The Saqqara Bird may have navigated the skies over ancient Egypt.
Source: Sparkleystitch
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The Saqqara Bird may have navigated the skies over ancient Egypt.
Source: Sparkleystitch
Bill Gates recently got to check out the Omniprocessor, an ingenious machine designed and built by Janicki Bioenergy, which turns human waste into water and electricity. In places without good waste treatment plants, it could be a real game-changer.
Source: TheGatesNotes
A scientist’s analysis of photos taken from NASA’s Curiosity suggests that there is evidence of ancient life on Mars, but many critics are warning people not to get too excited just yet.
The new paper in the journal Astrobiology claims that Curiosity’s photos of the Gillespie Lake outcrop in Mars’ Yellowknife Bay reveal microbially-induced sedimentary structures (MISS).
If this is true, the structures would serve as proof that microbial life exists, or at least existed, on Mars.
While some science-lovers are gazing at the photos with wide eyes filled with amazement, skeptics aren’t too sure about the evidence.
After all, the paper was even intended to be nothing more than a “hypothesis paper.”
The photos are currently being treated as if they are extraterrestrial versions of ghost pictures—those who already believe in that kind of thing are excited about the visuals but those who have long been skeptics remain unimpressed.
The circumstantial evidence comes from Nora Noffke, who has spent quite some time looking for signs of life on Mars.
That alone, for some people, is enough to suggest that Noffke could be reading too deeply into the vague markings on Mars’ surface.
Not everybody is discounting the paper, however, and Geek contributor Graham Templeton believes, at the very least, the photos are something to get excited about it.
“All wishful thinking aside, and within the context of this paper’s openly hypothetical status, it’s not irresponsible to get at least a little bit excited about these findings,” Templeton wrote.
In the same breath, however, Templeton explained why many experts aren’t placing any bets on the research just yet.
Outside of the markings in Curiosity’s photos, there is no other evidence to support microbial life on Mars.
“Curiosity has been blasting rock samples with lasers and measuring atmospheric methane to search for direct chemical evidence of current or ancient life, but so far the findings have been ambiguous at best,” Templeton added. “If microbes really did carpet Gillespie Lake for a long period, that might have been one of a small selection of places where that was the case.”
So the pictures are no sure sign of life on Mars but it’s important to note that Curiosity’s mission isn’t over just yet.
The rover is still making its way across the rocky planet hoping to one day send back solid evidence of life on Mars.
From the iPad to Google Glass, the 1989 film accurately predicted many technological advances.
Source: ABC News
The recent Sony attack revealed that hackers, believed to be from North Korea, were capable of getting data and destroying it as well. Data destruction is not a common occurrence in the U.S. This attack causes the victim to spend time and money to rebuild systems.
Ransomware
This threat locks up documents and access to the victims’ systems. The hacker asks for a ransom in order to give access back to the user.
NASA has spent years searching for other Earth-like planets, and while several have already been found, the latest discoveries by Kepler could be the most Earth-like new worlds yet.
NASA’s Kepler spacecraft has been searching for new planets for years and the new discoveries, deemed Kepler 438 b and Kepler 442 b, appear to be incredibly similar to Earth.
The two planets were among several other planets that were discovered by the spacecraft and brought Kepler’s total discovered planets past the 1,000 mark milestone.
Both of the planets appear to have relatively similar temperatures to Earth and boast environments where liquid water is likely to be in abundance.
The planets are also rocky worlds and are comparable to Earth’s size and orbit.
While the planets are certainly pretty close to Earth in certain ways, the study’s co-author, David Kipping, warned that the planets still might not be habitable for humans.
“We can’t say for sure whether these planets are truly habitable — only that they are promising candidates for habitability,” Kipping, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said, according to Scientific American.
Another major catch is that the planets are extremely far away.
One is 500 light years away while the other is more than 1,000 light years away.
To put that in perspective, a light year is the equivalent to roughly 5.9 trillion miles.
The study’s lead author, Guillermo Torres, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, is excited about what the discoveries could mean for the search for extraterrestrial life.
“These planets do exist; we didn’t know that before,” Torres said in a phone interview with Fox News. “What we’re really looking for is signs of life eventually. We’re not there yet. It will take many years, but this is the first step.”
The addition of Kepler 438 b and Kepler 442 b brings the grand total of planets no larger than twice the size of Earth to eight or nine, depending on who you ask.
There are still debates over another recently discovered planet.
Either way, Torres says it’s just proof that the universe is full of Earth-like planets and the only challenge is finding them and reaching them.
Of course, there are some notable differences between Earth and the newly discovered worlds.
Kepler 438 b gets about 40 percent more energy from its sun-like star and makes a much tighter orbit around it.
This means the planet would have years that are no longer than about 35 Earth days and the red dwarf star would give the planet red rays of sunlight as opposed to the yellow sunlight we experience on Earth.
Detours travels to Rochester, New York, to meet BlackBox Biometrics Inc., a company that’s developed a head-mounted sensor to detect and measure sports-related concussions.
Source: The Verge
The state’s tech sector is growing primarily because of Google Fiber, a faster broadband provider, being moved and expanded there. Tech jobs are on the rise to feed Google Fiber’s work force.
The city has five Fortune 500 companies that all require tech workers. Berkshire Hathaway, Conagra and Union Pacific are major players in the city. SmartAsset ranked the city as one of the top ten cities to be a tech worker.
Kyle Russell got an early look at first-person zombie-survival game Dying Light, which arrives on PC and consoles in January. This wasn’t your run-of-the-mill demo, however — Techland, the studio behind the game, let me play on an Oculus Rift connected to a maxed-out gaming rig.
Source: TechCrunch