Archive for the ‘education’ category: Page 169
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bY_wfKVjuJM&feature=youtu.be
Recently, I saw an article making big deal that a robot can now write. Ok, it only took us 253 years to enhance it a little. Meet the Automaton from Sweden that could write and was designed to look like a young boy. Made in 1774 and still writes today.
We had Automaton that did this since 1774. 1st one was from Sweden and made in 1775.
Feb 23, 2017
Melinda and Bill Gates’s Letter to Warren Buffett Reveals the One Thing Successful People Value Most
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: economics, education, health
Bill and Melinda Gates say “the future will surprise the pessimists.”
They discovered childhood mortality is a symptom of other issues
Children’s deaths are often a result of lack of birth control, gender inequality, and poor women’s health. Melinda wrote, “Virtually all advances in society—nutrition, education, access to contraceptives, gender equity, economic growth—show up as gains in the childhood mortality chart, and every gain in this chart shows up in gains for society.”
Feb 22, 2017
Why I Will No Longer Do Research Sponsored By The Department Of Homeland Security
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: education, ethics, government, security
“As academics we can sign petitions, but it is not enough.”
As academics we can sign petitions, but it is not enough. Scott Aaronson wrote very eloquently about this issue after the initial ban was announced (see also Terry Tao). My department has seen a dramatic decrease in the number of applicants in general and not just from Iran. We were just informed that we can no longer make Teaching Assistant offers for students who are unlikely to get a visa to come here.
The Department of Homeland Security has demonstrated its blatant disregard for moral norms. Why should we trust its scientific norms? What confidence do we have that funding will not be used in some coercive way? What does it say to our students when we ask them to work for DHS? Yes, the government is big, but at some point the argument that it’s mostly the guy at the top who is bad but the rest of the agency is still committed to good science becomes just too hard to swallow. I decided that I can’t square that circle. Each one of us should think hard about whether we want to.
Feb 16, 2017
Australian entrepreneur reveals ‘brain-controlled’ telepresence robot
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: education, robotics/AI
Luv this.
Australian entrepreneur reveals brain-controlled telepresence robot. Teleport utilizes brain controlling interface to follow the focal point of a user’s mind and serve various fields of life.
Australian Developer has released a telepresent robot that will let the users attend school or work distantly. People, with a limited mobility of upper limb, will remotely attend tasks through this off-the-shelf mind controlling interface costing 200 UDDs.
Continue reading “Australian entrepreneur reveals ‘brain-controlled’ telepresence robot” »
Feb 9, 2017
Bizarre new helium compound may rewrite science books
Posted by Carse Peel in categories: chemistry, education, particle physics, science
At school you may have been taught that helium was a noble gas because it was totally unreactive.
But, new research suggests it might not be as virtuous as we first thought.
Continue reading “Bizarre new helium compound may rewrite science books” »
Feb 7, 2017
Genetics Is Giving Way to a New Science of Life
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, education, genetics, science
By Jonathan Latham, PhD
Test your understanding of the living world with this simple question. What kind of biomolecule is found in all living organisms? If your answer is “DNA”, you are incorrect. The mistake is very forgiveable though. The standard English-language biology education casts DNA (DeoxyriboNucleic Acid) as the master molecule of life, coordinating and controlling most, if not all, living functions. This master molecule concept is popular. It is plausible. It is taught in every university and high school. But it is wrong. DNA is no master controller, nor is it even at the centre of biology. Instead, science overwhelmingly shows that life is self-organised and thus the pieces are in place for biology to undergo the ultimate paradigm shift.
Feb 7, 2017
High-tech tool joins breast cancer battle
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, education, health
Cara Guilfoyle, M.D., FACS, leads the Coordinated Health Breast Center, which covers all aspects of diagnosis and treatment of a broad range of breast conditions. Breast Center services are available at Coordinated Health locations in Allentown and Pittston.
Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer in women; however, thanks to new diagnostic imaging tools and better patient education, more women are surviving it than ever before.
According to Coordinated Health breast surgeon Cara Guilfoyle, M.D., FACS, the earlier that women are diagnosed with breast cancer, the better their prognosis.
Continue reading “High-tech tool joins breast cancer battle” »
Feb 7, 2017
Bohr’s quantum theory revised
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: education, information science, quantum physics
Bohr’s atomic model was utterly revolutionary when it was presented in 1913 but, although it is still taught in schools, it became obsolete decades ago. However, its creator also developed a much wider-ranging and less known quantum theory, the principles of which changed over time. Researchers at the University of Barcelona have now analysed the development in the Danish physicist’s thought — a real example of how scientific theories are shaped.
Most schools still teach the atomic model, in which electrons orbit around the nucleus like the planets do around the sun. The model was proposed more than a century ago by Danish physicist Niels Bohr based on Rutherford’s first model, the principles of classical mechanics and emerging ideas about ‘quantisation’ (equations to apply initial quantum hypotheses to classical physical systems) advanced by Max Planck and Albert Einstein.
As Blai Pié i Valls, a physicist at the University of Barcelona, explains: “Bohr published his model in 1913 and, although it was revolutionary, it was a proposal that did little to explain highly varied experimental results, so between 1918 and 1923 he established a much more wide-ranging, well-informed theory which incorporated his previous model.”
Feb 7, 2017
Solar-powered Ring Garden marries desalination and agriculture for drought-stricken California
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: education, energy, food, sustainability
Ring Garden is a finalist of LAGI 2016: Santa Monica, a biennial design competition that encourages interconnectivity between art, renewable energy and education.