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Sep 7, 2021

The Space Force is starting to lean into innovative launch concepts

Posted by in categories: government, military, satellites

The biggest threat to our success is moving too slowly and refusing to change.


In June, a previously flown Falcon 9 booster lofted a new-generation Global Positioning Satellite for the US Space Force. This marked a watershed moment for the US military and the concept of reusable rockets, as the Space Force entrusted a satellite worth about half a billion dollars to the new technology.

Now, thanks to a recent news release from the US Space Force, we have a little more insight into why the Space Force is leaning into reusable rockets and other technology from innovative companies such as SpaceX.

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Sep 7, 2021

How artificial intelligence will kill junior private equity jobs

Posted by in categories: employment, finance, robotics/AI

It’s not just salespeople, traders, compliance professionals and people formatting pitchbooks who risk losing their banking jobs to technology. It turns out that private equity professionals do too. A new study by a professor at one of France’s top finance universities explains how.

Professor Thomas Åstebro at Paris-based HEC says private equity firms are using artificial intelligence (AI) to push the limits of human cognition and to support decision-making. Åstebro says t he sorts of people employed by private equity funds is changing as a result.

Åstebro looked at the use of AI systems across various private equity and venture capital firms. He found that funds that have embraced AI are using decision support systems (DSS) across the investment decision-making process, including to source potential targets for investments before rivals.

Sep 7, 2021

Scientists detected the radio ‘colors’ of a fast radio burst for the first time

Posted by in category: futurism

This could be further proof that magnetars are responsible for most, if not all, FRBs.

Sep 7, 2021

“Liquid Electricity” at a Filling Station Near You?

Posted by in categories: energy, transportation

Dear Reader.

Despite what the mainstream media have been telling you for decades now, the future of consumer and commercial transportation is not electric.

It also won’t be gas-powered…

Continue reading “‘Liquid Electricity’ at a Filling Station Near You?” »

Sep 7, 2021

How Nuclear Fusion Reactors Work

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

Fusion reactors will use abundant sources of fuel, will not leak radiation above normal background levels, and will produce less radioactive waste than current fission reactors. Learn about this promising power source.

Sep 7, 2021

Optical Antennas Promise ‘Unlimited’ Data Capacity

Posted by in categories: computing, physics

Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have outlined details of an optical antenna they claim could provide almost limitless bandwidth.

They suggest the key to the breakthrough is a method of being able to take full advantage of the orbital angular momentum (OAM) properties of a coherent light source, thus enabling multiplexing, or simultaneous transmission.

According to Boubacar Kante, the principal investigator of the Berkeley project “it is the first time that lasers producing twisted light have been directly multiplexed.” He is an associate professor in the university’s Electronic Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, and the initial results of the work have just been published in Nature Physics.

Sep 7, 2021

NASA’s Perseverance Rover Successfully Cores Its First Rock

Posted by in category: space

Perseverance will obtain additional imagery of the sample tube before potentially completing the process of collecting its first scientifically-selected Mars sample.


Mars feature.

Sep 7, 2021

Video shows SpaceX’s once ‘ridiculous’ rocket landing in the dark

Posted by in category: space travel

SpaceX has posted a new video that shows off what was once considered as a ‘ridiculous’ rocket landing in clouded darkness.

Sep 7, 2021

Only ‘natural persons’ can be recognized as patent inventors, not AI systems, US judge rules

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Chris Smedley, please tell us your thoughts on this judgment?


This isn’t over says man pushing for neural networks’ rights.

Sep 7, 2021

Novel imaging method reveals a surprising arrangement of DNA in the cell’s nucleus

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, genetics

The groups also explained why in previous studies by other scientists, the chromatin appeared to fill the cell nuclei. “When scientists plate cells on a glass slide in order to study them under a microscope, they change their volume and physically flatten them. This may perturb some of the forces governing chromatin arrangement and reduce the distance between the upper part of the nucleus to its base,” Safran explains.


If you open a biology textbook and run through the images depicting how DNA is organized in the cell’s nucleus, chances are you’ll start feeling hungry; the chains of DNA would seem like a bowl of ramen: long strings floating in liquid. However, according to two new studies—one experimental and the other theoretical—that are the outcome of the collaboration between the groups of Prof. Talila Volk of the Molecular Genetics Department and Prof. Sam Safran of the Chemical and Biological Physics Department at the Weizmann Institute of Science, this image should be reconsidered. Clarifying it is essential since DNA’s spatial arrangement in the nucleus can affect the expression of genes contained within the DNA molecule, and hence the proteins found in the cell.

This story began when Volk was studying how mechanical forces influence cell nuclei in the muscle and found evidence that muscle contractions had an immediate effect on gene expression patterns. “We couldn’t explore this further because existing methods relied on imaging of chemically preserved cells, so they failed to capture what happens in the cell nuclei of an actual working muscle,” she says.

Continue reading “Novel imaging method reveals a surprising arrangement of DNA in the cell’s nucleus” »