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Science News

Location American Science News for 10 April 2013
Exponential Growth In Small Machines -- Don't Fear, They're Here To Protect You Small machines are ubiquitous. They've proliferated exponentially for forty years and are now all around us. Since new technology can be scary, especially small machine technologies that human eyes can't see, I'm writing...
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From DARPA, A Navigational Device That Fits On A Penny And Works When GPS Doesn't DARPA's new on-the-go navigation chip can measure orientation, acceleration, and time. GPS is great, but it isn't always reliable. The signal can be interrupted by, say, a tunnel, or something else smothering the relay b...
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Google Fiber Expands In Kansas City, Heads To Austin Next

Singularity Hub - 10 Apr 2013 22:30
Google Fiber Expands In Kansas City, Heads To Austin Next If you suffer from Google Fiber envy, which delivers close to gigabit speeds, there's good news: you don't have to move to Kansas anymore. It was only last November when Google Fiber launched in Kansas City at a cost of ...
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Cost of cuts: Austerity's toxic genetic legacy

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 21:00
Psychological stress brought on by the economic crisis may trigger genes that threaten the long-term health of future generations (full text available to subscribers)
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Baby dinos pumped their muscles inside the egg

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 21:00
A rare clutch of fossil dinosaur embryos reveals how sauropods grew so fast
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Saturn's rings leave ghostly imprint on atmosphere

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 21:00
The iconic rings produce charged particles that rain down on the planet's atmosphere, where they carve out an imprint
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Today on New Scientist: 10 April 2013

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 21:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com, including: OMGOMGOMG, austerity's toxic genetic legacy, guessing names from faces, and more
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Transparent brains make neuroscience clearer

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 21:00
A technique that turns organs transparent could let us peer inside the mind more easily
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Paolo Soleri, Utopian Architect, Is Dead

Popular Science - 10 Apr 2013 20:30
Paolo Soleri, Utopian Architect, Is Dead But his plan for a 5,000-person, eco-friendly city lives on Paolo Soleri, the futuristic, eco-conscious architect, died yesterday at 93. He is best known among the masses (and in the scientific community, to some extent)...
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Global hard times in environmental photography show

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 20:14
Our favourite images from the Environmental Photographer of the Year exhibition
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Last desert nomads defy a raging sandstorm

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 20:12
Playing in a Gobi desert sandstorm, these children follow an ancient nomadic lifestyle that is now up against the interests of international mining companies
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Feeling Left Out? Stay In Touch With Our Newsletter

Singularity Hub - 10 Apr 2013 20:10
Feeling Left Out? Stay In Touch With Our Newsletter Feel like you missed something? Never fear! Singularity Hub has got you covered. Our newsletter is sent straight to your email inbox to recap the stories of the day. Now you can rest assured that you won't be missing out...
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Man Puts House in the Canadian Rockies Up For Sale - in Bitcoins You can use the digital cryptocurrency Bitcoin to buy an ever-lengthening list of items. Last week, a 2007 Porsche Cayenne sale was settled in the currency. But a house? Sure, why not. 23-year-old Taylor More is listing ...
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OMG - it's the textual revolution for language

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 19:00
Digital technology is fuelling a linguistic revolution in which even simple expressions like LOL mask sophisticated layers of meaning, argues Tom Chatfield (full text available to subscribers)
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Republican voters want action on climate change

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 18:04
Just 35 per cent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents support the party's stance on climate change, according to a new poll
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Why tweets from the over-30s are no measure of age

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 17:51
Your tweets are not a very good measure of your age, especially if you're thirtysomething-plus, according to a Dutch study
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US women can get morning-after pill over the counter

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 14:38
Emergency contraception could be available in the US without prescription within a month - and the first morning-sickness drug for 30 years wins approval
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Female great whites reveal long-range mating secrets

New Scientist - 10 Apr 2013 13:58
For the first time, the femmes fatales of the ocean have been tracked over the whole of their two-year migratory cycle
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