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IBM Lotus Symphony - 1.2 Mac Beta - 0 views

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    has anybody already tried out this? i contains "lotus" and thus has already a handicap in its name but well ... why not check it out
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Brain Scanners Can See Your Decisions Before You Make Them - 0 views

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    luca please check it out ... anything new we did not know? // TSe: it is about the old problem of the free will - when I talked about that you all killed me.
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Linus opinion about C++ - 0 views

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    "C++ is a horrible language. It's made more horrible by the fact that a lot of substandard programmers use It, to the point where It's much much easier to generate total and utter crap wIth It."
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Soundsnap.com: Find and Share Free Sound Effects and Loops - 0 views

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    "Soundsnap is the best platform to find and share free sound effects and loops- legally. It is a collection of original sounds made or recorded by Its users, and not songs or sound FX found on commercial libraries or sample CD's."
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Aigaion - A web-based bibliography management system - 0 views

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    This is a bibliography management system one of my project partners suggested. I (Tobias) am trying it out in the frame of the project. If you do not hear anything from me, it was probabely not sooo successfull...
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Prepare and transmit electronic text - American Institute of Physics - 2 views

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    new revTex version available ... what do they mean by this? how do they use XML and latex to XML? would this also be an option for acta futura? "While we appreciate the benefits to authors of preparing manuscripts in TeX, especially for math-intensive manuscripts, it is neither a cost-effective composition tool (for the volume of pages AIP currently produces) nor is it a format that can be used effectively for online publishing."
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    Dunno really, they may have some in-house process that converts LaTeX to XML for some reason. Probably they are using some subset of SGML, the standard generalized markup language from which both HTML and XML derive. Don't think is really relevant for Acta Futura, and the rest of the world seems to get along with TeX just fine...
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Mendeley, the-Last.fm-of-research, could be world's largest online research paper datab... - 4 views

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    smells like ariadnet for ariadna papers and researchers
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    Ideed, seems like what we dream for ariadnet... However could have been good to allow the creation of groups. I will try it next week. The possibility to "Explore research trends and statistics" will please Leopold ;)
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    I am on mendeley now and I like it so far ! You can check my page on http://www.mendeley.com/profiles/pacome-delva/
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    am also on Medelay since some time - think that Tobias has showed it to me. Nice but did not actually use it yet really ....
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Knowledge, networks and nations | Royal Society - 4 views

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    nice graphs ... and nice stats
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    the graphs are Motion Charts. They were made famous by Hans Rosling's TED talks (http://www.ted.com/speakers/hans_rosling.html). Google eventually bought his software, and made part of it freely available: http://code.google.com/apis/visualization/documentation/gallery/motionchart.html. That's what they are using there.
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    thanks - I was already wondering several times what had happened to this technique that he used at the talk we looked at several times when it was first uploaded ... good that they have made it open source! are they easy to use?
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    the easiest way to use them is: Google Docs > open/create a spreadsheet > Insert > Gadget > Charts > Motion Chart !! :) You have here a tutorial describing all the steps to get it running.
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SpaceX Targets 2013 for Launch of Falcon Heavy | SpaceNews.com - 1 views

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    big big booster coming ... !
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    In similar story (http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-spacex-rocket-elon-musk-20110405,0,3234336.story) the quote: " "This is a rocket of truly huge scale," said Musk, adding it would have the capability to one day enable moon or Mars missions." tells a lot about the ambition of it...
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    even bigger booster also coming: China Aims To Build World's Largest Rocket "Back in March, China revealed it is studying the feasibility of designing the most powerful carrier rocket in history for making a manned moon landing and exploring deep space, according to Liang Xiaohong, vice head of the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology. The rocket is envisaged to have a payload of 130 tonnes, five times larger than that of China's current largest rocket. This rocket, if built, will eclipse the 53 tonne capacity of the planned Falcon 9 Heavy from SpaceX. it will even surpass the largest rocket ever built, the 119-tonne Saturn V."
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    still only "is studying the feasibility of designing a powerful carrier rocket" - we could easily do the same at no cost almost ... but still ... they might be serious ...
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Leap Motion - 7 views

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    Very quick and accurate gesture interface. A bit like Kinect, but better. Watch the video, its neat!
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    where can I buy it?????
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    ore-order just here ... shipping Feb 2013 https://live.leapmotion.com/order.html
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    just ordered it!
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    Aww... new toy coming! Great Leo! :)
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    they also have a developer program, the ACT should apply :)
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Hands-on with the Muse brain sensing headband -- the most important wearable of 2014 (e... - 4 views

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    interestingly it looks like a subject could wear it all day while doing normal stuff http://www.choosemuse.com/ "I got my hands on an early version of Interaxon's brainwave reading headband, the Muse, and I think this could be the most important wearable of the year. And that's saying a lot, considering I've seen 2014′s entire lineup for health tech at the Consumer Electronic Show as well as a few undisclosed athletic devices slated for later this year."
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    ..."alerts the users with sights and sounds when they are producing brain waves associated with calm and focus." ALERT! ALERT! ALERT! YOU ARE CALM AND FOCUSSED! :-D
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    indeed the app that comes with it sounds really lame but it comes with an sdk
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Never Forgetting a Face - 0 views

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    Whether society embraces face recognition on a larger scale will ultimately depend on how legislators, companies and consumers resolve the argument about its singularity. Is faceprinting as innocuous as photography, an activity that people may freely perform? Or is a faceprint a unique indicator, like a fingerprint or a DNA sequence, that should require a person's active consent before it can be collected, matched, shared or sold?

    Dr. Atick is firmly in the second camp.
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    Actually these sort of things are also quite easy to exploit. Print a picture of Osama bin Laden on your t-shirt and have the entire police force scared out of their wits.
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    I saw so many bin laden t-shirts already ... they must have better filters than this
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OpenBCI - 5 views

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    "The OpenBCI Board is a versatile and affordable analog-to-digital converter that can be used to sample electrical brain activity (EEG), muscle activity (EMG), heart rate (EKG), and more" Perhaps some work or ideas on brainwave analysis would be interesting ? (User interfaces, mood classifier, detection of various alertness levels )
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    lets get one? And then link to the Oculus Rift to control it with my brain.. I want to think about running on Mars and then be doing it :)
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    It's not worth It for $400... The chips are seriously nothing special and you can get a lot better for a lot cheaper. I would just get the electrodes and link them to a RPi or an Odroid or something.
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    True, but the selling feature here is that they take care of that stuff and sell it for 400$. Lets say the hardware is 100USD, then an RF-grade person here here has to do the coding, interfacing, testing within roughly (300/16eur/hour) 20 hours to break even and even then the interface is much nicer in their case.
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Hypersonic Successor to Legendary SR-71 Blackbird Spy Plane Unveiled - 1 views

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    he new SR-72 will use a turbine-based combined cycle (TBCC) that will employ the turbine engine at lower speeds, and use a scramjet at higher speeds. A scramjet engine is designed to operate at hypersonic velocities by compressing the air through a carefully designed inlet, but needs to be traveling supersonic before it is practical to begin with. So far research projects from NASA, the Air Force and other Pentagon entities have not been able to solve the problem of transitioning from the subsonic flight regime, through hypersonic flight with a single aircraft. Same problem as Reaction Engines is trying to solve, so I am not sure whether they actually cracked it. In any case, nice pictures. Not sure why the exhaust color is purple in color. its not running on Argon I believe.
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    Weird article. Intermediate thruster stage (Ramjet) is missing. Scramjet has supersonic combustion and a normal turbine delivers subsonic flows. Even with afterburner - the Scramjet inlet would decelerate the flow down to subsonic velocity with "normal" subsonic combustion. The only thing I can imagine is that the Scramjet stage is bi-functional and covers both, subsonic and supersonic combustion. But the article doesn't say anything about it.
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Silk protein and chloroplasts for the synthetic leaf - 2 views

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    Royal College of Art's Innovation Design Engineering course in collaboration with Tufts University silk lab. Not as good as it sounds as it does not fully mimic the photosynthesis equation (spare C, H atoms)
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    Interesting stuff and I guess it does not need to fully mimic photosynthesis in the end. As long as oxygen can be produced from CO2 and water that would be great enough. Though the carbon has to be deposited somewhere (in some form) and I wonder how one could extract this efficiently. Maybe it can even serve some purpose (as the sugars are doing for the plant)
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Watch uranium radiation inside a cloud chamber - 6 views

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    Ever wondered what radiation looks like? If you have, I bet you didn't think it would look as cool as this. This is a small piece of uranium mineral sitting in a cloud chamber, which means you can see the process of decay and radiation emission....
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    Once I saw a DIY spark chamber in LIP (CERN associated laboratory). It was the work of a bunch of BSc students, they made It all from scratch, so It seemed to be not that difficult to have one at home. Yet another project for the future 'Experimental Physics' stagiare maybe :)
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Risky Business | The Economic Risk of Climate Change in the US | Risky Business - 2 views

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    interesting report on the cost of climate change for the US ... coming from Bloomberg and financed by him might not give it its utmost credibility but still
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Have We Been Interpreting Quantum Mechanics Wrong This Whole Time? - 6 views

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    "The experiments involve an oil droplet that bounces along the surface of a liquid. The droplet gently sloshes the liquid with every bounce. At the same time, ripples from past bounces affect its course. The droplet's interaction with its own ripples, which form what's known as a pilot wave, causes it to exhibit behaviors previously thought to be peculiar to elementary particles - including behaviors seen as evidence that these particles are spread through space like waves, without any specific location, until they are measured." Pilot-wave theory reresurrected. Maybe something for the next "fundamental" :P physics RF?
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    And for the next 'Experimental Physics Stagiaire' position why not try to do "Unpredictable Tunneling of a Classical Wave-Particle Association" http://stilton.tnw.utwente.nl/people/eddi/Papers/PhysRevLett_TUNNEL.pdf, there are some rumors online that the results of Yves Couder Experiments can be reproduced with simple DIY vibrating tables! it is very funny to see the videos of the Mit's replication of this experiment (with lightening legends for those who are uncomfortable with the concepts involved https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YF5iHQMjcsM)
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MIT Analysis Paints Bleak Outcome for Mars One Concept - UPDATE - 5 views

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    A nice study on the soon cancelled-before-it-began hit TV show "MarsOne" (or, how it should be called, "How to make someone else rich while slowly dying on Mars").
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AI to recontruct partially-erased images with mindblowing accuracy - 4 views

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    You erase it, AI reconstructs it.
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