A Science News Aggregator That Covers Stories in the World Of Science And Technology.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Was Jimi Hendrix's Ambidexterity The Key To His Virtuosity?
From The Guardian:
Guitar hero's 'mixed-handedness' was secret to his genius, argues American psychologist.
Was Jimi Hendrix's ambidexterity the secret to his talent? This is the question explored in a new paper by psychologist Stephen Christman (via TwentyFourBit), who argues that Hendrix's versatility informed not just his guitar-playing – but his lyrics too.
According to Christman, who is based at the University of Toledo, Hendrix was not strictly left-handed. Although he played his right-handed guitar upside down, and used his left hand to throw, comb his hair and hold cigarettes, Hendrix wrote, ate and held the telephone with his right hand. He was, Christman argues, "mixed-right-handed". And this "mixed"-ness, signaling better interaction between the left and right hemispheres of the guitarist's brain, suffused every part of his music.
Read more ....
A Call For Tenders To Have A Medical Robot
THE US military is asking inventors to come up with designs for a robot that can trundle onto a battlefield and rescue injured troops, with little or no help from outside.
Retrieving casualties while under fire is a major cause of combat losses, says a posting on the Pentagon's small business technology transfer website (bit.ly/aRXXQU). So the army wants a robot with strong, dexterous arms and grippers that can cope with "the large number of body positions and types of locations in which casualties can be found".
Read more ....Intelligent Men 'Less Likely To Cheat'
From The Telegraph:
Intelligent men are less likely to cheat on their wives because of evolution, a new analysis of social trends indicates.
Researchers at a British university found that men with higher IQs place greater value on monogamy and sexual exclusivity than their less intelligent peers.
But the connection between conventional sexual morality and intelligence is not mirrored in women, it seems.
Read more ....
EU Tells Google To Warn Cities Before Sending In Street View Cameras
From The Daily Mail:
Google has been told to warn people before it sends cameras out to take pictures for its controversial Street View maps.
The EU privacy regulators say refusal to give adequate notice could lead to legal action.
And the internet giant must shorten the time it keeps the original photographs from one year to six months.
The regulators also said it should avoid taking pictures ‘of a sensitive nature and those containing intimate details not normally observable by a passer-by’.
Read more ....
Google has been told to warn people before it sends cameras out to take pictures for its controversial Street View maps.
The EU privacy regulators say refusal to give adequate notice could lead to legal action.
And the internet giant must shorten the time it keeps the original photographs from one year to six months.
The regulators also said it should avoid taking pictures ‘of a sensitive nature and those containing intimate details not normally observable by a passer-by’.
Read more ....
Quantum Physics Breakthrough: Scientists Find an Equation for Materials Innovation
Professor Emily Carter and graduate student Chen Huang developed a new way of predicting important properties of substances. The advance could speed the development of new materials and technologies. (Credit: Frank Wojciechowski)
From Science Daily:
Science Daily (Feb. 26, 2010) — Princeton engineers have made a breakthrough in an 80-year-old quandary in quantum physics, paving the way for the development of new materials that could make electronic devices smaller and cars more energy efficient.
By reworking a theory first proposed by physicists in the 1920s, the researchers discovered a new way to predict important characteristics of a new material before it's been created. The new formula allows computers to model the properties of a material up to 100,000 times faster than previously possible and vastly expands the range of properties scientists can study.
Read more ....
Human Teeth Reveal History of Catastrophes
From Live Science:
Teeth are a window into our past, storing a record of the environmental pollutants and radiation they've encountered. Now scientists are developing tools to use teeth enamel to test how much radiation a person has been exposed to in the case of a major emergency, like a dirty bomb explosion.
"Dental enamel is quite a remarkable material," said Barry Pass, a professor in the College of Dentistry at Howard University in Washington, D.C. "There's a world of information in the tooth."
Read more ....
Teeth are a window into our past, storing a record of the environmental pollutants and radiation they've encountered. Now scientists are developing tools to use teeth enamel to test how much radiation a person has been exposed to in the case of a major emergency, like a dirty bomb explosion.
"Dental enamel is quite a remarkable material," said Barry Pass, a professor in the College of Dentistry at Howard University in Washington, D.C. "There's a world of information in the tooth."
Read more ....
US Government Rescinds 'Leave Internet Alone' Policy
From The Register:
The US government’s policy of leaving the Internet alone is over, according to Obama’s top official at the Department of Commerce.
Instead, an “Internet Policy 3.0” approach will see policy discussions between government agencies, foreign governments, and key Internet constituencies, according to Assistant Secretary Larry Strickling, with those discussions covering issues such as privacy, child protection, cybersecurity, copyright protection, and Internet governance.
Read more ....
The US government’s policy of leaving the Internet alone is over, according to Obama’s top official at the Department of Commerce.
Instead, an “Internet Policy 3.0” approach will see policy discussions between government agencies, foreign governments, and key Internet constituencies, according to Assistant Secretary Larry Strickling, with those discussions covering issues such as privacy, child protection, cybersecurity, copyright protection, and Internet governance.
Read more ....
Saturday, February 27, 2010
When It Comes To Salt, No Rights Or Wrongs. Yet.
From The New York Times:
Suppose, as some experts advise, that the new national dietary guidelines due this spring will lower the recommended level of salt. Suppose further that public health officials in New York and Washington succeed in forcing food companies to use less salt. What would be the effect?
Read more ....
Suppose, as some experts advise, that the new national dietary guidelines due this spring will lower the recommended level of salt. Suppose further that public health officials in New York and Washington succeed in forcing food companies to use less salt. What would be the effect?
Read more ....
Tiny Ear Listens To Hidden Worlds
From The BBC:
A micro-ear could soon help scientists eavesdrop on tiny events just like microscopes make them visible.
Initially, researchers will use it to snoop on cells as they go about their daily business.
It may allow researchers to listen to how a drug disrupts micro-organisms, in the same way as a mechanic might listen to a car's engine to find a fault.
Read more ....
A micro-ear could soon help scientists eavesdrop on tiny events just like microscopes make them visible.
Initially, researchers will use it to snoop on cells as they go about their daily business.
It may allow researchers to listen to how a drug disrupts micro-organisms, in the same way as a mechanic might listen to a car's engine to find a fault.
Read more ....
Apple's iTunes Store Serves up 10 Billionth Song
From ABC News/PC World:
'Guess Things Happen That Way' by Johnny Cash Reportedly 10 Billionth Song.
Apple's iTunes Store hit a landmark on Wednesday with the download of its 10 billionth song.
A counter on the company's home page hit the 10 billion mark at 9:43 p.m. GMT -- approximately 6 years and 10 months since the store first opened in the U.S.
Back then it was known as the iTunes Music Store and served just music but it has since expanded to include video, TV shows and podcasts.
Read more ....
Video: In Attempt at True VTOL, F-35 Makes Shortest, Slowest Landing Yet
From Popular Science:
To perfect the vertical and short takeoff and landing ability of the F-35 Lightning II, test pilots have been taking off and landing at progressively shorter distances and slower speeds, building up to the final, true vertical boost. And today, engine manufacturers Pratt and Whitney released video of the slowest, shortest takeoff and landing yet, in which the jet cruises to a stop at 130 knots.
Read more ....
Twitter Attack Affects Thousands Of Users
Twitter has been hit by two phishing scams in a week, and is warning users not to click on suspicious links in direct messages
From The Telegraph:
The microblogging site has been hit by a second phishing attack in a week.
Twitter users have been warned not to click links in some tweets, after the microblogging service fell victim to its second phishing attack in a week.
Cyber criminals are using the service to trick people in to giving away their username and password for the site. Users have been receiving direct messages from friends on the site which contain a shortened link. When users click on that link, they are directed to a malicious website, which looks just like the Twitter home page, where they are prompted to enter their login details.
Read more ....
Lasers Lift Dirt Of Ages From Artworks
From The BBC:
Physicists have applied the same laser techniques commonly used for tattoo removal to clean several famous works of art, including wall paintings.
Laser cleaning is well established for stone and metal artefacts already.
It has now been successfully applied to the wall paintings of the Sagrestia Vecchia and the Cappella del Manto in Santa Maria della Scala, Siena, Italy.
Read more ....
Friday, February 26, 2010
Optical System Promises To Revolutionize Undersea Communications
An artist's conception of how the optical modem could function at a deep ocean cabled observatory. Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) collect sonar images (downward bands of light) and other data at a hydrothermal vent site and transmit the data through an optical modem to receivers stationed on moorings in the ocean. The moorings are connected to a cabled observatory, and the data are sent back to scientists on shore. Scientists, in turn, can send new instructions to the AUVs via the optical modem as well. (Credit: E. Paul Oberlander, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
From Science Daily:
Science Daily (Feb. 25, 2010) — In a technological advance that its developers are likening to the cell phone and wireless Internet access, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) scientists and engineers have devised an undersea optical communications system that -- complemented by acoustics -- enables a virtual revolution in high-speed undersea data collection and transmission.
Read more ....
Much Of U.S. Water Safe, But Problems Remain
A recent study suggests that fixtures could leach lead into drinking water, even if the devices received passing grades from standard testing protocols. Credit: Josh Chamot, National Science Foundation.
From Live Science:
The United States has benefitted from centuries of improvements in drinking water safety, and most Americans can trust that clean water comes from their tap. Yet, closer inspection is showing that on a house-by-house basis, water quality is not guaranteed — even in communities with high marks for water safety.
Marc Edwards, of Virginia Tech University, has been part of a growing contingent of engineers and scientists looking more carefully at the water we drink, and finding that in some cases harmful sources are overlooked.
Read more ....
Perfect Insulator Could Eliminate Heating Bills
Besides eliminating your heating bill, perfect insulators could make computers cooler and speed up cell phone downloads. Stockbyte
From Discovery News:
With this insulator, the body heat produced by one person would be enough to warm an entire home.
THE GIST:
* A new material developed by MIT scientists perfectly reflects heat and absorbs none of it.
* This perfect insulator could eliminate heating bills and solve cell phone network overload issues.
* Currently, the material only works under freezing conditions, but a perfect insulator that functions at room temperature is soon expected.
A perfect insulator, or a material that reflects heat while absorbing none of it, has been created by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Sandia National Laboratories.
Read more ....
Microsoft Battles Cyber Criminals
From The Wall Street Journal:
Microsoft Corp. launched a novel legal assault to take down a global network of PCs suspected of spreading spam and harmful computer code, adding what the company believes could become a potent weapon in the battle against cyber criminals.
But security experts say it isn't yet clear how effective Microsoft's approach will be, while online rights groups warn that the activities of innocent computer users could be inadvertently disrupted.
Read more ....
Giant Iceberg Could Change Weather Patterns
From The Australian/AFP:
AN iceberg the size of Luxembourg knocked loose from the Antarctic continent earlier this month could disrupt the ocean currents driving weather patterns around the globe, researchers said.
While the impact would not be felt for decades or longer, a slowdown in the production of colder, dense water could result in less temperate winters in the north Atlantic, they said.
The 2550 sq km block broke off on February 12 or 13 from the Mertz Glacier Tongue, a 160km spit of floating ice protruding into the Southern Ocean from East Antarctica due south of Melbourne, researchers said.
Some 400m thick, the iceberg could fill Sydney Harbour more than 100 times over.
Read more ....
AN iceberg the size of Luxembourg knocked loose from the Antarctic continent earlier this month could disrupt the ocean currents driving weather patterns around the globe, researchers said.
While the impact would not be felt for decades or longer, a slowdown in the production of colder, dense water could result in less temperate winters in the north Atlantic, they said.
The 2550 sq km block broke off on February 12 or 13 from the Mertz Glacier Tongue, a 160km spit of floating ice protruding into the Southern Ocean from East Antarctica due south of Melbourne, researchers said.
Some 400m thick, the iceberg could fill Sydney Harbour more than 100 times over.
Read more ....
The Crazies' Franken-Virus Toxins: How Scared Should We Be?
From Popular Mechanics:
In director Breck Eisner's remake of George Romero's 1973 gem, The Crazies, in theaters today, a genetically engineered toxin created by the military escapes into the water supply of idyllic Ogden Marsh, Iowa, transforming the town's residents into a bloody, infected horde with severe attitude problems. But how much is the portrayal of the disease—and the military response—Hollywood hyperbole? Popular Mechanics spoke to experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to find out.
Read more ....
World's Most Sensitive Neutrino Experiment Launches, To Seek Answers About Matter's Origins
Super-Kamiokande Built in an abandoned mine, the "Super-K" neutrino detector surrounds 50,000 gallons of super pure water with 11,200 photomultiplier tubes. To give an idea of the scale, that object in the distance is two men in a rubber raft. courtesy of the Science and Technology Facilities Council of the UK
From Popular Science:
The questions that plague particle physicists and cosmology buffs seem fundamental, but it's startling how little we really know about some of them; for instance, why does matter exist? Researchers in Japan are undertaking the most sensitive subatomic particle experiment ever ventured in attempt to get to the bottom of that question, shooting neutrinos nearly 300 miles under the mountains, straight through the bedrock under Japan to a detector on the opposite coast, in an attempt to hash out exactly why neutrinos appear to spontaneously change from one kind to another.
Read more ....
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