Science News
Cara Face Recognition Transforms Standard Webcams Into Intelligent Sensors
Singularity Hub - 16 May 2013 23:24
The human face is a treasure trove of information. A millisecond after meeting someone, we've guessed their general age bracket, gender, mood, and more. With tech startup IMRSV's new face detection software Cara--release...
Google Bets $10.7 Million On Drone Intelligence
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 23:00
The company's venture capital arm has just made a big investment in unmanned systems. Echoing a company belief in autonomous systems, clever algorithms, and replacing fallible humans with smart machines, Google's venture...
Parcels find their way to you via the crowd
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 23:00
A new delivery concept uses the location of random strangers to TwedEx parcels directly to you - wherever you are
Concept Skyscraper Generates Its Own Energy, Looks Like A Toilet Brush
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 22:30
The, erm, splashy future of skyscrapers In the future, all buildings will resemble massive toilet brushes. Perhaps not, but that's the net-zero energy future of skyscrapers envisioned by Belatchew Arkitekter in an idea c...
Ghostly pictures made in 3D - minus the camera
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 22:00
A strange kind of photography called ghost imaging has been extended to work in 3D, and may one day prove useful for medical or security scans
Robot Plane Flies Humans 500 Miles
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 22:00
Up, up, and away--without a pilot. The great thing about robots is that they take boring, repetitive tasks from humans, which frees up our superior minds for more creative endeavors (like building more robots.) Flying a ...
Zap the brain with electricity to speed up mental maths
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 21:35
It's what school children have been waiting for - stimulating the brain speeds up mental arithmetic and the results seem to last
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 21:00
All the latest stories on newscientist.com: new US agony beam weapon, malarial mosquitoes sniff you out, Google and NASA go quantum, and more
Google And NASA Team Up In Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 20:56
Why not use a crazy sci-fi technology (quantum computing) to solve a classic crazy sci-fi problem (artificial intelligence)? Google announced today a partnership with NASA and D-Wave to launch a lab to solve artificial i...
How NASA Could Save Kepler
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 20:30
Scott Hubbard, former director of the NASA Ames Research Center, speculates on how NASA could revive the ailing space telescope. Yesterday NASA officials confirmed that the exoplanet-hunting Kepler space telescope had su...
New memories filmed in action for first time
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 20:21
The processes of memory formation and retrieval have been observed across the entire brain for the first time using transparent zebrafish
Google and NASA team up to use quantum computer
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 20:06
New big-name clients for quantum-computer maker D-Wave may signal that their devices are going mainstream - but are they really that fast?
Google and NASA buy controversial quantum computer
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 20:06
New big-name clients for quantum-computer maker D-Wave may signal that their devices are going mainstream - but are they really that fast?
With Latest Tech, Can Doctors Treat Us Before We Fall Sick?
Singularity Hub - 16 May 2013 19:06
We visit a doctor when something feels wrong. We routinely receive care too late -- millions die because of delayed diagnosis. Future of healthcare delivery flips this equation. Can we be treated before we fall sick?
Thinking Like a Pirate – or a Scientist
KQED Quest - 16 May 2013 19:00
New understandings about how scientists think have forced changes in school science standards.
Thinking Like a Pirate - or a Scientist
KQED Quest - 16 May 2013 19:00
New understandings about how scientists think inspire changes in school science standards.
Pain ray: The US military's new agony beam weapon
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 19:00
A weapon that fires a beam hundreds of metres to induce unbearable pain is ready to be unleashed on the world - what should be done with it? (full text available to subscribers)
Smartphone App Lets You Carry Human Experts Around In Your Pocket
Singularity Hub - 16 May 2013 18:57
Imagine if you could bring a slew of virtual experts around with you and ask them for advice whenever the need arose. Although that sounds like futuristic technology, a new app from Esquire magazine shows that it's a wor...
Light Duty
Popular Science - 16 May 2013 17:05
The Army fires up a sunshine simulator. Each year, some 20 soldiers experience Afghanistan's 118°F heat for the first time not in the field but in a lab in Natick, Massachusetts. For six decades, the Doriot Climatic Cha...
Ice tsunamis overwhelm lakeside homes
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 15:09
It's a rarely seen phenomenon - high winds have blown ice floes ashore in Canada and the US on two consecutive days, destroying homes
Rebuilding not rewinding is the future of conservation
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 12:00
The concept of "natural" makes little sense in our ever-changing, human-dominated world
Stem cells: Back to the future
New Scientist - 16 May 2013 11:00
The unexpected return of therapeutic cloning could reopen ethical arguments that seemed to have been laid to rest