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Jul 28, 2018
Could We Use Space to Pay for a Universal Basic Income?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, government, robotics/AI, space
Universal basic income is a generous idea in principle, with clear benefits to society. However, the question of how to pay for it remains an enigma. While some propose taxation, others think we should use the booming space trade to benefit us all.
Universal basic income is the idea that every citizen should receive an amount of money from the government to meet their needs, regardless of age, race, gender, or even need. It has been billed as a solution to a variety of current and potential societal problems, including AI automation, poverty, and people losing the ability to allocate their own time.
Jul 28, 2018
Dive Under the Ice With the Brave Robots of Antarctica
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
AI or artificial intelligence and occult magical practices are linked closely together. In this article, I will show the direct link between these two technologies, if you will.
What does Occult Science and AI or articifical intelligence have in common. Possibly more than you think. Check out this article.
Jul 28, 2018
LIVE: NASA — National Aeronautics and Space Administration live stream of the total lunar eclipse
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
Today we’re celebrating the 60th Anniversary of NASA — National Aeronautics and Space Administration with current NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine and former NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden.
Scientists say they’ve found a huge lake of salty water buried deep beneath Mars’s surface.
Could there be life on Mars?
Jul 28, 2018
Lunar Eclipse: July 28 ‘blood moon’
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: biotech/medical, space
Watch on Rappler the longest total lunar eclipse of the century, and Mars will be right next to the eclipsing moon http://www.rappler.com/science-nature/earth-space/208321-how…nce-nature
Jul 28, 2018
XTPL ultra-precise Nanometric Printer receives Honorable Mention at Display Week 2018 I-Zone
Posted by Ole Peter Galaasen in categories: biotech/medical, information science, nanotechnology, solar power, sustainability, wearables
Closing in on molecular manufacturing…
http://xt-pl.com received an honorable mention from I-Zone judges for its innovative product that prints extremely fine film structures using nanomaterials. XTPL’s interdisciplinary team is developing and commercializing an innovative technology that enables ultra-precise printing of electrodes up to several hundred times thinner than a human hair – conducive lines as thin as 100 nm. XTPL is facilitating the production of a new generation of transparent conductive films (TCFs) that are widely used in manufacturing. XTPL’s solution has a potentially disruptive technology in the production of displays, monitors, touchscreens, printed electronics, wearable electronics, smart packaging, automotive, medical devices, photovoltaic cells, biosensors, and anti-counterfeiting. The technology is also applicable to the open-defect repair industry (the repair of broken metallic connections in thin film electronic circuits) and offers cost-effective, non-toxic, flexible industry-adapted solutions.