Science News
NASA Is Using Tech From The Columbia Crash Investigation To See How Trees Fail
Popular Science - 3 Apr 2013 00:35
Stereo photogrammetry will tell engineers if a tree falls in the forest. Stereo photogrammetry is a process used to determine the strain on a certain structure, which is why it was used to investigate the causes of the S...
Three Smart New Ways To Actually Block Robocalls
Popular Science - 2 Apr 2013 23:30
The "Do Not Call" list sucks. Winners of a Federal Trade Commission contest propose some high-tech strategies to finally stop automated sales calls. They slip through the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's "Do Not Call" reg...
Interactions.org Newsdigest 2 April 2013
Interactions - 2 Apr 2013 23:30
-- Detectors zero in on Earth's heat -- Cern begins LHC upgrade to boost dark matter search -- Cosmic Journey 13 Billion Years In The Making Seen By Plank -- Listen to the big bang - now in hi-fi! -- How the Large Hadron...
World's Largest Solar Power Plant Online In United Arab Emirates
Singularity Hub - 2 Apr 2013 21:42
And now, this country that has risen from poverty to become the world's thirteenth richest after striking oil, is doing renewable energy in a characteristically big way. They've just completed the world's largest solar p...
Reprogrammed Assembly Line Robots Make Fine Art in San Francisco
Singularity Hub - 2 Apr 2013 21:38
What is an Autofuss? Good question. The four year old San Francisco design firm is hard to pin down. Go to the website to find out, and you will be shown (not told) with a lush selection of video shorts defying the laws ...
Today on New Scientist: 2 April 2013
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 21:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com, including: your possessions in the cloud, present tech shock, Antarctic ice paradox, stupidity, and more
Antarctic ice grows as climate warms
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 20:52
Counter-intuitively, global warming may be cooling the surface waters of the Southern Ocean, increasing the extent of Antarctic ice
DNA transistors pave way for living computers
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 20:35
Transistor-like devices have been made out of DNA, making biological gadgets with built-in circuitry possible
Vast cache of rare earth elements found in Japan's mud
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 20:25
A deposit under the Pacific Ocean gives Japan a new source of the valuable rare earth metals commonly used in electronics
Has technology forced us into a 'present shock'?
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 20:00
In Present Shock, Douglas Rushkoff says everyday technologies have destroyed our sense of perspective, but his insights need better backup
Pollution in US rivers is widespread and will persist
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 19:49
More than half of the country's streams and rivers are in a poor condition for aquatic life, according to the Environmental Protection Agency
Lost in the cloud: How safe are your online possessions?
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 19:00
In the digital age, your files and memories are not truly yours any more, says Douglas Heaven. They belong to the cloud (full text available to subscribers)
Google doodle exalts artist and scientist Maria Merian
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 17:55
Today's Google doodle commemorates Maria Sibylla Merian - entomologist, botanical illustrator, explorer and pioneering female scientist
Low-Cost Robot Hand Can (Almost) Change A Tire
Popular Science - 2 Apr 2013 17:30
DARPA's three-fingered artificial hand is great at grasping, but can't quite manipulate tools. The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is working on making dexterous robot hands to search for explosive devices...
Cherry-blossom volcano spews forth lava and lightning
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 15:06
Sakurajima volcano, on the southern tip of Japan, is almost constantly erupting - and sometimes there's accompanying lightning
Air Matters
Physics Central - 2 Apr 2013 14:04Time to get smarter about stupidity
New Scientist - 2 Apr 2013 12:00
If we want to avoid repeating past mistakes, we must acknowledge that even the brightest people can do monumentally daft things
The 6 Most Absurd Military Hoaxes By North Korea And Iran
Popular Science - 2 Apr 2013 02:07
How do rogue states compete with a superpower? Photoshop, apparently.