Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged FUN

Rss Feed Group items tagged

johannessimon81

42 - a constant of nature - 3 views

  •  
    It turns out that falling along any straight line through the Earth takes 42 minutes (Gravity train). I think this has not been opted as an explanation of Douglas Adams' 42 but this fact is definitely quite beautiful.
Thijs Versloot

#LEGO car running on compressed air - 0 views

  •  
    500000 lego bricks, a tank of compressed air, some mechanical engineering and a lot of time later...
Nicholas Lan

Real-Life Jetpack Flies at Futuristic Conference - 5 views

  •  
    frickin awesome
  •  
    finally!!!
Tom Gheysens

Meet OutRunner: The World's First Remotely Controlled Running Robot - YouTube - 8 views

  •  
    the only downside is that you have to launch it before it can run... :)
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    Nice idea! Get one? :)
  •  
    Next step : make them get up by themselves after a fall. Then you can envisage to play with them on more rugged terrain :)
  •  
    Hmm.. but how would you make it such that it can stand up? Maybe launch it somehow forward?
  •  
    I can imagine a system with 2 retractable support legs to stand it up and raise it a bit above the floor. Then make it run and retract the legs abruptly.
johannessimon81

Rat Neurons Grown On A Computer Chip Fly A Simulated Aircraft - 1 views

  •  
    This could become quite relevant in future control systems if the setup can be made simple to keep alive and stable. I was doing some follow-up on a story about people controlling aircraft with their brainwaves (through EEG) when I ran into this really cool story. The idea of growing the neurons in patterns is incidentally very similar to the Physarium slime-mold stuff that Dario and me were curious about a little while ago.
  •  
    I think we already had a discussion on this during a wednesday meeting :P
  •  
    Oh, I thought that was on the little robot that was controlled by rat neurons and bumped into EVERYTHING. The interesting thing here is that they add a surface patterning (with some kind of nutrient) to control the growth of cells. (Maybe that is not new either, though.)
Thijs Versloot

Is Westeros orbiting a binary star system? #ArXiv - 5 views

shared by Thijs Versloot on 21 May 14 - No Cached
Nicholas Lan liked it
  •  
    To right that appalling wrong, here we attempt to explain the apparently erratic seasonal changes in the world of G.R.R.M. A natural explanation for such phenomena is the unique behavior of a circumbinary planet. Thus, by speculating that the planet under scrutiny is orbiting a pair of stars, we utilize the power of numerical three-body dynamics to predict that, unfortunately, it is not possible to predict either the length, or the severity of any coming winter.
jcunha

Why Quantum "Clippers" Will Distribute Entanglement Across The Oceans - 0 views

  •  
    Quantum internet will enable perfectly secure communications, but the technology and means to build the required quantum memories and routers are still many years distant. The proposal here is to store qubits and send them in containers over the oceans. Researchers claim that it is possible to send information at bandwidths measured in teraahertz outperforming the predictions of a quantum router internet. It can be thought in space systems as well. Then the problem is still for how long are we able to store a qubit, without dephasing... PS: As a curiosity, you can find a very interesting book about containers and how in some way they changed our world: Mark Levinson's book 'The Box' http://press.princeton.edu/titles/9383.html Maybe they will do it again
Marcus Maertens

BBC News - Comedy club charges per laugh with facial recognition - 4 views

  •  
    Also check out this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=V0FowbxEe3w. I like the "pay for wtf?" concept.
annaheffernan

Physicsworld top 10 breakthroughs of the year - at the top Rosetta - 3 views

  •  
    Physicsworld releases their top 10 breakthroughs of the year 2014, ESA's Rosetta mission tops the list with the achievement of landing on a comet.
jcunha

Mystery of where Earth's water came from deepens: Comet water is different - 2 views

  •  
    "Over the past few months, the European Space Agency's Rosetta space probe closely examined the type of comet that some scientists theorized could have brought water to our planet 4 billion years ago. It found water, but the wrong kind."
jcunha

Cloud cities for Venus exploration - 3 views

  •  
    Our friends from NASA have come out with a plan to the human exploration of Venus in the time that everyone is speaking about Mars.
  •  
    Love the concept acronym, which pretty much says it all... Not sure which astronaut would fancy floating around in an atmosphere where clouds are made of sulphuric acid. Besides I don't see the point of a manned mission if one can't reach the surface.. tele-operation would be easy and so much cheaper.
Luís F. Simões

Lust in space: Russians lose control of gecko sex satellite | Al Jazeera America - 5 views

  • Lizards were sent into orbit as part of study into effects of weightlessness on sexual intercourse
  • On Thursday, the team behind the research confirmed that the vessel was not responding to commands, potentially leaving the reptiles to their out-of-this-world sexual intercourse while video footage continues to beam down to Earth.
  •  
    I still think, the lizards have evolved at an unexpectedly high rate and have now taken over the satellite...
Marcus Maertens

hitchBOT | Making my way across Canada, one ride at a time. - 3 views

shared by Marcus Maertens on 09 Aug 14 - No Cached
  •  
    Hitchhiking bot!
  •  
    Only until he encounters his first Polish driver. Will be taken directly to a scrap metal merchant...
Marcus Maertens

Computer Scientists Generate A Self-Aware Mario That Can Learn And Feel | IFLScience - 2 views

  •  
    Here we go! AI for Mario has arrived. What is still missing is the Italian accent in his robo-voice though. To compensate for that, we have a lot of German accent in the Youtube-video. Make sure to check it out if you always liked the background music from the games. Putting the trolling aside, I honestly like the idea! There is still some way to go, but maybe we will watch and even pay to be able to see twitch-streams of self-ware bots one day?
  •  
    I'm actually considering doing an twitch-bot channel. Why pay when you can cash in? Kind of lazy tho`
annaheffernan

Lost Beagle 2 spacecraft found intact on Martian surface - 0 views

  •  
    The UK-led Beagle 2 Mars lander, thought lost on the red planet since 2003, has been found partially deployed on the Martian surface. New images show that it successfully touched down on the planet's surface in 2003 but failed to deploy all four of its solar panels, thereby allowing no communication with scientists on Earth.
annaheffernan

New apps allow smartphone users to join the hunt for ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays - 0 views

  •  
    Two apps - the Distributed Electronic Cosmic-ray Observatory (DECO) and Cosmic Rays Found in Smartphones (CRAYFIS) - transform smartphones into miniature cosmic-ray detectors. They use the CMOS chips inside phones' onboard cameras to detect the secondary particles produced when cosmic rays - energetic, charged subatomic particles arriving from beyond the solar system - collide with air molecules in the Earth's atmosphere
ESA ACT

Internet Archive: Wayback Machine - 1 views

  •  
    You can find here also the old ACT website from 2003...
jcunha

Medical Xpress: Newly discovered hormone mimics the effects of exercise - 0 views

  •  
    "Hormones are molecules that act as the body's signals, triggering various physiological responses. The newly discovered hormone, dubbed "MOTS-c," primarily targets muscle tissue, where it restores insulin sensitivity, counteracting diet-induced and age-dependent insulin resistance." Good news for long distance space travelers?
  •  
    as well as lazy couch potatoes
annaheffernan

How to make droplets chase each other and self-assemble into devices - 0 views

  •  
    Droplets can be made to chase each other around a track and even self-assemble into devices, simply by mixing two everyday liquids. This remarkable discovery made by scientists in the US has already been used to create beautiful shapes and patterns, and could also be exploited to create optical components that assemble themselves and even to clean surfaces. It looks very like Jojo's self-assembling balls :p
« First ‹ Previous 361 - 380 of 437 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page