Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 5 April 2013

This Iranian Drone Could Someday Save Your Life

Popular Science - 5 Apr 2013 22:00
This Iranian Drone Could Someday Save Your Life Though still a concept, this robot lifeguard should be one robot people are grateful to see coming. Lifeguards of the future may soon come with four rotors. RTS Labs, an Iranian research firm, has started work on a drone...
Read More
3
0

Disposable army drone makes eyes in the sky easy

New Scientist - 6 Apr 2013 01:19
The age of throw-away army drones is nearing - researchers have built a prototype of a super-cheap, light flier designed for single-use surveillance
Read More
0
0
Navy Training Raises New Concerns for Whales off California Coast As the whale migration season reaches its peak, new concerns arise over naval training exercises off the California coast.
Read More
0
0
Bracelet For Human Rights Workers Sends Kidnapping Alerts to Facebook, Twitter When activated, the device sends "Help!" messages social media accounts and nearby aid workers. Activists and aid workers who document government abuses or monitor elections often risk abduction by those who oppose their...
Read More
0
0
PETMAN tries on some new duds. The robot-makers over at Boston Dynamics make some consistently amazing robots, and consistently amazing videos of said robots. Another of their 'bots, BigDog, took runner-up in our drones ...
Read More
0
0
A new analysis is revealing how ancient Greeks made hefty metal rams for their warships
Read More
0
0

Scientists Can Pluck Images Out Of Your Dreams

Popular Science - 5 Apr 2013 21:00
Scientists Can Pluck Images Out Of Your Dreams A new method can visualize with 60 percent accuracy what you're seeing while you sleep. With just an fMRI, an algorithm, and the internet, researchers from Kyoto, Japan predicted with 60 percent accuracy what a person wa...
Read More
0
0

Today on New Scientist: 5 April 2013

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 21:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com, including: first Americans, smartphones keep baby milk safe, infinite maze in your living room, and more
Read More
0
0

Little ripples make syrup stringy

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 20:52
Ever wondered why syrup forms long strands when you pour it? It's all down to how thick it is - but not for the reasons you might think
Read More
0
0

Dino stars of Jurassic Park to remain featherless

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 20:21
Despite mounting evidence that many dinosaurs were feathered, the director of Jurassic Park 4 appears set on keeping them leathery
Read More
0
0

Voice Ads Let You Speak With Mobile Advertisements

Singularity Hub - 5 Apr 2013 20:09
Voice Ads Let You Speak With Mobile Advertisements The number of conversations you have with your smartphone is about to go way up, for better or worse. Nuance, the company whose speech recognition technology helped bring Apple's Siri to life, is now taking its technolog...
Read More
0
0
Controlling another living animal with just your brain. It's a little bit scary! In a world's first, a researcher was able to create a brain-to-brain interface with an animal of another species, and issue commands with o...
Read More
0
0

New flu strain's genes probed as China culls poultry

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 19:01
Thousands of birds have been slaughtered in Shanghai to try to contain a new H7N9 bird flu strain that may have a mutation helping it to infect mammals
Read More
0
0
Peregrine Falcon Chicks Hatch On Easter Sunday in San Jose Peregrine falcon nest cameras in San Francisco and San Jose have been giving citizens the unique chance to watch these animals up-close since 2005.
Read More
0
0

How It Works: The Robotic Chicken Butcher

Popular Science - 5 Apr 2013 19:00
How It Works: The Robotic Chicken Butcher If you've ever wondered how boneless chicken parts end up that way, take a peek inside one of the 4,000 or so poultry processing plants in the U.S. Workers man massive assembly lines to scald, pluck, gut, slice, and wrap...
Read More
0
0

Migration mystery: Who were the first Americans?

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 19:00
We thought we knew who first set foot in the Americas, but new evidence means the question of our last great migration is wide open again (full text available to subscribers)
Read More
0
0
Global warming bleaches and kills coral, but reefs can recover if their environment is pristine and free of human impacts such as pollution
Read More
0
0

Invented: A Much Better Way To Predict Airline Delays

Popular Science - 5 Apr 2013 17:00
Invented: A Much Better Way To Predict Airline Delays Calculating air travel is a surprisingly tough math challenge. If you consider how many things have to go right for it to work, passenger flight is a seamless experience almost all of the time. Except when it isn't, and ...
Read More
0
0

Dead star's gravity warps giant neighbour's light

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 15:33
Watch an animation of a white dwarf bending a larger star's light, illustrating one of the first examples of the effect spotted by NASA's Kepler space telescope
Read More
0
0
Earth looks safer thanks to a new model that suggests intense gamma-ray bursts stem from rare stellar collisions that can't happen in our galaxy
Read More
0
0

Feedback: Which part of 'partial zero' don't we get?

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 15:00
Partial zero, elephant sizing, quantum icing and more (full text available to subscribers)
Read More
0
0

Real life with robots in 20 and 200 years

New Scientist - 5 Apr 2013 14:53
C-3PO and the Borg inspired Illah Reza Nourbakhsh to imagine the reality of living with robots. The plausible scenarios of Robot Futures are the result
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard