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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 June 2013

Watch This Insane Helicopter-Bike Fly Around

Popular Science - 13 Jun 2013 01:55
Surface-bound Citibikes are so last week. Hey, cyclists: why are you still bicycling on asphalt like chumps when there's this (totally safe-looking, not at all super-dangerous) flying bicycle? Just kidding! You're not al...
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Astrophile: The runt of the galactic litter

New Scientist - 13 Jun 2013 01:20
The smallest galaxy known, Segue 2, is either an impossible runt or a battered companion of the Milky Way
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Singularity Hub Is Hiring! New Writer/Journalist Position With Your Name On It That's right, we're excited to announce that Singularity Hub is hiring! We're looking for talented, prolific writers with a strong background in technology and science to join our editorial team. If you love covering sci...
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Prevent your bike from being stolen by keeping it in a batcave basically In most cities, being a cyclist means you will have your vehicle stolen and/or vandalized on a semi-regular basis. That's just how it works. But in...
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Derecho Facts, Formation and Forecasting

Live Science - 12 Jun 2013 23:14
Derecho Facts, Formation and Forecasting These long-lived, large windstorms are difficult to predict.
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Designers Spruce Up The Government's Crappy PowerPoint

Popular Science - 12 Jun 2013 21:30
Designers Spruce Up The Government's Crappy PowerPoint Our government wins in espionage, but not in PowerPoint. Luckily for the NSA, there's the Internet. After news broke of PRISM, the government's secret surveillance program, everyone recoiled in horror: first, at the conf...
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Update your software without stress or disruption

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 21:25
Two major objections to installing a software update - that you have to stop running the program and the fear that the update will introduce bugs - could soon be removed
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New type of stem cell helps your fingers regenerate

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 21:00
Shave off the very tip of your finger or toe and it should grow back. Now we know how. It's all got to do with some very special cells beneath your nails
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: goodbye to Goldilocks, super-pests beating GM crops, US carbon emissions turn down, and more
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Big Brother needs a data privacy policy

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 21:00
The debate over internet and phone surveillance should be conducted in the open, not the shadows
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Congress Was Not Really Briefed On PRISM

Popular Science - 12 Jun 2013 20:59
Congress Was Not Really Briefed On PRISM Next time, members of Congress should make sure to ask for a briefing about a program they have no reason to believe even exists. "Every member of Congress has been briefed on this program," said President Obama last wee...
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Join Opening Ceremonies For 2013 Graduate Studies Program At Singularity University June 17 The time for innovation is now! The 2013 Graduate Studies Program at Singularity University is officially kicking off with the Opening Ceremonies on June 17. The event is being held at the Computer History Museum in Moun...
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-tzi the iceman's cells show battle brain damage

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 19:58
Images from a pinhead-sized sample of a glacier corpse's brain shows evidence of his final, deadly fight
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3D Printed Windpipe Saves Baby's Life

Singularity Hub - 12 Jun 2013 19:38
3D Printed Windpipe Saves Baby's Life A group of resourceful doctors at the University of Michigan used 3D printing technology to give a young man a stint for his weakened trachea. Without the stint the boy's prognosis was to never leave the hospital - and t...
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Restoring the Earth's "Kidneys"

KQED Quest - 12 Jun 2013 19:00
Restoring the Earth's Urban development is impeding the ability of native wetlands to serve as natural filters, but efforts are underway in some places to reverse the damage.
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Goodbye, Goldilocks? The untimely end of life on Earth

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 19:00
From life's point of view, Earth sits in the solar system's sweet spot. But new calculations suggest it is teetering on the brink of a solar roasting (full text available to subscribers)
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How do you move a 50-foot-wide, circular electromagnet from Long Island to the Chicago suburbs in one piece without flexing or twisting it? Very, very carefully. On Sunday, June 16, the electromagnet will begin its 3,200...
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Tokyo, Geneva, Chicago - 12 June 2013. A five-volume report containing the blueprint for a future particle physics project, the International Linear Collider (ILC), was published today. In three consecutive ceremonies in...
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Super-pests are fighting back against killer crops

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 15:42
Five of 13 key pests can now eat crops genetically engineered to kill them - but it's not too late to raise our game (full text available to subscribers)
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US emissions hit first low since mid-1990s

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 14:07
The latest figures on carbon dioxide emissions suggest US emissions are still falling, while China's emissions growth is also in decline
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Time we all learned how to program the world we want

New Scientist - 12 Jun 2013 11:00
The next generation of programming languages will put computation directly into the hands of people who can use it best (full text available to subscribers)
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Facts About Tin

Live Science - 12 Jun 2013 02:17
Facts About Tin Properties, sources and uses of the element tin.
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