Monday 19 December 2016
Gatebox reimagines Amazon Alexa as fawning anime girlfriend
While artificial intelligence-based smart speakers like Amazon Echo and Google Home may be grabbing the headlines, Tokyo-based Vinclu's Gatebox is looking to set itself apart with a virtual assistant who isn't just a disembodied voice, but takes the holographic form of a tiny anime girl who seems a bit too eager to please. The device was first announced back in January, but Vinclu is now taking limited pre-orders for those interested in a virtual personal assistant that also doubles as a surrogate girlfriend.
.. Continue Reading Gatebox reimagines Amazon Alexa as fawning anime girlfriend
Category: Around The Home
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Japan
Artificial Intelligence
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Saturday 17 December 2016
Ice found in the eternally dark craters at Ceres' poles
NASA's Dawn deep-space probe has discovered ice inside the eternally shadowed craters of the polar regions of the dwarf planet Ceres. Discovered using onboard cameras built by the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS), the water ice survives in the crater interiors thanks to the extreme cold there.
.. Continue Reading Ice found in the eternally dark craters at Ceres' poles
Category: Space
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NASA
Dawn
Ceres
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Max Planck Institute
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Latest Northop Grumman E-2D Advanced Hawkeye makes maiden flight
Northrop Grumman's newest version of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye has made its maiden flight. The latest iteration of the carrier-borne turboprop airborne early warning aircraft – designed for the US Navy starting in the late 1950s – the new Hawkeye now has the ability to refuel in the air from a tanker aircraft. This allows it to remain on station longer and operate at longer range.
.. Continue Reading Latest Northop Grumman E-2D Advanced Hawkeye makes maiden flight
Category: Aircraft
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US Navy
Northrop Grumman
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Friday 16 December 2016
Sideways launch for microsatellites set to study heart of hurricanes
NASA launched a new class of hurricane monitoring microsatellites today – and did it sideways. At 8:37 am EST Dec. 15, a modified Orbital ATK L-1011 Stargazer aircraft dropped a Pegasus XL rocket from an altitude of 39,000 ft (11.900 m) over the Atlantic Ocean off the east coast of Florida as part of NASA's Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) mission. The three-stage booster then fired its engines in midair before soaring into orbit with its payload of eight microsatellites designed to monitor hurricanes with a new generation of remote sensors.
.. Continue Reading Sideways launch for microsatellites set to study heart of hurricanes
Category: Space
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NASA
Orbital Sciences Corporation
Weather
Launch
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Wednesday 14 December 2016
Autonomous, unmanned swarmboats secure harbor approaches for US Navy
The US Navy's Office of Naval Research (ONR) recently showed off the progress it's making in the area of robotic warfare with a demonstration of how autonomous swarmboats can patrol and secure harbor approaches. The swarm of rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIB) equipped with the latest version of the agency's Control Architecture for Robotic Agent Command and Sensing (CARACaS) technology patrolled the reaches of lower Chesapeake Bay, Virginia with only remote human supervision as they coordinated actions to intercept and evaluate targets on the water.
.. Continue Reading Autonomous, unmanned swarmboats secure harbor approaches for US Navy
Category: Military
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US Navy
Boats
Autonomous Vehicles
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US Marine Corps receives first Amphibious Combat Vehicle I.I prototype
At its York, Pennsylvania facility, BAE Systems has unveiled the first of 16 Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV) 1.1 prototypes it is developing for the US Marine Corps. The fully amphibious, ship-launchable and ship-recoverable 8x8 wheeled armored troop carrier is being developed under a US$103.7 million contract for the Engineering, Manufacturing, and Development phase of the ACV 1.1 program.
.. Continue Reading US Marine Corps receives first Amphibious Combat Vehicle I.I prototype
Category: Military
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Armor
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ACTUV unmanned sub-hunter begins operational trials
Main contractor Leidos has announced that it is starting operational trials of the robotic sub-hunter it's building for DARPA. The Anti-Submarine Warfare Continuous Trail Unmanned Vessel (ACTUV) will take to the seas off the coast of San Diego, California in the coming months for tests of the unmanned ship's sensors, mission control hardware and software, and the autonomy system.
.. Continue Reading ACTUV unmanned sub-hunter begins operational trials
Category: Military
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Submarine
DARPA
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First manned flight of SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft postponed until 2018
SpaceX has suffered another setback with the first manned flight of its Crew Dragon spacecraft being delayed until 2018. According to NASA, the SpaceX Demonstration Mission 2 will not fly until May 2018 instead of in the second quarter of 2017 as previously planned. Though no reason was given for the postponement, it's likely related to the ongoing investigation of the September 1 launchpad explosion of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket during fueling operations.
.. Continue Reading First manned flight of SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft postponed until 2018
Category: Space
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Falcon
NASA
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Monday 12 December 2016
Jets stir up stronger aluminum, reduce casting waste
Aluminum is a ubiquitous part of our modern age, but it's surprisingly hard to produce alloys for it without putting up with significant waste from bad mixtures. MIT researchers Antoine Allanore and Samuel R. Wagstaff have been studying how aluminum alloys harden and have come up with a way to use jets to produce more even distributions of copper and manganese in castings.
.. Continue Reading Jets stir up stronger aluminum, reduce casting waste
Category: Materials
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Metals
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Saturday 10 December 2016
Piccadilly Circus' famous adverts are being replaced by Europe's largest LED screen
The saying goes that Piccadilly Circus is the one place in the world where, if you stand long enough, you'll meet everyone you've ever known. It's small wonder, therefore, that it's famous for its wall of light-up adverts, which are some of the primest eye ball real estate going. To get the most out of the landmark, site owner Land Securities will switch off the six existing screens in January so they can be replaced by a single high-resolution LED screen that will be the biggest in Europe.
.. Continue Reading Piccadilly Circus' famous adverts are being replaced by Europe's largest LED screen
Category: Electronics
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Advertising
London
LED TV
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Japanese cargo ship en route to space station
Eight days after an unmanned Russian Progress cargo ship failed to reach orbit, a Japanese space freighter is on its way to the International Space Station (ISS). Today at 8:26 am EST (10:26 pm JST), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)'s HTV-6 mission lifted off from the Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan atop an H-IIB rocket. Carrying 4.5 tons (4.1 tonnes) of supplies, it's scheduled to rendezvous with the station on Tuesday.
.. Continue Reading Japanese cargo ship en route to space station
Category: Space
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NASA
International Space Station
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Friday 9 December 2016
Home sweet home for US Navy's largest ever destroyer
The US Navy's largest and most technologically advanced destroyer, the USS Zumwalt(DDG 1000), arrived at its new homeport of San Diego, California today. The first-in-class warship left the Bath Iron Works shipyard in Bath, Maine on September 7 and made passage through the Panama canal, making goodwill visits to various ports along the way.
.. Continue Reading Home sweet home for US Navy's largest ever destroyer
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US pioneering astronaut John Glenn dies
Space pioneer and former US senator John Glenn died today at the age of 95, after a brief stay in hospital. One of the original Mercury Seven astronauts, Glenn was America's first man to orbit the Earth on February 20, 1962 aboard the Mercury-Atlas Friendship Seven space capsule. He later went on to serve in the United States Senate for 25 years and became the world's oldest astronaut in 1998 when he returned to space as a passenger/specialist on STS-95 Discovery.
.. Continue Reading US pioneering astronaut John Glenn dies
Category: Space
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Obituaries
NASA
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Apollo 15 drill chuck that helped bore into lunar surface up for auction
Such a tiny fraction of the massive Saturn V rocket returned home from each Apollo Moon mission that it's surprising what has survived over the years. One example is an odd artifact: the chuck used by Apollo 15 Mission Commander David Scott that was part of the Apollo Lunar Surface Drill used to burrow into the lunar soil to retrieve samples and place experiments. It's up for auction at RR Auction as part of its Autographs, Artifacts & Animation sale in Boston, Massachusetts, where it's expected to fetch US$50,000.
.. Continue Reading Apollo 15 drill chuck that helped bore into lunar surface up for auction
Category: Space
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RR Auction
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NASA
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Next SpaceX Falcon 9 launch delayed until January
SpaceX has set back the date for its next Falcon 9 launch until sometime in January. The company says the much anticipated return after a Falcon 9's launchpad explosion on September 1 was delayed to make time for close-out vehicle preparations and complete extended testing to ensure the safety of the flight.
.. Continue Reading Next SpaceX Falcon 9 launch delayed until January
Category: Space
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Enigma machine sells for a record $463,500
One of the rarest surviving Enigma cipher machines has sold at auction for a record price of US$463,500. An artifact of one of the most exciting episodes of World War II, the fully operational Enigma M4 was made in 1943 for Admiral Doneitz's Kriegsmarine to send secret messages to the German U-boat packs at the height of the war. It was part of the Bonhams History of Science and Technology Sale in New York City and easily surpassed the previous record of US$350,000 set in 2015.
.. Continue Reading Enigma machine sells for a record $463,500
Category: Collectibles
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Enigma Machine
Bonhams
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Tuesday 6 December 2016
Gearing up space robots with metallic glass
In a quest to give robots human-like grace even in the frozen wastes of space, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California is looking at exotic gears made out of exotic materials. In a pair of papers, technologist Douglas Hofmann and his team describe how high-precision gears made of Bulk Metallic Glass (BMG) could lead to more graceful robots that cost less to build.
.. Continue Reading Gearing up space robots with metallic glass
Category: Robotics
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Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity glides in for first free flight
Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity took to the sky's today on its first free flight. The company says the suborbital passenger spacecraft was dropped by the WhiteKnightTwo mothership at the Virgin Galactic test site over the Mojave Desert during one hour 20 minute flight that included a ten minute, unpowered free flight to test the craft's systems and collect telemetry data.
.. Continue Reading Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity glides in for first free flight
Category: Space
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Audi lunar Quattro books trip to the Moon
In 2015, Audi went into partnership with Germany's Part-Time Scientists team to help develop the Audi lunar Quattro unmanned lunar rover in competition for the Google Lunar X-Prize. The company announced recently that the latest iteration of the rover and its landing craft are undergoing extensive testing to the run up to a visit to the landing site of the Apollo 17 mission by late next year.
.. Continue Reading Audi lunar Quattro books trip to the Moon
Category: Space
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Meat glue and crustacean shells form the right recipe for patching wounds
The kitchen and the laboratory have come together at Harvard's Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, where researchers have developed a method that allows a biodegradable, and biocompatible bioplastic derived from the chitin shells of crustaceans and insects to be used to patch up wounds or hold implanted medical devices in place. The technique involves combining the material with a cutting edge culinary ingredient called transglutaminase or "meat glue".
.. Continue Reading Meat glue and crustacean shells form the right recipe for patching wounds
Category: Medical
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Changes in cerebrospinal fluid volume the culprit behind astronauts' blurry vision
As missions aboard the International Space Station (ISS) have grown longer, astronauts have been repeatedly complaining of blurred vision and, fearing that this condition might not be reversible on returning from Earth, NASA has been investigating the causes. Now a team led by Noam Alperin, professor of radiology and biomedical engineering at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Miami, Florida has completed a study that indicates the culprit might be a change in volume in the astronaut's cerebrospinal fluid.
.. Continue Reading Changes in cerebrospinal fluid volume the culprit behind astronauts' blurry vision
Category: Space
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International Space Station
Vision
NASA
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Diamonds turn nuclear waste into nuclear batteries
One problem with dealing with nuclear waste is that it's often hard to tell what's waste and what's a valuable resource. Case in point is the work of physicists and chemists at the University of Bristol, who have found a way to convert thousands of tonnes of seemingly worthless nuclear waste into man-made diamond batteries that can generate a small electric current for longer than the entire history of human civilization.
.. Continue Reading Diamonds turn nuclear waste into nuclear batteries
Category: Energy
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Nuclear
University of Bristol
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Spaceworthy optical clock promises centimeter-level GPS precision
As sailors in the 17th century learned the hard way, having an accurate clock for navigation is pointless if it's too delicate to carry aboard ship and the and the same goes for the super accurate optical clocks being developed for future GPS satellites. Now an optical clock built by a team led by Matthias Lezius of Menlo Systems not only has the potential to one day produce centimeter-level GPS location fixing, but is capable of operating in a zero-gravity environment.
.. Continue Reading Spaceworthy optical clock promises centimeter-level GPS precision
Category: Space
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Clever clip keeps time on luxury watches
One of the problems of owning a luxury mechanical wrist watch is making sure it's keeping proper time. You could check it against radio time signals over a period of weeks, or you could take it to an upmarket watch repair shop to be hooked up to some very large and expensive equipment, but the Geneva-based watchmaker Frederique Constant has an inexpensive alternative. The Frederique Constant Analytics is an accuracy measuring clip and smartphone app that allows owners to measure the performance of their watches at home and make sure they're properly maintained.
.. Continue Reading Clever clip keeps time on luxury watches
Category: Wearables
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ExoMars sharpens its scientific tools
After a long cruise and eventful arrival, the ExoMars mission gets to work next week as the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) makes its first observations of Mars during two orbits. The calibration tests are designed to make sure the instruments are working properly and ready to make a detailed study of the atmosphere of the Red Planet beginning in 2018.
.. Continue Reading ExoMars sharpens its scientific tools
Category: Space
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Ecotricity wants to heat British homes with gas from grass
The old saying goes that you shouldn't let the grass grow under your feet, but a British green energy company sees that neglected greenery as the solution to the UK's energy needs. Ecotricity has announced it plans to produce methane using grass harvested from marginal farmland that could one day heat 97 percent of British homes and create a whole new energy industry.
.. Continue Reading Ecotricity wants to heat British homes with gas from grass
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BAE Systems takes a cue from ironclad beetle to build self-repairing military suspensions
Seeking ways to make military vehicles less vulnerable to blast damage, BAE Systems is looking to one of the toughest insects in nature. Inspired by the frighteningly hard to kill ironclad beetle, the defense contractor is developing a new bendable titanium alloy suspension system that not only does away with springs, but snaps back into shape after taking on landmines.
.. Continue Reading BAE Systems takes a cue from ironclad beetle to build self-repairing military suspensions
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Artificial organs that look and bleed like the real thing take surgical practice to the next level
Practice makes perfect, but if you're a surgeon, truly realistic practice also means doing so at the patient's risk. To provide surgeons and students with an alternative to a living human being to work on, a pair of physicians at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) have developed a way to use 3D printing to create artificial organs that look, feel, and even bleed like the real thing.
.. Continue Reading Artificial organs that look and bleed like the real thing take surgical practice to the next level
Category: Medical
Tags:
3D Printing
Surgery
University of Rochester
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Near-complete dodo skeleton fetches £280,000 at auction
The only near-complete dodo bird skeleton in private hands went on sale today at Summers Place Auctions, where it fetched £280,000 as part of the Sussex-based natural history auction house's fourth Evolution sale. According to the company, the composite skeleton made from the remains of different birds is 95-percent complete and is one of only 14 such dodo skeletons in the world.
.. Continue Reading Near-complete dodo skeleton fetches £280,000 at auction
Category: Biology
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Schiaparelli Mars lander crashed because it thought it was below ground
ESA has identified the malfunction that caused the unmanned ExoMars Schiaparelli Mars lander to jettison its parachute and shut down its landing engines prematurely, causing it to crash and explode on the surface of the Red Planet. According to the space agency, it was due to the navigation system being overloaded, so it not only thought it was on the ground, but beneath it.
.. Continue Reading Schiaparelli Mars lander crashed because it thought it was below ground
Category: Space
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Moving walkway networks would be an efficient transport option for car-free cities
Many urban planners would like to get rid of, or at least minimize, the number of private cars in cities, but what would replace them? Researchers at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) looked at the idea of car-free cities and, using Geneva as a model, they concluded that Jetson-style moving walkways could not only replace the car, but could each carry 7,000 passengers an hour more energy efficiently than buses.
.. Continue Reading Moving walkway networks would be an efficient transport option for car-free cities
Category: Urban Transport
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Food bars for astronauts' most important meal of the day
The modern habit of skipping the first meal of the day in favor of grabbing a breakfast bar may be the key to feeding the crews of the first manned deep space missions since Apollo. To save space and weight aboard the Orion space capsule, NASA is developing a next generation breakfast bar that provides enough calories and nutrition to keep a busy astronaut going, yet remains appetizing enough to eat for weeks on end.
.. Continue Reading Food bars for astronauts' most important meal of the day
Category: Space
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Orion Spacecraft
NASA
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ISS-bound cargo ship destroyed after launch
The International Space Station (ISS) had another setback today as a Russian cargo ship was destroyed shortly after launch. At 9:51 am EST (8:51 pm Baikonur time, 14:51 GMT), The unmanned Progress 65 (Progress MS-4) spacecraft lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan atop a Soyuz-U launch vehicle. According to Roscosmos, the spacecraft separated prematurely from the third stage 382 seconds into flight, at which time telemetry was lost.
.. Continue Reading ISS-bound cargo ship destroyed after launch
Category: Space
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Roscosmos
International Space Station
NASA
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