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Location American Science News for 26 March 2013
Who Are The Casualties Of America's Drone Strikes? [Infographic] More than 3,000 people in Pakistan have been killed by drone strikes. Were they enemies? That's where it gets tricky. The United States has killed more than 3,000 people in Pakistan with drone strikes. Breaking down who ...
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UC Berkeley Students Build 3D Printing Vending Machine Combining 3D printing technology with the convenience and accessibility of the DVD-dispensing Redbox service, student entrepreneurs at UC Berkeley have built a vending machine with a seemingly infinite selection of produ...
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Could Privately Funded Orbiters Fill The Looming Weather Satellite Gap? Without global coverage, weather (and climate) prediction models will get things wrong. Pictures like the one above, showing Hurricane Sandy, are captured by satellites owned and operated by our federal government. But w...
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Today on New Scientist: 26 March 2013

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 22:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com, including: dark matter's Goliath meets its David, robot surgeon's lawsuits, gene therapy cures leukaemia, and more
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Robo-surgeon da Vinci faces lawsuits

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 22:00
Robot surgery can mean less blood loss, smaller scars and quicker recovery time, but what if there are complications?
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Can millionaire physicists draw the masses to science?

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 21:50
Giving top researchers huge prizes will never make them natural celebrities, but could make them great ambassadors for science, says writer Michael Brooks
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A million photos from space map the astronaut's gaze

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 21:02
A plot of over a million photos taken from the International Space Station reveal a map of the world as seen by 12 years' worth of space travellers
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Gravity-less toy black hole solves cosmic puzzles

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 20:50
Gravity defines a black hole, but a model that ignores gravity and is based entirely on quantum mechanics has reproduced surprisingly similar features
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Is North Korea Forcing Diplomats To Sell Drugs Abroad?

Popular Science - 26 Mar 2013 20:30
How does an economically isolated pariah state make money? The black market, apparently. North Korea is a bizarre country. Ruled by a 26-year-old dictator, technically still at war with its southern neighbor, and respons...
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Curiosity Is Back To Work On Mars, But Only For A Few Days With its computer glitch solved, the rover is staying busy until the sun gets in the way. The Mars rover Curiosity is back in action after solar radiation interrupted its mission a few weeks ago. It even swallowed some m...
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Dark matter is the Goliath that supposedly dominates our galaxy. But it might already have met its David (full text available to subscribers)
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Stunning Visuals From the Edge of Science and Engineering

Singularity Hub - 26 Mar 2013 19:25
Stunning Visuals From the Edge of Science and Engineering Sometimes when words just aren't sufficient, adding an image can spark understanding and inspiration. Welcome to the National Science Foundation’s International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge 2012...
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Rare Disease Science Challenge Brings Funding To An Overlooked Area Of Research In the United States a disease is considered rare if fewer than 200,000 Americans have it. About 7,000 diseases meet this criterion, and the number of people affected by them: 25 million. Doesn’t sound so rare aft...
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Anti-doping agency warns athletes of black market drug

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 18:08
Drug cheats have been warned to stay away from a drug called GW501516 that rapidly causes cancers in rodents
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Fake caviar threatens existence of dino fish

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 18:03
Eight people in the US have been charged for illegally trafficking paddlefish and their eggs – which are sold on the black market as fake caviar
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Here's How Long It'll Be Until Google Kills That Service You Like A mathematical look at the approximate expiration date for Google stuff. With Google's recent announcement that it would be discontinuing the cultishly beloved Google Reader, some people are understandably wary about oth...
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Palladium Films Up Close

Physics Central - 26 Mar 2013 16:51
Palladium Films Up Close A colorful mosaic of nano-scale grains on a super thin film
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US to regulate Bitcoin currency at its all-time high

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 16:43
The US Treasury will insist that virtual currencies comply with anti-money-laundering laws just as Bitcoin hits a record high of $70
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Can there be an algorithm for every human desire?

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 16:24
In The Golden Ticket: P, NP, and the search for the impossible, Lance Fortnow finds deep implications for our future in an esoteric mathematical problem
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Bigger isn't always better for becoming multicellular

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 16:20
Lab experiments with yeast suggest that multicellular tissues and specialised cells could have evolved when the costs of being bigger outweighed the benefits
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Gene therapy cures leukaemia in eight days

New Scientist - 26 Mar 2013 16:13
Tweaking immune cells so they recognise a molecule found only on cancer cells can make a usually fatal form of leukaemia vanish
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An international team of scientists that operate the BESIII Experiment at the Beijing Electron Positron Collider in China recently began a series of specialized studies aiming at an understanding of the anomalous "Y(4260...
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