - 3D is being trialled by a number of TV makers and the BBC has said it may even broadcast part of the London 2012 Olympics in the format.
Here, Rob Waugh explains the competing home 3D technologies and answers your burning 3D questions.
Read more ....
New Space Station Tech Maps Earth's Coasts
A satellite view of a coastline on Earth. An extensive imaging project aboard the International Space Station may give scientists their first look at Earth's coasts on a global scale. Getty Image
From Discovery News:
For 20 years, researchers have used light-splitting devices mounted in aircraft to study coastal regions on Earth. This week, the effort expands into space with an instrument arriving at the International Space Station.
From a vantage point 225 miles above the planet and full-time operations for at least a year, the Hyperspectral Imager for the Coastal Ocean (HICO) is expected to give scientists their first detailed look Earth's coasts on a global scale.
"HICO gives us access to repeat imagery worldwide," said lead researcher Mike Corson with the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.
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Bold Rwanda Takes Broadband Leap
From The BBC:
Landlocked Rwanda is weeks away from completing a link to a new fibre-optic network promising high-speed internet for East Africa, officials say.
Engineers expect the capital, Kigali, to be connected to newly-arrived undersea cables in Kenya by November.
A national fibre-optic ring is due to go online early in 2010.
Read more ....
Monday, September 21, 2009
New Transient Radiation Belt Discovered Around Saturn
Radiation belt map of the ions with energies between 25-60 MeV, in Saturn's magnetosphere, based on several years of Cassini MIMI/LEMMS data. The structure of this radiation belt is almost perfectly stable for more than 5 years of Cassini observations, despite the intense variability of the radiation belts, outside the location of Tethys. (Credit: Image courtesy of Europlanet Media Centre)
From Science Daily:
ScienceDaily (Sep. 21, 2009) — Scientists using the Cassini spacecraft's Magnetospheric Imaging instrument (MIMI) have detected a new, temporary radiation belt at Saturn, located around the orbit of its moon Dione at about 377,000 km from the center of the planet.
The discovery will be presented at the European Planetary Science Congress in Potsdam by Dr Elias Roussos on Monday 14 September.
Read more ....
Sinking River Deltas Threaten Millions
Nile River delta, Red Sea and Sinai Peninsula.
(Photo from Wallpaper Free Review)
(Photo from Wallpaper Free Review)
From Live Science:
Most of the world's low-lying river deltas are sinking due to human activity, making them increasingly vulnerable to flooding from rivers and ocean storms and putting tens of millions of people at risk, a new study finds.
Researchers have long warned that the mass human migration to coastal areas in recent decades puts more and more people at risk of death from major storms. About 500 million people in the world live on river deltas.
Read more ....
Probe Gets Clearest Glimpse Yet Of Cosmic Dawn
From New Scientist:
The Planck spacecraft has obtained its first peek at the afterglow of the big bang, revealing it in unprecedented detail. Its first map of the entire sky is set to be complete in about six months.
The European Space Agency spacecraft was launched into space on 14 May. It is observing the glow of hot gas from just 380,000 years after the big bang – about 13.73 billion years ago – called the cosmic microwave background.
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A Robot That Juggles Blind
Pendulum Juggler from Philipp Reist on Vimeo.
From Popular Science:
This machine uses no sensors, no feedback -- just the power of math -- to do its tricks.
In theory, designing a robot that continuously juggles a single ball should not be difficult. Calibrating the machine would be a pain but once you got the thing running, it should continue to juggle the ball until some variable intervenes. In a perfect world, this would occur elegantly, but here on Earth things just don't come off so beautifully. However, through some smart design and precise math, researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich have created the Blind Juggler, so named because it juggles a ball continuously, even when variables are introduced, without the use of sensors.
Read more ....
Smoking Bans May Reduce Heart Attacks By More Than A Third
Smoking bans were introduced in pubs and other public places in England and Wales in 2007. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA
From The Guardian
The number of heart attacks has fallen steeply in countries where bans on smoking in public places have been introduced, according to two independent reviews.
The ban on smoking in public places could reduce heart attacks by more than a third in some parts of the world, say researchers.
Two independent health reviews have found that heart attack rates dropped steeply in areas where bans have been introduced, with one reporting 36% fewer cases three years after smoke-free legislation came in.
Read more ....
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