Blog

Page 9628

Jul 31, 2018

How Goop’s Haters Made Gwyneth Paltrow’s Company Worth $250 Million

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The weirder Goop went, the more its readers rejoiced. And then, of course, the more Goop was criticized: by mainstream doctors with accusations of pseudoscience, by websites like Slate and Jezebel saying it was no longer ludicrous — no, now it was dangerous. And elsewhere people would wonder how Gwyneth Paltrow could try to solve our problems when her life seemed almost comically problem-free. But every time there was a negative story about her or her company, all that did was bring more people to the site — among them those who had similar kinds of questions and couldn’t find help in mainstream medicine.


Taffy Brodesser-Akner is a staff writer for the magazine and a writer for The Times’s culture desk. She last wrote for the magazine about the author Jonathan Franzen.

Sign up for our newsletter to get the best of The New York Times Magazine delivered to your inbox every week.

Continue reading “How Goop’s Haters Made Gwyneth Paltrow’s Company Worth $250 Million” »

Jul 30, 2018

Is this the end of household chores?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

We’re at the point where AI can take on mundane household tasks – if slowly. And the implications of this technology go far beyond folding laundry.

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

AI-driven robot hand spent hundred years teaching itself to rotate cube

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI, virtual reality

A reinforcement learning algorithm allows Dactyl to learn physical tasks by practicing them in a virtual-reality environment.

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

Einstein’s general relativity confirmed near black hole

Posted by in category: cosmology

Observations made with ESO’s Very Large Telescope have for the first time revealed the effects predicted by Einstein’s general relativity on the motion of a star passing through the extreme gravitational field near the supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way. This long-sought result represents the climax of a 26-year-long observation campaign using ESO’s telescopes in Chile.

Credit: European Space Observatory

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

Research finds silicon-based, tandem photovoltaic modules can compete in solar market

Posted by in categories: business, economics, solar power, sustainability

New solar energy research from Arizona State University demonstrates that silicon-based, tandem photovoltaic modules, which convert sunlight to electricity with higher efficiency than present modules, will become increasingly attractive in the U.S.

A paper that explores the vs. enhanced efficiency of a new solar technology, titled “Techno-economic viability of silicon-based, tandem modules in the United States,” appears in Nature Energy this week. The paper is authored by ASU Fulton Schools of Engineering, Assistant Research Professor Zhengshan J. Yu, Graduate Student Joe V. Carpenter and Assistant Professor Zachary Holman.

The Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative was launched in 2011 with a goal of making solar cost-competitive with conventional energy sources by 2020. The program attained its goal of $0.06 per kilowatt-hour three years early and a new target of $0.03 per kilowatt-hour by 2030 has been set. Increasing the efficiency of photovoltaic modules is one route to reducing the cost of the solar electricity to this new target. If reached, the goal is expected to triple the amount of solar installed in the U.S. in 2030 compared to the business-as-usual scenario.

Continue reading “Research finds silicon-based, tandem photovoltaic modules can compete in solar market” »

Jul 30, 2018

What If You Could Clone Your Body?

Posted by in category: futurism

Would you want to create a better version of yourself? #clones

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

Photo

Posted by in category: futurism

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

Sweet Pepper-Harvesting Robot

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI

This robot was designed for harvesting vegetables inside greenhouses.

Read more

Jul 30, 2018

Scientists Have Discovered an Entirely New Shape, And It Was Hiding in Your Cells

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Skin is your largest organ. There are about 2 square metres (22 square feet) of it enveloping you right now, and it’s not the shape we thought it was.

In fact, scientists have just discovered an entirely new geometric shape previously unknown to science or mathematics, and it looks like it’s been hiding in your skin all along. By which we mean, in epithelial cells, the building blocks of the structural tissue forming our external (and internal) skin layers.

These epithelial cells are some of the most important cells early in life, helping to build structures in developing embryos that ultimately become all our different bodily organs.

Continue reading “Scientists Have Discovered an Entirely New Shape, And It Was Hiding in Your Cells” »

Jul 30, 2018

[1710.05796] The Cosmological Models with Jump Discontinuities

Posted by in category: futurism

Risks of sudden sigularities:


The article is dedicated to one of the most undeservedly overlooked properties of the cosmological models: the behaviour at, near and due to a jump discontinuity. It is most interesting that while the usual considerations of the cosmological dynamics deals heavily in the singularities produced by the discontinuities of the second kind (a.k.a. the essential discontinuities) of one (or more) of the physical parameters, almost no research exists to date that would turn to their natural extension/counterpart: the singularities induced by the discontinuities of the first kind (a.k.a. the jump discontinuities). It is this oversight that this article aims to amend.

Read more