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Anonymous 21/5/2009(Thu)07:03:53 No.41687    [Reply]
Researchers create what may be the perfect scout: a bug controlled remotely through a chip implanted in its optic lobes and flight muscles.

The first wireless flying-insect cyborg—a remote-controlled beetle—has been developed by engineers at the University of California at Berkeley. The six-legged biomechanical hybrid can rise, hover, and fly on command, guided by a radio receiver that relays signals to electrodes connected to the insect’s optic lobes and flight muscles. Researchers demonstrated the beetle at the 2009 IEEE MEMS conference in Italy after showing off a preliminary version at the same conference in 2008.

With the mind of a machine and the nimble body of an insect, this bug-bot may be the perfect scout: inexpensive, expendable, and capable of surreptitious reconnaissance. The Berkeley researchers, led by Michael Maharbiz, note that beetles are strong enough to carry useful payloads, such as a miniature camera.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA),

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Hai GlagenealfTog 30/3/2010(Tue)12:18:48 No.566776
Hi
I am a newbie here.
Glad to find this forum...as what I am looking for
>>
overlord overman 03/4/2010(Sat)09:13:38 No.574797
>>
Farnsworth 07/5/2010(Fri)12:00:52 No.623174
In the pic for 91711 it looks like they opened up the birds skull, pulled it's brain out, and stuck a chip on it.
>>
Anonymous 10/5/2010(Mon)09:48:10 No.627995
>>623174
The pink thing is a resin to keep it in place

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Anonymous 07/6/2009(Sun)03:37:27 No.59418    [Reply]
In a tour de force of office supply physics, researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles, have shown that it is possible to produce X-rays by simply unrolling Scotch tape.

Next step: nuclear fusion.

“We’re going to do that,” said Seth J. Putterman, a professor of physics at U.C.L.A. “I think it will work.”

But first, X-rays.

In the current issue of the journal Nature, Dr. Putterman and his colleagues report that surprisingly fierce flows of electrons were unleashed as the tape was unpeeled and its gooey adhesive snapped free of the surface. The electrical currents, in turn, generated strong, short bursts of X-rays — each burst, about a billionth of a second long, contained about 300,000 X-ray photons.
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Anonymous 06/7/2009(Mon)12:54:21 No.101435
I always wonder...who comes up with these ideas?

"Dude...lets pull apart some tape in a vacuum, and measure the results. Are you doing anything today, or do you want to try it tomorrow?"

Either way, that's pretty sweet.

Edited at 06/7/2009(Mon)12:54:58
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Anonymous 09/2/2010(Tue)08:49:34 No.492159
>>101435

It is very likely it was discovered by accident. Many important discoveries in Science were originally discovered by accident or while looking for a different result.

It said it only occurs while in a vacuum or possibly a very dry environment where the water in the air would not short it out. Maybe some scientists were working in a vacuum and pulled out some tape to fix an experiment and whallagh.
>>
Anonymous 23/3/2010(Tue)03:25:26 No.557803
>>492159

pulled out some tape to fix an experiment and whallagh.

and whallagh.

That's "voila", good sir.
>>
DHMO Anonymous 27/3/2010(Sat)04:03:29 No.563106
<font face="impact"><FONT SIZE="+3">STAY AWAY FROM TAPE!!! lol jk

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blue dye found in M&Ms protects injured spinal chord Anonymous 09/8/2009(Sun)12:13:34 No.204790    [Reply]
A cascade of molecular changes triggered in the hours following an initial injury can cause further severe damage to the spinal cord.

But US researchers found this can be halted by using a dye known as Brilliant Blue G (BBG).

However, rats given the treatment in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study turned blue.
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Anonymous 11/8/2009(Tue)07:03:26 No.207375
>>207367

Schools in all the world should give more attention to scientific knowledge. I bet that this prank would work anywhere in the world because most people are scientific illiterates.

Without knowledge people are just sheep, be it for a delusional conservative church nut or a crazy Greenpeace/PETA screamming vegan.
>>
4tran 12/8/2009(Wed)02:12:17 No.207797
>>207367
>>207375
It is also among the most potent carcinogens in existence. The absence of dihydrogen monoxide guarantees a cancer free lifestyle.
>>
Anonymous 12/8/2009(Wed)03:05:30 No.207843
A lot of facts about dihydrogen monoxide
http://www.dhmo.org/facts.html

Despite the known dangers of DHMO, it continues to be used daily by industry, government, and even in private homes across the U.S. and worldwide. Some of the well-known uses of Dihydrogen Monoxide are:
* as an industrial solvent and coolant,
* in nuclear power plants,
* by the U.S. Navy in the propulsion systems of some older vessels,
* by elite athletes to improve performance,
* in the production of Styrofoam,
* in biological and chemical weapons manufacture,
* in the development of genetically engineering crops and animals,
* as a spray-on fire suppressant and retardant,
* in so-called "family planning" or "reproductive health" clinics,
* as a major ingredient in many home-brewed bombs,
* as a byproduct of hydrocarbon combustion in furnaces and air conditioning compressor operation,
* in cult rituals,
* by the Church of Scientology on their members and their members' families (although surprisingly, many members recently have contacted DHMO.org to vehemently deny such use),
* by both the KKK and the NAACP during rallies and marches,
* by members of Congress who are under investigation for financial corruption and inappropriate IM behavior,
* by the clientele at a number of bath houses in New York City and San Francisco,
* historically, in Hitler's death camps in Nazi Germany, and in prisons in Turkey, Serbia, Croatia, Libya, Iraq and Iran,
* in World War II prison camps in Japan, and in prisons in China, for various forms of torture,
* during many recent religious and ethnic wars in the Middle East,
* by many terrorist organizations including al Quaeda,
* in community swimming pools to maintain chemical balance,
* in day care centers, purportedly for sanitary purposes,
* by software engineers, including those producing DICOM programmer APIs and other DICOM software tools,
* by popular computer science professors,
* by the semi-divine King Bhumibol of Thailand and his many devoted young working girls in Bangkok,
* in animal research laboratories, and
* in pesticide production and distribution.

lol
>>
DHMO Anonymous 27/3/2010(Sat)03:58:31 No.563099
3/26/10

Its sad that all of those people had no idea that they were signing a petition against water. Gotta love living in america. Evem i have grown up in a sheltered life and still knew what they were talking about when they said DMHMO...its sad...whens the last time those people took a basic biology class? Not evem that high earth space science? ring a bell to anyone out there? Cant anyone breakdown chemical names any more? God forbid anyone ger off facebook and open a frelling book

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Anonymous 02/5/2009(Sat)08:48:22 No.6020    [Reply]
http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/04/20/1900342.aspx
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQ7EOpPNQyw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QPiF4-iu6g
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuxAV0S71qU

The concept of brains interracting with electronics - especially robots - physically excites the hell out of me. >>6015 reminded me, but it doesn't really fit in that thread. This stuff is interesting anyway though.

Also, the start of the Asimo video annoys me.
>Enabling Control of a Robot by Human Thought Alone.

Saying this sort of stuff leads people to think that technology will be able to read their minds, such as some of the commentors in the Twitter article. Doesn't it have more to do with selecting and recognizing the patterns and abnormalities in human brainwaves, then preforming an action based on that abnormality? 'Thought' seems a bit misleading there.

Also, anyone know why some people could 'type' faster with twitter than others? And how would people with neurological is

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Stanley Cool Brick!FByqDI9Gn. 05/7/2009(Sun)09:28:46 No.101356
>>100135
lol
>"this is not Micheal Fox faking it, this is real"
the guy is a stupid portuguese
>>
Anonymous 05/7/2009(Sun)09:41:26 No.101359
>>101356
I think he is brazilian.
he speak that way due to parkinson
>>
Personality outsourcing Anonymous 17/12/2009(Thu)03:16:00 No.426932
Connecting a computer to your brain is also very interesting if you want to live forever. Let's say you are outsourcing more and more of your higher cognitive functions by connecting more devices which just communicate neurally with your brain. While you get older, more parts of your personality will be emulated by the computer and when your brain finally dies it's more like a stroke than death.
>>
Anonymous 21/3/2010(Sun)09:01:05 No.555634
>>426932

what you say makes no sense, if your brain dies YOU DIE! The seat of consciousness is most probably the tissue of the BRAIN!

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Atom smasher shows vacuum of space in a twist Anonymous 23/2/2010(Tue)03:02:58 No.514467    [Reply]
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18526-atom-smasher-shows-vacuum-of-space-in-a-twist.html
(vid eo at http://www.newscientist.com/articlevideo/dn18526/66623156001-atom-smasher-shows-vacuum-of-space-in-a-twist.html )

Ephemeral vortices that form in the vacuum of space may have been spotted for the first time. They could help to explain how matter gets much of its mass.

Most of the mass of ordinary matter comes from nucleons – protons and neutrons. Each nucleon, in turn, is made of three quarks. But the quarks themselves account for only about 1 per cent of the mass of a nucleon. The remainder of the mass comes from the force that holds the quarks together. This force is mediated by particles called gluons.

A theory called quantum chromodynamics is used to calculate how quarks and gluons combine to give mass to nucleons, but exactly how this phenomenon works is not fully understood.

One possibility is that the fields created by gluons can twist, forming vortex-like struc

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Anonymous 20/2/2010(Sat)08:08:58 No.510304    [Reply]
Earliest starlight of the universe is revealed

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8255-earliest-starlight-of-the-universe-is-revealed.html


* 18:00 02 November 2005 by Maggie McKee

NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope may have detected the infrared glow from the very first generation of stars, a new study reports. If confirmed, the work would reveal the structure of the universe a few hundred million years after the big bang, when the galaxies that exist today were just beginning to take shape.

Astronomers have already detected light from even earlier times, when the universe was a mere 370,000 years old. It was then that radiation first escaped from a scalding primordial soup of matter and energy, and it still suffuses space today in the form of the cosmic microwave background radiation.

But infrared light also floods space in what is called the cosmic infrared background radiation. "It is a repository of the emissions of all the stars that have ever existed in the un

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Anonymous 26/8/2009(Wed)05:31:59 No.229563    [Reply]
What's your thoughts on this?
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Anonymous 28/12/2009(Mon)12:06:16 No.437663
... nothing...?
>>
Anonymous 28/12/2009(Mon)03:11:50 No.438419
>>437663

Hey. A sign of life. I feel like I'm on a deserted islan
>>
Anonymous 09/2/2010(Tue)06:56:12 No.492003
There are patterns inside the number sequence of pi. They are fucking strange. Pattern complexes when you combine the numbers into different forms. Blocks of five. Every five numbers combined equals one number. Printed out with hundreds of 5 number sets combined into different sets reveals ridiculous patterns and combination's of numbers. Patterns are to be seen in ten block sets. In odd/even number sets. Set all of the numbers of Pi out in just odd or just even. Put those into block sets. Patterns in primes, patterns in Mandelbrot sets when input with pi combination's. Simply put a sphere or a circle is the most efficient way for energy to take shape.

I cannot talk more on this subject. I feel that I am under surveillance.

Do not look simply in the numbers, it is in how the numbers are used.
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Anonymous 15/2/2010(Mon)11:11:46 No.502860
pi=10 (base pi)

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Anonymous 13/10/2009(Tue)06:14:30 No.309452    [Reply]
Since this is the most generic board of this "chan", What book are you reading now (apart of the ones for uni/school)

Picture related, I'm a medical student and I'm reading this. It's not a true medical book, more like a book written by a medic about medical mysteries like phantom limbs, blind vision and how our brains work.

The only bad thing about this book is that the one who translated it ot my language wasn't in the medical area so some terms were misstranslated...
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Anonymous 17/10/2009(Sat)07:31:57 No.316064
File: the_art_of_war-img-9568355847_ib4f.jpg - (35.28kb, 323x500)
Sun Tzu said...

All warfare is based on deception. [1:18]

Hence, when able to attack, we must seem unable; when using our forces, we must seem inactive; when we are near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away; when far away, we must make him believe we are near. [1:19]

Hold out baits to entice the enemy. Feign disorder, and crush him. [1:20]

The spot where we intend to fight must not be made known; for then the enemy will have to prepare against a possible attack at several different points; and his forces being thus distributed in many directions, the numbers we shall have to face at any given point will be proportionately few. [6:16]

Rapidity is the essence of war: take advantage of the enemy's unreadiness, make your way by unexpected routes, and attack unguarded spots. [11:19]
>>
Anonymous 18/10/2009(Sun)03:26:51 No.318538
>>313563
add a new one to the list
ian stewart - nature's numbers
:)
>>
Learning resistant Loserbernd 26/10/2009(Mon)10:39:21 No.333909
I don't read.
I barely read in the schooltime back then. Just did it because it was obligatory for the tests.

Guess i am an idiot.
>>
TurkeyBurgers 10/2/2010(Wed)12:42:58 No.492640
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Is this just a cool book list? I just bought
"On the Shoulders of Giants" by Hawking. It looks great and I am excited that I decided to buy it rather than try and borrow it from the library. Barnes and Noble 23 bones. It is "On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres" by Copernicus, "Dialogues Concerning Two Sciences" by Galileo, "Harmonies of the World" by Kepler, "Principia" by Newton and Einsteins original papers that were in "The Principle of Relativity" all translated into English, edited and with commentary by Hawking to accompany them.

I REALLY wish I could find a detailed book that describes my favorite Scientist Alhazen.

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Intergalatic Travel Anon 04/7/2009(Sat)08:12:48 No.99816    [Reply]
If it faster than light travel as easy as in sci fi is possible and there are many advanced civilizations in universe much older than we are them why they are not everywhere? They should be in the Earth, Moon, Mars, terraformed Venus, and some moons of giant planets for thousand of years.
Since they are not this means that travel in space is not easy (take too long), too expensive, or there aren't so many advanced civilizations around.

Discuss
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Anonymous 06/2/2010(Sat)09:44:34 No.487498
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>>487492

Start thinking and planning on a scale of time that is millions of years, not lifetimes.

It would be much easier to seed a planet and let that planet develop and seed 1 other or 2 other planets, in order to spread intelligent life, than to go there yourself, with the limits the lifespan.

The bloom of this "viral" campaign would be much faster than light travel.
>>
Anonymous 06/2/2010(Sat)09:55:44 No.487539
File: PMeyeLG_ib4f.png - (144.8kb, 200x213)
>>487498

Another concept that I personally think is more likely is that generally speaking each planet that can support life eventually creates and starts the evolutionary process...

And, that most of the Universe is within a certain age range (AROUND US), and evolution being a LAW of nature, occurs and approximately the same pace on all the similar aged planets, so AROUND US, so that in our section of the Universe we're all (of the planets capable of it) are developing at about the same pace...so we're all at about the same technological age, give or take a million years...(which is really close)
>>
Anonymous 09/2/2010(Tue)06:46:15 No.491995
>>487539

The problem is that our current Science has really good Evidence that Fully Matured Galaxies have been around for as soon as less than 1 Billion years after the big bang. That would give other species a 12 Billion year + head start on us. It is absolutely possible that a species came to our current level of technology 12 Billion years ago. The range of prediction for the Evolution of a species 12 Billion years ahead of our own is astounding.

In fact our own Milky Way Galaxy is estimated to be 13 Billion years old, as old as the current estimates for our Universes age. That means that life could have evolved BILLIONS of years ahead of our own inside our own Milky Way Galaxy!
>>
Anonymous 09/2/2010(Tue)07:14:15 No.492053
Or to put it in a way that actually makes sense. there are untold billion stars. If one tenth of one percent of each of those stars has a habitable planet. and 1/1000'th of those potential habitable planets gave rise to life. and if say 1/100 of those life bearing planets gives rise to intelligent life....and if..say. Half of those make it out into space?

There are more habitable planets out in the universe than anyone could possibly care about. So why try to terriform shitty little balls like mars.

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Terraforming and living in space. Anonymous 15/7/2009(Wed)04:24:15 No.120665    [Reply]
Based on experiences with Earth, the environment of a planet can be altered deliberately: however the feasibility of creating an unconstrained planetary biosphere that mimics Earth on another planet has yet to be verified. Mars is considered by many to be the most likely candidate for terraformation. Much study has been done concerning the possibility of heating the planet and altering its atmosphere, and NASA has even hosted debates on the subject. Several potential methods of altering the climate of Mars may fall within humanity's technological capabilities, but at present the economic resources required to do so are far beyond that which any government or society is willing to allocate to the purpose. The long timescales and practicality of terraforming are the subject of debate.
>>
Anonymous 15/7/2009(Wed)04:34:19 No.120673
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In the not-too distant future, population growth and demand for resources may create pressure for humans to colonize new habitats such as the surface of the Earth's oceans, the sea floor, near-Earth orbital space, the moon and nearby planets, as well as mine the solar system for energy and materials. Through terraforming, humans could make Mars habitable long before this 'deadline'.
>>
Anonymous 15/7/2009(Wed)04:36:40 No.120678
File: MarsTransition3_ib4f.png - (2.1mb, 1303x1283)
Mars already consists of many soil minerals that could theoretically be used for terraforming. Additionally, recent research has revealed large amounts of ice permafrost just below the Martian surface down to latitude 60, as well as on the surface at the poles, where it is mixed with dry ice, frozen CO2. It has also been hypothesized that there are vast amounts of ice in the deeper crust. As frozen carbon dioxide (CO2) at the poles sublimes back into the atmosphere during the Martian summer, a small amount of water residue is left behind, which fast winds then sweep off the poles at speeds approaching 250 mph (400 km/h). This seasonal ocurrence transports large amounts of dust and water vapor into the atmosphere, giving rise to Earth-like cirrus clouds.

Oxygen is only present in the atmosphere in trace amounts, but is present in large amounts in metal-oxides on the Martian surface. Some oxygen is also present in the soil in the form of per-nitrates. An analysis of soil samples taken

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Anonymous 15/7/2009(Wed)04:38:14 No.120680
File: MarsTransition4_ib4f.png - (2.57mb, 1303x1283)
It has been suggested that Mars once had an environment relatively similar to that of Earth during an earlier stage in its development. This similarity is indicated by the thickness of the Martian atmosphere, as well as the evident presence of liquid water on the planet's surface in the past. The atmosphere has thinned over millions of years as gases have escaped into space, although it has also partially condensed into solid form. While water once appears to have existed on the Martian surface, it now only appears to exist at the poles and just below the planetary surface as permafrost. The exact mechanisms which led to the current atmospheric conditions on Mars are not fully known, although several hypotheses have been proposed. One hypothesis is that the gravity of Mars today indicates that lighter gases in the upper atmosphere could have contributed to the thinning of the atmosphere, with the excess atoms escaping into space. The evident lack of plate tectonics on Mars is another p

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My test this forum number 6. trfjjesdgktiol. oralelmiple 03/2/2010(Wed)04:51:05 No.481557
My test this forum number 5. trfrtfzfefdkiol

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