Science News
Nanoparticle Device Kills Germs With Sunlight
Popular Science - 12 Jul 2013 01:00
The solarclave could sterilize medical devices in areas without reliable electricity. Though the steam-generating autoclave has long been the standard method of sterilizing medical equipment, this could change with the s...
Watch This Untrippable Robot Strut Its Stuff
Popular Science - 12 Jul 2013 00:31
Boston Dynamics' latest 'bot doesn't fall down easily. Boston Dynamics, makers of some of the coolest, most terrifying robots around, have already showed off prototypes of their humanoid Atlas robot, but we haven't quite...
In Chicago, 3-D Printers Are Available To Anyone With A Library Card
Popular Science - 12 Jul 2013 00:00
The Harold Washington Library's new Maker Lab is free and open to the public. Get making! 3-D printing may be the way of the future, but for the average Joe, actually getting ahold of a 3-D printer to use on the cheap re...
The X-47B Autonomous Warplane Lands On Aircraft Carrier
Popular Science - 11 Jul 2013 22:00
Yesterday, a robot made history. The X-47B, an experimental drone that flies itself, landed on the aircraft carrier U.S.S George H.W. Bush. Why is that a big deal? Because landing on an aircraft carrier is hard. Both the...
Finally, A Urinal You Can Wash Your Hands In
Popular Science - 11 Jul 2013 21:30
It's about time! Only about 5 percent of people wash their hands correctly. According to the same study, 15 percent of men and 7 percent of women don't even wash their hands at all. Which, gross, you guys. Is the problem...
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: how our behaviour obeys quantum logic, why 1978 was the best year ever, musical argon, high-tech piano keys, and more
Biggest building in the world rivals Monaco in size
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 20:39
New Century Global Centre in Chengdu, China, is big enough to eat 20 Sydney Opera Houses with room for dessert
Astrophile: Searing hot exoplanet is an unearthly blue
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 20:13
"Planet HD 189733b is blue, and there's nothing I can do" - not quite the David Bowie lyric, but it sums up the first exoplanet to have its colour studied
Astrophile: Searing hot exoplanet is an unearthly blu
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 20:13
"Planet HD 189733b is blue, and there's nothing I can do" - not quite the David Bowie lyric, but it sums up the first exoplanet to have its colour studied
The World's Largest Building Is Open For Business
Popular Science - 11 Jul 2013 20:00
It could fit 20 Sydney Opera Houses inside it and has its own artificial sun. The New Century Global Center, a behemoth Chinese officials are calling the world's largest standalone building, has finally opened in Chengdu...
Learning To Learn Faster Part II: Harnessing the Subconscious For Accelerated Performance
Singularity Hub - 11 Jul 2013 19:29
In my last blog, we got a chance to meet learning expert Jim Kwik and explored some of the ideas behind SuperheroYou, which is the Kwik-founded open-source community/university devoted to accelerated learning and brain o...
Zoologger: Traitorous fish throw friends to the wolves
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 19:07
Confronted with a predator, a group of twospot astyanax fish will attack one of their number to leave it vulnerable
Physics goes social: How behaviour obeys quantum logic
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 19:00
Applying the rules of quantum mechanics to psychology and economics can help us understand the brain and how people make decisions, two physicists argue (full text available to subscribers)
Newswire: 11 July 2013 - CERN - CERN and EUROVISION Unite to Attract "Tweens" to Science
Interactions - 11 Jul 2013 18:15
Geneva, 11 July 2013. CERN* and EUROVISION** are awarding grants to two production companies to develop multiplatform media proposals to spark the scientific curiosity of "tweens" - children aged eight to twelve.
From Coal to Canvas: An Artist Turns Toxic Runoff into Palette-Worthy Paints
KQED Quest - 11 Jul 2013 18:00
Discover how an Ohio artist is repurposing runoff from coalmines to create a variety of rich paint pigments--and draw attention to the state's polluted waterways.
For ultra-precise measures, go for nature's constants
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 18:00
The decades-long struggle to redefine seven basic units of measurement may look pointless but is vital for scientific progress
What if your gluten intolerance is all in your head?
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 17:33
For many sufferers, gluten intolerance may originate in the mind, not the body. But that's nothing to be ashamed of, says philosopher Alan Levinovitz
Sensitive piano keys let pianists create new sounds
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 17:00
A new piano keyboard uses sensors similar to those in smartphone touchscreens to let pianists create vibrato and other effects with their fingers
1978 in pictures: Why it was the best year so far
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 15:15
John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John's high-school romance, the first test-tube baby and Pluto's moon are only some of the events that made 1978 a year to remember
The wonder year: Why 1978 was the best year ever
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 15:00
Grease was the word. It was fun to stay at the YMCA. Global prosperity and well-being peaked in 1978 - and has been going downhill since
Eating insects: Disgust is just the first hurdle
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 11:00
The UN says insects are the food of the future, but the West isn't ready to make them a staple - and squeamishness is the least of the problems
Solar system has a tail shaped like a four-leaf clover
New Scientist - 11 Jul 2013 03:35
The first images of our star's strange tail come from a NASA probe studying the bubble of plasma created as the sun ploughs through interstellar gas