Science News
Your Rented Computer Can No Longer Legally Spy On You
Popular Science - 17 Apr 2013 01:30
Previously, some rent-to-own companies would log customers' keystrokes and snap pictures using their webcams. According to a settlement that went into action yesterday (April 15), rent-to-own stores will no longer be all...
Crowd diagnosis could spot rare diseases doctors miss
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2013 01:07
Diagnosing rare illnesses could get easier, thanks to new web-based tools that pull information from a wide variety of sources
Twitter Is The New Police Scanner
Popular Science - 17 Apr 2013 01:00
After the explosions yesterday at the Boston Marathon, police departments used social media to send out immediate updates. Since the mid-1970s, police scanners have been the only way for civilians to access real-time upd...
Zap Away Would-Be Attackers With This 3800kv Anti-Rape Bra
Popular Science - 16 Apr 2013 22:30
Feeling unsafe? Switch on your protective lingerie. In the wake of a highly publicized series of brutal rapes in India, a group of engineering students devised a way to help women deter sexual assault: Make their underwe...
World's biggest telescope gets green light
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 21:02
The Thirty Meter Telescope - due to be the world's widest eye on space - has got the go-ahead for construction on the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii
Design Studio Working On A Business Suit That Turns Transparent When The Wearer Lies
Popular Science - 16 Apr 2013 21:00
That'll learn those fatcats. Because we'll all be able to see how fat they are. Studio Roosegaarde, led by designer and vowel aficionado Daan Roosegaarde, is one of our favorites; we've previously followed the studio as ...
Today on New Scientist: 16 April 2013
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 21:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com: villages of the damned, Boston bombs, Antarctic ice speed record, signs of dark matter, and more
Antarctic ice melting faster than in past 1000 years
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 20:31
An ice core taken from the west Antarctic Peninsula shows ice is melting 10 times faster each summer than it did 600 years ago
Interactions.org Newsdigest 16 April 2013
Interactions - 16 Apr 2013 20:00
-- Atom Smashers Find Something Not So Charm-ing -- WIMP-like signal indicates first hint of mysterious dark matter -- Scientists see three promising blips in underground dark matter search -- Could Proton Mass Mystery M...
Coming Soon to a Body Near You? World's Smallest Chip to Be Swallowable
Singularity Hub - 16 Apr 2013 19:18
Dumb things will soon be smart--you've heard it repeated ad nauseum. Cyborg-Earth will bristle with uncounted hordes of tiny embedded chips; smart-roads will talk to smart-cars, warning of black ice; smart-buildings will...
Mystery cancer: Inside the villages of the damned
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 19:00
What can explain the lung cancer that afflicts the "houses of death" in Turkey? The answer may raise concerns across the world, finds Clare Wilson (full text available to subscribers)
Measles stalks Europe after drop in vaccination
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 18:49
The Welsh measles outbreak is a predictable result of a fall in vaccination rates - something that still needs tackling to ensure the disease is eliminated by 2015
Newswire: 16 April 2013 - CERN - CERN to host its first TEDx
Interactions - 16 Apr 2013 18:00
Geneva, 15 April 2013. The inaugural TEDxCERN event will take place on 3 May 2013, under the theme 'Multiplying Dimensions', at the Globe of Science and Innovation with a Live Webcast at the CERN* Main Auditorium and at ...
Wing And A Scare
Popular Science - 16 Apr 2013 18:00
A record-breaking roller coaster that mimics the thrill of stunt flying. In the competitive world of roller-coaster design, engineers often obsess about smashing records and pushing the limits of human endurance. But rec...
The First App-Controlled Bionic Hand
Popular Science - 16 Apr 2013 17:00
Wearers can push one button for complex movements like right-clicking a mouse and picking up a pen. A new bionic hand is the first to come with app control, allowing users to access complicated motion patterns--like the ...
Analysis of Boston bombs could yield vital clues
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 16:29
The detonated bombs could provide a raft of incriminating evidence about who was behind the fatal attack on the Boston marathon on 15 April
Unexploded Boston bombs could yield vital clues
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 16:29
Any unexploded devices could provide a raft of incriminating evidence about who was behind the fatal attack on the Boston marathon on 15 April
Why your Twitter friends are more interesting than you
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 15:29
Analysis of nearly 6 million Twitter users has provided an updated version of the friendship paradox
Overflowing Surface Tension
Physics Central - 16 Apr 2013 13:09What outsiders can teach us about creativity
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 13:00
Two London exhibitions present extraordinary examples of "outsider" art and science
Use the internet to defuse gang culture
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 11:00
Street gang members often lead parallel lives online - and that makes cyberspace a great channel for reaching out to them, says criminologist David Pyrooz
Closest exoplanet sparks international naming fight
New Scientist - 16 Apr 2013 03:04
Is it Alpha Centauri Bb or Rakhat? A scientific society says a private bid to name exoplanets has no official footing, but the bid's organisers are striking back