Science News
First bone tools suggest Neanderthals taught us skills
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 23:00
Specialised tools dating back 50,000 years indicate that Neanderthals may have created polished bone implements in Europe and showed us how it's done
Why Students Choose Majors
Physics Buzz - 12 Aug 2013 22:44
We ask a lot of 18-year-old students. Upon entering college, students weigh advice and expectations from parents, teachers, and administrators when choosing a major to study for the next few years. On top of that, they'r...
From Charles And Ray Eames, A Simple Machine With One Function: Not To Have Any Function
Popular Science - 12 Aug 2013 22:00
The "Do-Nothing Machine" was a solar-powered ode to originality and wonder. Husband-and-wife duo Charles and Ray Eames were two of the most influential designers of the 20th century, making progress in fields as diverse ...
Watch A 3-D Printed Robot Slide Under Doors
Popular Science - 12 Aug 2013 21:00
The Sprawl Tuned Autonomous Robot is also pretty good at pool. Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley's Biomimetic Millisystems Lab created the Sprawl Tuned Autonomous Robot, a 3-D printed insectoid 'bot t...
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 20:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: fighting for the right to stem cells, making Niels Bohr, why Nigeria has a space programme, fracking, and more
Fracking could accelerate global warming
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 20:44
With the row over fracking reaching the UK, leading climate scientists are warning that its ability to combat climate change might be illusory
What Will Happen 5 Days Before The Singularity? "I's" Feature Film Aims To Find Out
Singularity Hub - 12 Aug 2013 19:53
Sci-fi films have a long history of speculating what the future might be like, seeking to understand what remnants of humanity will continue on when the world may undergo drastic change. More realistic projections focus ...
Fight for the right to stem cells
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 19:00
Who gets to say when unproven therapies can be offered to desperate people? To some, it's a matter of life or death, finds Peter Aldhous (full text available to subscribers)
The making of Niels Bohr
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 18:00
Art's effect on science isn't always clear, shows Love, Literature, and the Quantum Atom by Finn Aaserud and J. L. Heilbron
Ballooning size of world's second-largest refugee camp
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 15:00
Zaatari refugee camp has grown from almost nothing to a population of more than 140,000 in a year, as refugees pour in from neighbouring Syria
If it isn't life-threatening, don't call it cancer
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 12:00
Cancer screening too often leads to scare diagnoses and unnecessary treatments. It's time to rethink our approach, says cancer specialist Laura Esserman
Ban boxing - it's demeaning and dangerous
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2013 11:00
A sport whose sole aim is to cause brain damage to another person is not a "noble art". It has no place in a civilised society, says neuroscientist John Hardy
DARPA, IBM Neurosynaptic Chip and Programming Language Mimic the Brain
Singularity Hub - 12 Aug 2013 07:14
Engineering is often inspired by nature--the hooks in velcro or dermal denticles in sharkskin swimsuits. Then there's Darpa's SyNAPSE, a collaboration of researchers at IBM, XX, and XX universities. Not content with curr...