A Science News Aggregator That Covers Stories in the World Of Science And Technology.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Want Passionate Kids? Leave 'Em Alone
From Live Science:
Parents who want their children to discover a passion for music, sports, or other hobbies should follow a simple plan: Don't pressure them.
By allowing kids to explore activities on their own, parents not only help children pinpoint the pursuit that fits them best, but they can also prevent young minds from obsessing over an activity, a new study finds.
Read more ....
Apple iPad Price Cut: Blunder or Brilliance?
From PC World:
If Apple is really considering price cuts on its just-introduced iPad, the best advice is to make them before launch, not after.
Not today, or tomorrow, but a price drop a week--or even a day--before it goes on sale might give the iPad an incredible boost. I will also describe what other businesses can learn from Apple's troubles.
Read more ....
If Apple is really considering price cuts on its just-introduced iPad, the best advice is to make them before launch, not after.
Not today, or tomorrow, but a price drop a week--or even a day--before it goes on sale might give the iPad an incredible boost. I will also describe what other businesses can learn from Apple's troubles.
Read more ....
First Results From Large Hadron Collider Published
Photo: The "extra" particles may make spotting the Higgs boson harder
From The BBC:
The results from the highest-energy particle experiments carried out at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in December have begun to yield their secrets.
Scientists from the LHC's Compact Muon Solenoid detector has now totted up all of the resulting particle interactions.
They wrote in the Journal of High Energy Physics that the run created more particles than theory predicted.
Read more ....
From The BBC:
The results from the highest-energy particle experiments carried out at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in December have begun to yield their secrets.
Scientists from the LHC's Compact Muon Solenoid detector has now totted up all of the resulting particle interactions.
They wrote in the Journal of High Energy Physics that the run created more particles than theory predicted.
Read more ....
Google Links Up With US Spy-Master To thwart Threats To Cyberspace
Google has threatened to pull out of the Chinese market
unless Beijing can guarantee uncensored searches.
unless Beijing can guarantee uncensored searches.
From Times Online:
Google is teaming up with the US National Security Agency to battle cyber-attacks from China in a move that is causing disquiet on the internet.
The alliance of the world’s largest internet search company and the world’s most powerful electronic surveillance agency has provoked concern among privacy advocates. The non-profit Electronic Privacy Information Centre filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking more details yesterday hours after the deal was disclosed by The Washington Post.
Read more ....
Ageing Gene Found By Scientists Could Be Key To Longer Lifespans
Scientists say that by testing for the gene when some one is young could identify whether they have to alter their lifestyle accordingly. Photo: GETTY
From The Telegraph:
A longevity gene has been identified for the first time in a breakthrough that could eventually help people live longer, a new study suggests.
The researchers have located a gene which determines whether or not a person will biologically age quickly or slowly.
They think that by testing for the gene when some one is young could identify whether they have to alter their lifestyle accordingly.
Read more ....
Genetic Disorder Turns Risk-Averse Into Gamblers
The study found that people with a damaged amygdala had a higher inclination to risk losing money as a result of reckless gambling. Alamy
From The Independent:
The brains of people who risk everything when gambling may be wired up differently to those of the naturally cautious, according to a study that appears to have discovered a neurological basis for reckless behaviour.
The research found that people were far more gullible to high-risk gambling when a small but distinct part of their brain had been damaged as a result of a rare genetic disorder. They showed little of the natural aversion to losing something of value that most people are born with.
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First Contact: Will We Ever Hear From Aliens?
From The Guardian:
It will soon be half a century since the American astronomer Frank Drake first pointed a radio telescope at the star Tau Ceti in the hope of picking up an extraterrestrial broadcast, and we still haven't heard anything. So is there anyone out there?
Fifty years ago Frank Drake – then a young astronomer from Cornell University – began an experiment that would have profound implications for humanity's understanding of its place in the cosmos. He turned the newly constructed Green Bank radio telescope in West Virginia towards Tau Ceti, a nearby star that is similar to our own Sun.
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Smoking May Pose 'Third-Hand' Cancer Hazard
From New Scientist:
Residues of cigarette smoke deposited on indoor surfaces can turn carcinogenic when they react with airborne chemicals. This "third-hand" exposure could in theory cause health problems, particularly in children, says Hugo Destaillats, a specialist in indoor pollution at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California.
His team found several chemicals on the inside of the cab of a half-pack-a-day smoker's truck, including a carcinogen called a NNK. Destaillats's team reckon that NNK is produced when nicotine from tobacco smoke reacts with nitrous acid in the air.
Read more ...
Google's Handheld Translator Seeks To Cross Language Barriers
From Popular Science:
Google's vision for a better world involves removing those pesky language barriers that keep people apart, and so the Internet search giant has begun development on a voice recognition and automatic translation system for cell phones. Such technology could either herald a new era of fruitful international collaboration or usher in new grievances and conflicts, depending on your viewpoint. The Times makes the obligatory reference to the Babel Fish of Hitchhiker's Guide that spawned bloody interstellar conflicts.
Read more ....
Monday, February 8, 2010
Migrating Insects Fly In The Fast Lane
A new study sheds light on the flight behaviours that enable insects to undertake long-distance migrations, and highlights the remarkable abilities of these insect migrants. (Credit: iStockphoto/Karel Gallas)
From Science Daily:
Science Daily (Feb. 8, 2010) — A study published in Science, by researchers at Rothamsted Research (an institute of the BBSRC), the Met Office, the Natural Resources Institute, and the Universities of Exeter, Greenwich and York, sheds new light on the flight behaviours that enable insects to undertake long-distance migrations, and highlights the remarkable abilities of these insect migrants.
Read more ....
Beer May Be Good For Your Bones
From Live Science:
If you downed one too many while watching the Super Bowl, here's at least one reason to hold your head high: Drinking beer can be good for your health.
But seriously, a new analysis of 100 commercial beers shows the hoppy beverage is a significant source of dietary silicon, a key ingredient for bone health.
Read more ....
China Heralds Bust of Major Hacker Ring
People use computers at an internet cafe in Wuhan, Hubei province, January 23, 2010.
Credit: Reuters/Stringer
Credit: Reuters/Stringer
From Wall Street Journal:
SHANGHAI—China heralded a major bust of computer hackers to underscore its pledge to help enhance global online security, with state media saying officials had shut what they called the country's largest distributor of tools used in malicious Internet attacks.
Three people were arrested on suspicion of making hacking tools available online, the state-run Xinhua news agency said on Monday. Their business, known as Black Hawk Safety Net, operated through the now-shuttered Web site 3800cc.com and generated around $1 million in income from its over 12,000 subscribers, the report said.
Read more ....
Google Making Gmail Into A Communications Hub
From Epicenter:
Gmail users will soon have more ways to keep up with their friends via a widget that shows quick status updates like Facebook and Twitter do, The Wall Street Journal reports.
The move would further turn Gmail, which revolutionized online e-mail, into a comprehensive communications hub. The intent is to keep people’s attention centered on Google, by making Gmail, not Facebook, people’s first stop online — and their default place to send and receive messages. Gmail users can already chat via Jabber or AIM, make video calls, and send SMS messages from Gmail’s web interface.
Read more ....
Gmail users will soon have more ways to keep up with their friends via a widget that shows quick status updates like Facebook and Twitter do, The Wall Street Journal reports.
The move would further turn Gmail, which revolutionized online e-mail, into a comprehensive communications hub. The intent is to keep people’s attention centered on Google, by making Gmail, not Facebook, people’s first stop online — and their default place to send and receive messages. Gmail users can already chat via Jabber or AIM, make video calls, and send SMS messages from Gmail’s web interface.
Read more ....
Soft Drink Consumption May Increase Risk Of Pancreatic Cancer
Researchers found that there was a correlation between drinking sugary drinks and pancreatic cancer Photo: CORBIS
From The Telegraph:
Drinking two or more soft drinks a week can double the risk of developing pancreatic cancer, a new study claims.
Researchers found that there was a correlation between drinking sugary drinks and the cancer which affects around 7,000 people in the UK every year.
They believe that the high sugar content increases the amount of insulin the pancreas produces which could be why they are more prone to cancer.
Read more ....
Will The Next Cold War Be In Cyberspace -- A Commentary
Will the future be cyber-attacks and an uneasy balance of terror or cultural collaboration hosted by Google's servers?
"THE FUTURE", WROTE the novelist William Gibson in a justifiably famous aphorism, "is already here: it's just not evenly distributed".
The challenge is to spot those unevenly distributed peeks into our future. The Apple iPad launch provoked a storm of peeking: optimists saw it as a sign that the computer industry had finally got the message that most people can't be bothered with the mysteries of operating systems and software updates and want an information appliance that "just works"; pessimists saw it as a glimpse into an authoritarian world dominated either by governments or a few powerful companies; sceptics saw it as just another product launch.
Read more ....
Why Thinking Too Much Can Damage Your Performance In Sports
Photo: Handicap: A study of golfers found that the better players used less brainpower
From The Daily Mail:
If you're struggling to improve your golf swing or strengthen your backhand, it may be that you are giving it too much thought.
A study shows that the masters of sport use less grey matter when in action than novices.
A group of good golfers were shown pictures of potential shots and asked how they would play them, undergoing brain scans as they responded. The process was repeated with poorer players.
With the better players, very little of the brain was lit up except for the areas that deal with choices and consequences.
Read more ....
From The Daily Mail:
If you're struggling to improve your golf swing or strengthen your backhand, it may be that you are giving it too much thought.
A study shows that the masters of sport use less grey matter when in action than novices.
A group of good golfers were shown pictures of potential shots and asked how they would play them, undergoing brain scans as they responded. The process was repeated with poorer players.
With the better players, very little of the brain was lit up except for the areas that deal with choices and consequences.
England's Dark Sites On Public View
From New Scientist:
A British art group took New Scientist on a magical mystery tour of southern England's most secret government sites – from the locations of past military experiments to the birthplace of the forerunner of the computers we use today.
Read more ....
The Superbowl “Green Police” Commercial
From Watts Up With That?
My story today on changing out my incandescent recessed lighting for high efficiency LED units couldn’t have come too soon. I don’t have to worry now.
This video below is one of the most talked about Superbowl commercials today. You have to watch it more than once to catch all the visual gags in it.
Read more ....
For The First Time, Researchers Find Longevity Gene That Helps Determine Lifespan
From Popular Science:
Humanity's search for the secrets to immortality has inspired Ray Kurzweil's Singularity vision and DARPA's hunt for ageless synthetic beings. Now scientists have discovered a single gene that appears to control how quickly individuals will biologically age, The Telegraph reports. The discovery could not only encourage people to adopt healthier lifestyles earlier, but may eventually help people live longer if scientists can figure out how to manipulate the gene.
Read more ....
Acid Syringe 'Could Spell An End To Dentist's Drill'
From The Daily Mail:
It's the main reason so many of us feel such trepidation when faced with a trip to the dentist.
But the dreaded drill could soon be a thing of the past thanks to a new technique in which teeth are treated with acid gel squirted from a syringe.
Read more ....
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