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Science News

Location American Science News for 20 June 2013

Heed the evidence: Cops need more than common sense

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 19:00
Police tend to think that intuitive strategies are best for fighting crime, but they should be using research to discover what works - and what doesn't (full text available to subscribers)
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World's First 3-D Printed Battery Is The Size Of A Grain Of Sand A team of scientists have used a custom-made 3-D printer to create high-power microbatteries. Scientists at Harvard University and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have 3-D printed lithium-ion batteries as ...
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A Monocle That Summons Airstrikes With The Push Of A Button Ignore the inevitable Google Glass comparisons, this is all Call of Duty. A new helmet design by Raytheon, exhibited at the Paris Air Show this week, wants to summon firepower from the sky with just a glance and a button...
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Can the UK ease Europe's deadlock on GM crops?

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 21:47
The European Union should make it easier for its farmers to grow genetically modified crops, says the UK environment minister - we look at the state of play
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App Swaps Children's Book Text With News To Save Bored Parents' Sanity Magic Story Maker sneakily replaces the text in children's book illustrations so you can read the news to your unassuming toddler. (Mwahaha...) Like puppies, kids are wildly energetic and easy to fool. My siblings once r...
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The mental illness taboo is a problem for all of us

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 21:02
As celebrities become more open about their mental health problems, stigma still ensures most people conceal such illnesses, say two researchers in the field
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Nigel Lockyer, director of Canada's TRIUMF laboratory for particle and nuclear physics and a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of British Columbia, has been selected to become the next director of the ...
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: why cops need more than common sense, Oculus Rift brings VR dreams on demand, inside Fukushima, and more
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Snail shell stripes reveal Irish origins

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 20:32
Say bonjour and dia duit to a snail that hitched a ride with the Stone Age humans who migrated from the south of France to Ireland
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What a new jumbo particle reveals about extreme matter

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 20:29
A long-sought tetraquark may finally have surfaced, potentially providing insights into the make-up of the most exotic regions of the universe
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Inside Singularity University: Bloomberg Profiles SU On Brink TV Show If you are excited about emerging technologies and how they can solve some of the world's greatest challenges, strap in for an inside look at Singularity University, courtesy of Bloomberg TV. At the beginning of June, Si...
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A Plan For The World's Tallest Wood Skyscraper

Popular Science - 20 Jun 2013 20:00
A Plan For The World's Tallest Wood Skyscraper It's like a giant's whittling project. Look at this futuristic skyscraper design! Construction for it would dump less CO2 into the atmosphere than traditional steel construction! It'd be cheaper to build! It'd be made ou...
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Learn to shake your new tail as a virtual animal

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 18:05
We can quickly learn to control an avatar in the form of an animal if our movements are mapped onto its digital representation
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The Monkey and the Hunter

Physics Central - 20 Jun 2013 16:03
The Monkey and the Hunter Test your knowledge of gravity with this thought experiment.
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Why I've built a search engine that doesn't follow you

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 16:02
Revelations about governments' online snooping have been good news for Gabriel Weinberg, builder of DuckDuckGo - a search engine that doesn't track its users
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Wormhole entanglement solves black hole paradox

New Scientist - 20 Jun 2013 16:00
A new kind of wormhole may resolve whether you'd be crushed or burned if you fell in a black hole, which could in turn lead to a theory of quantum gravity
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