Standardization may not be the most exciting topic in biomedical research, but in an era where we lament the lack of reproducibility and distribute blame to reagents, sample prep, and general technical…
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US unleashes smart rifle scopes that shoot enemy drones on their own
In a significant technological leap toward countering small unmanned aerial systems (sUAS), the US Army has begun fielding the SMASH 2000L, an artificial intelligence-enabled smart fire control system designed to give soldiers a precision edge…
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Have a damaged painting? Restore it in just hours with an AI-generated “mask” | MIT News
Art restoration takes steady hands and a discerning eye. For centuries, conservators have restored paintings by identifying areas needing repair, then mixing an exact shade to fill in one area at a time. Often, a painting…
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Tofu-like brain implant lets scientists track cyborg tadpole growth
Bioengineering scientists in the US have developed a soft, thin, and stretchable bioelectronic implant, which they integrated into a tadpole embryo’s nervous system to help them track neural activity and monitor the earliest stages of brain…
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CURBy uses quantum physics to generate unhackable random numbers
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder have developed the world’s truest random number generator based on quantum mechanics.
Dubbed Colorado University Randomness…
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World’s first 2D material built computer completely ditches silicon
Silicon is the kingpin when it comes to semiconductor technology that’s used in smartphones, computers, electric vehicles, and more. However, the material could soon lose its claim as the most important material for this technology in the…
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‘The whole team was euphoric’
A surprising discovery has left the scientific community speechless. According to Inkl, a species previously believed to be extinct has been spotted.
The unique 200-million-year-old species, famously named after Sir David Attenborough, was caught…
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Controlling This One Molecule Could Halt Alzheimer’s in Its Tracks
New research identifies the immune molecule STING as a driver of brain damage in Alzheimer’s. A new approach to Alzheimer’s disease has led to an exciting discovery that could help stop the devastating cognitive decline linked to…
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Voyager raises $383 million from upsized IPO
TAMPA, Fla. — Voyager Technologies debuted on the New York Stock Exchange June 11, raising nearly $383 million in an upsized IPO that investors hope will spur more space-focused companies to go public.
The six-year-old provider of…
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Lotions and perfumes found to affect ‘human oxidation field’ chemistry | Research
Skin lotions and perfumes can disrupt the chemistry of the air surrounding us, although more investigation is needed to understand what, if anything, this means for human health.
Back in 2022, a team of researchers led by Jonathan Williams,…
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