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Archive for the ‘futurism’ category: Page 400
Dec 16, 2022
World’s biggest free-standing cylindrical aquarium bursts in Berlin
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: futurism
Wikimedia Commons.
“The aquarium is damaged, water is leaking. The situation is not clear at the moment,” the Berlin fire brigade further wrote on Twitter.
Dec 16, 2022
Researchers discover “Evidence” of an earlier universe than our own
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: futurism
Dec 16, 2022
The Two Faces of Supercooled Water
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: futurism
Computations support the 30-year-old idea that supercooled liquid water can undergo a transition between high-and low-density states.
Dec 15, 2022
David Sinclair Talks about the Future of Longevity Research (Clips with S/T in Spanish)
Posted by Andrés Grases in categories: futurism, life extension
Enjoy my latest creation of video clips with S/T in Spanish, in this case made with selected excerpts from a video recently published by David Sinclair.
In the description of the video is the link for those who later want to see the full original video.
Dec 15, 2022
Una bomba que puede destruir a toda la humanidad en 0,00005 segundos
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in category: futurism
Dec 14, 2022
In 10 years, gamers will use AI prompts to build what they play
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
Called it. i want to start w/ planet Fall Out. see you in 2030.
In a guest editorial, Watch Dogs: Legion and Assassin’s Creed: Codename Hexe creative director Clint Hocking looks at the future of artificial intelligence, and how it will one day be able to generate full games.
Dec 14, 2022
An end to chronic pain? Future treatment could look very different
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Over the next decade or more experts say pain treatment will look very different than it does today, with more effective care.
Dec 14, 2022
The Power Of Seeing Beyond The Capabilities Of The Human Eye
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: futurism
The different colors that we can see are based on different wavelengths of light. The human eye can detect and differentiate wavelengths in three bands (red, green, and blue) covering the range from 450 to 650 nanometers, but we cannot see light from the hundreds of other bands of light that exist outside of that range. There is a technology called hyperspectral imaging that can give an enhanced view of what is going on in the world around us. There are specialized cameras that separate up to 300 bands of light with prisms and then digitize the energy they are detecting on a wavelength-specific basis. These cameras have a huge range of potential applications.
The human eye can only see three primary color bands (red, green, blue). There are hundreds of more bands and with enhanced hyperspectral camera technology there are many valuable applications.
Dec 14, 2022
Speeding up bone healing in menopausal females
Posted by Michael Taylor in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
Older women heal bone fractures slower than men. Now a team has found that a single, localized delivery of estrogen to a fracture can speed up healing in postmenopausal mice. The findings could have implications for the way fractures in women are treated in the future.
Over 250,000 hip fractures occur each year in adults aged 65 or older in the U.S., three-quarters of which are female. Within a year, between 15 and 36% of hip fracture patients will die. While staggering, the gender gap is unsurprising given that more women than men suffer from osteoporosis, a disease that weakens the bones. And yet, only recently has the scientific community shifted their focus to understanding this difference.
“The majority of stem cell research is done on male animals. There’s very little research that has actually been done on females,” said Wu Tsai Alliance member Charles Chan, Ph.D., an assistant professor of surgery at Stanford University and co-senior author of the paper published Oct. 30 in Nature Communications. “The research is long overdue, especially the question of why women heal differently from men.”