
Million-Neuron Artificial Brain Works In Real Time
• Francie Diep via PopSci.comA smaller, cheaper, faster brain model
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A smaller, cheaper, faster brain model
When we drive, we get into a glass bubble, lock the doors and press the accelerator, relying on our eyes to guide us -- even though we can only see the few cars ahead of and behind us.
A hepatitis C drug combination from Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD) and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY) cured all patients in a trial, demonstrating the success of a cocktail that may never be approved.
Palmer Luckey built his first virtual-reality (VR) headset for a simple reason: Every attempt he’d seen, including his own collection of 46 pairs of goggles, failed in one way or another
The most complicated $100 bill yet
An experimental new touch screen, the Obake, has a stretchable surface that to reacts user interaction in new ways.
In the beginning of this century a Croatian* engineer, emigrant to America, Nikola Tesla, measured the electrical charge of the planet Earth and found it of a very high potential. He made his observation during thunder storms.
An Army research project wants to cover a battlefield with dozens of soda-can-sized sensors to detect invisible threats.
Also it might provide electricity to the undeveloped world.
Wind power is pretty great: One doesn't need to do much but build turbines and capture the energy from a passing breeze.
It turns out piloting a human-powered helicopter takes a lot more than just pedaling your ass off.
Two NASA spacecraft are safe and sound, after the sun unleashed three intense back-to-back solar eruptions in their direction, scientists say.
If you’ve been to the RoboGames, you’ve seen everything from flame-throwing battlebots to androids that play soccer. But robo-athletes are more than just performers. They’re a path to the future.
Niche provider SoloPower, which received state aid, is seeking an investor to keep operating.
A lack of accessible design tools is holding back 3-D printing.
New research shows how arrays of tiny electronic devices can achieve human-skin-like sensitivity to mechanical force.
Combining aspects of high-energy lithium-sulfur batteries with flow battery technology can lower costs.
The University of Exeter produces molecules identical to the ones that give gas its power.
A shocking new study finds that glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide, "...may be the most biologically disruptive chemical in our environment," capable of contributing to a wide range of fatal human diseases.
Flexible electronics — like a handheld computer that rolls up like a magazine or a video display embedded in a shirtsleeve — are no longer limited to the realm of sci-fi, but they are still generally too expensive for the consumer market.
Making advanced microchips has always been hard.
Huawei is one of those companies that most people don't know about, or care about.
An army of microscopic sponges may someday save your life.
Complex and vibrant bird plumage inspired Darwin's concept of sexual selection as well as many a poem and painting.
Back in 2009, we heard about a 3D bio-printer that had been developed through a collaboration between Australian engineering firm Invetech, and Organovo, a San Diego-based regenerative medicine company.
New research shows how arrays of tiny electronic devices can achieve human-skin-like sensitivity to mechanical force.
When we drive, we get into a glass bubble, lock the doors and press the accelerator, relying on our eyes to guide us -- even though we can only see the few cars ahead of and behind us. But what if cars could share data with each other .....
The solar airplane that will attempt to fly across the country has made its final test flight, spending most of the day soaring over San Francisco Bay on a day that couldn’t have been any prettier.
Cities will greatly expand, again: Faster and more efficient transportation will convert locations that are currently too remote for most users into feasible alternatives, abundant with space. Like suburban rail in the early twentieth
Google has always been an artificial intelligence company, so it really shouldn’t have been a surprise that Ray Kurzweil, one of the leading scientists in the field, joined the search giant late last year.