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The complete guide to listening to music at work - 3 views

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    Nine out of 10 workers perform better when listening to music, according to a new study that found 88pc of participants produced their most accurate test results and 81pc completed their fastest work when music was playing.
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    There's this website: https://www.focusatwill.com/ , which I used for some time. At some point I even subscribed for the paid version (more tracks, control over "intensity" of music). Unfortunately I realized I work the best in complete silence, which is tricky to get - occasionally I put on the white noise http://simplynoise.com/ which works quite well for me.
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Oculus Rift users to see Moon live through robot - 2 views

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    A group from Carnegie Mellon wants to send a robot to the Moon to beam live pictures of the Moon to Oculus Rift headset users, reported technology reporter Jane Wakefield of the BBC. Andy the robot is intended to swing into action as a robot on a mission to transform education about space.
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How Building a Black Hole for Interstellar Led to an Amazing Scientific Discovery | WIRED - 2 views

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    Kip Thorne looks into the black hole he helped create and thinks, "Why, of course. That's what it would do." This particular black hole is a simulation of unprecedented accuracy. It appears to spin at nearly the speed of light, dragging bits of the universe along with it.
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An Arty Oculus Trip Through the Large Hadron Collider | WIRED - 2 views

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    "Collider is an arty audiovisual experience that provides a first-person perspective of a particle hurtling through the Large Hadron Collider"... with the use of the Leapmotion sensor and Oculus Rift hmd. Come to my desk if you wanna try it :) (not that fun actually)
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    we will come when you figure out how to capture a particle!!! or a dragonball, is the same
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Programmable biological circuits - 3 views

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    Several new components for biological circuits have been developed by researchers. These components are key building blocks for constructing precisely functioning and programmable bio-computers. "The ability to combine biological components at will in a modular, plug-and-play fashion means that we now approach the stage when the concept of programming as we know it from software engineering can be applied to biological computers.
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Why Quantum "Clippers" Will Distribute Entanglement Across The Oceans - 0 views

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    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
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Elon Musk describes AI as 'summoning the devil' - 4 views

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    A good idea for a card in one of our ACT magic decks!!! In his words AI is "our biggest existential threat" - lol
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    Discussing with myself :) .... He must have forgotten climate change .... or maybe not?
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    Well, I have to quote one of the 21st century classics on this one: "I'm sorry mr Musk I can't hear you because of all the Latin chanting. In the meanwhile can you hand me another goat to drain? I'm quite behind on my blood pentagram drawing" - Paul N., AD 2014.
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    Mr. Musk declined to comment :P
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    given that they apparently can't decide between two moral options (probably such as humans), should we be more concerned about their stupidity or their intelligence http://arxiv.org/abs/1411.2842
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    I personally don't even trust people to make "moral" choices in conditions of warfare. History is way too full of examples.
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    the "even" in your comment is the key word
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    Edge.org recently had an interesting piece that ties into all of this recent AI fear mongering: http://edge.org/conversation/the-myth-of-ai
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Resource availability towards a self-sufficient Mars Colony - 0 views

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    Regarding our discussion on resource self-sufficiency of a Mars colony. Would it ever be possible (from a resource perspective that is..) A NASA report on availability of resources. A self-sufficiency trade study described in Boston (1996) identifies the mission duration at which the development of local life support resources becomes advantageous. Within 30 days, without recycling, or with the equivalent leakage, it becomes advantageous to derive oxygen from local resources. The time constants for water and food are about 6 months and 3 years, respectively.
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    I guess it depends on the number of astronauts that have to be supporte ... 3 years for food looks like a lot
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Science's Favorite Deep-Sea Explorer Gets High-Tech Upgrades | WIRED - 2 views

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    Alvin, the only deep-diving manned submersible used for science has been upgraded, allowing scientists to explore for the 1st time the depth of the oceans down to 6500m bsl.
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A practical polariton laser - Nature Photonics - 2 views

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    One overview about a recent publication (10/06/2014 http://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.236802) showing room temperature operation of a new type of laser 'discovered' in 2013, the polariton laser. This new type of laser shows extremely low threshold current density - 2 orders of magnitude below Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers (VCSEL) - and it is believed to become one important component of nanophotonic integrated components.
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Brain decoder can eavesdrop on your inner voice - 4 views

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    "As you read this, your neurons are firing - that brain activity can now be decoded to reveal the silent words in your head TALKING to yourself used to be a strictly private pastime. That's no longer the case - researchers have eavesdropped on our internal monologue for the first time. The achievement is a step towards helping people who cannot physically speak communicate with the outside world." Or alternatively, a step towards snooping into individuals' privacy.
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    Soon we'll be able to see movies about our dreams!
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    Only if you are willing to have a chip implanted into/onto your brain though ^^
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Scotland's Renewable Sector Generated Over 100% of Electricity Needs In October - 0 views

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    Clean Power November 5th, 2014 by The Scottish renewable energy sector is one of the world's best performing, and new data from WeatherEnergy has shown that October was a "bumper month" for the country, generating more than enough electricity from renewable sources to power the country.
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First Terahertz Amplifier "Goes to 11" - 2 views

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    Guinness World Record breaking, "first radio amplifier operating at terahertz frequencies could lead to communications systems with much higher data rates, better radar, high-resolution imaging that could penetrate smoke and fog, and better ways of identifying dangerous substances, say the researchers who built it". Built from HEMTs (High Electron Mobility Transistors) made of InP (Indium Phosphide), this is a new milestone on the road to the THz applications.
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Curiosity Rover Sees a Pixel's-Worth of Comet Siding Spring - 3 views

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    It's something...
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Black-hole mergers cast kaleidoscope of shadows - 6 views

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    In Interstellar, the science-fiction film out this week, Matthew McConaughey stars as an astronaut contending with a supermassive black hole called Gargantua. The film's special effects have been hailed as the most realistic depiction ever made of this type of cosmic object. But astrophysicists have now gone one better - this is a really cool visualisation done by researchers in Cornell.
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    Wow, impressive! Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) software, very quick merging process though 17ms.. Observable?
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    Mind-blowing!
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Twisted light waves sent across Vienna - 2 views

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    A group of researchers from Austria have sent twisted beams of light across the rooftops of Vienna. It is the first time that twisted light has been transmitted over a large distance outdoors, and could enable researchers to take advantage of the significant data-carrying capacity of light in both classical and quantum communications. Although the data rate is not very high, it could offer a way to provide unhackable data links via space. Would provide an edge over terrestrial fibre optics?
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Italy and its TG4 middle ages news chanel - 6 views

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    Its in italian sorry ... but its worth trying to understand ..basically its how an important italian news channel (TG4) gave the rosetta news ... WOW ... middle ages Basically they say ESA spoilt the magic of comets (jesus birth and similar stuff) revealing to the world that it is just a rock and nothing more spending 100 Meuros in the process.
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    A pearl of the italian national news channels. A comet is nothing more than a dusty rock. Wow, brilliant, such level of understanding of what is happening! Can we use the typhoon control or some other project to get rid of them? They're so confused and ignorant that it's not even clear what their point is, apart from "spoiling the magic of comets", which is not the case.
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Philae comet lander alien 'cover-up' conspiracy theories emerge | Science | The Guardian - 9 views

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    Also our British friends are doing good .... Apparently an ESA employee leaked this news to them -- wait for it .... Rosetta, Aliens .... just read it I do not want to spoil it for you
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    I'm sorry, I had to do it! We can't keep the secret much longer!
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Philae's first touchdown seen by Rosetta | Rosetta - ESA's comet chaser - 3 views

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    Thats spot on where it should have been, pretty impressive!
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Mars Spacecraft Reveal Comet Flyby Effects on Martian Atmosphere - 1 views

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    NASA and ESA spacecraft have gathered new information about the basic properties of the comet's nucleus (not 67p) and directly detected the effects on the Martian atmosphere. Dust from the comet impacted Mars and was vaporized high in the atmosphere, producing what was likely an impressive meteor shower. Eight different types of metal ions have been detected, including sodium, magnesium and iron. The satellites will now continue to look for long-term perturbations to Mars' atmosphere.
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