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May 10, 2018

Doctors Replaced a Soldier’s Lost Ear Using a Wild Medical Technique

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

In a first for United States Army doctors, Burrage received an ear transplant that was grown from her own tissue inside her own body. A team, led by Lieutenant Colonel Owen Johnson III, the chief of plastic and reconstructive surgery at William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso, Texas, harvested cartilage from Burrage’s ribs, carved it into the shape of an ear, and implanted it under the skin in her arm. There, it developed blood vessels, which Johnson says will allow Burrage to regain feeling in the ear once it’s healed. In an announcement released on Monday, Johnson called the operation a success.

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May 10, 2018

Microsoft predicts five-year wait for quantum computing in Azure

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

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May 10, 2018

A Rogue Star Hurtling Towards The Solar System Is Going to Arrive Sooner Than We Realised

Posted by in category: cosmology

According to new calculations, we may have a little less time to prepare for a star on course to kiss the edges of our Solar System.

Yep. Dwarf star Gliese 710, which we’ve known about for some time, could now arrive in 1.29 million years, instead of the previously calculated 1.36 million years.

Gliese 710 is what is classified as a rogue star — one that has gone roaming across the galaxy, free of the gravitational chains that normally hold stars in position.

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May 10, 2018

Vostok Space Beer

Posted by in category: space

We are destined to go where humanity never has before and create the World’s first beer for space! | Check out ‘Vostok Space Beer’ on Indiegogo.

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May 10, 2018

Looking for E.T. with TESS

Posted by in category: alien life

TESS is out of this world!

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May 10, 2018

Booming cities, unintended consequences

Posted by in categories: economics, transportation

Roadways clogged by commercial vehicles and intense competition for affordable housing are imposing costs on prosperous cities and their most vulnerable residents.

Cities are the hubs of the emerging digital economy, attracting knowledge workers with higher pay and alluring lifestyles. One consequence of this concentrated prosperity is rising rents and a scramble for housing that places disadvantaged citizens in peril—as seen in the increasing rates of homelessness in cities such as Seattle. More people living in urban cores also means more commercial vehicles are needed to serve them, which is fueled by a surge in online deliveries. The resulting congestion is burdening cities with surprisingly high costs. The social stresses of the new growth should be on your radar.

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May 10, 2018

Touring the Transhuman House, Sustainable Technologies and our Future

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transhumanism

In this special edition we are going on a tour of the Foundation’s ‘Transhuman House’.

Set in the middle of the Rocky Mountains, let’s fly in and take a look…

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May 10, 2018

He Made Science Easy!

Posted by in categories: science, space


Imagine if your teacher looked like Gandalf from Space and explained everything about the universe in the most simplest way possible…

That’s when everyone decides to be a scientist!

The way Greg got to become an Astronomer is quite amazing!
You can find him here in Broome, Australia at Greg Quicke’s Astro Tours. He’s as earthy as he looks!

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May 10, 2018

How to Leverage the Power of Science Fiction for Exponential Innovation

Posted by in categories: futurism, innovation

Science fiction is powerful because it brings the future to life. Using a methodology called SciFi D.I., we can leverage science fiction to look 10 to 15 years into the future to redefine what’s possible today. When we can clearly imagine what the future might be like, we can begin to see a path to it.

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May 10, 2018

Light could make semiconductor computers a million times faster or even go quantum

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

A technique to manipulate electrons with light could bring quantum computing up to room temperature.

A team of researchers in Germany and at the University of Michigan have demonstrated how can shift electrons between two different , the classic 1 and 0, in a thin sheet of semiconductor.

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