This Week In Science & Technology


I wouldn't mind hearing President Trump weigh in....given his response to a reporter asking him whether he would call former President Biden after his cancer diagnosis.
 

“And if they couldn't dock, they didn't know if they could make it back home again.
‘Docking was imperative,’ Mr Wilmore told BBC News, two months after he and Ms Williams finally made a successful return to Earth. ‘If we weren't able to dock, would we be able to make it back? We didn't know.’”

Uhh. It was that bad?

“‘We are very positively hopeful that there will be opportunities to fly the Boeing Starliner in the future,’ Mr Wilmore said.

And both astronauts said they would personally fly in the craft again - once those technical issues were resolved.

‘It's a very capable spacecraft,’ Ms Williams said. ‘It has unique capabilities compared to other spacecraft that are out there that are really great for future astronauts to fly.’”

Sounds like toeing the corporate line.
 

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There is no need for NASA to do this. It will be outsourced to the great companies of the world like SpaceX Blue Origin…even Roscosmos.
 

Dying cells surround healthier cells to protect them from dying. They seem to communicate to each other like peer to peer torrents instead of having top down orders. The last paragraph the guy starts saying DNA shed in the environment causes people to see ghosts. A bit far fetched.
 

"A fair number of internet users — especially in rural or remote areas where broadband Internet is not available or is too expensive — also still rely on dial-up: as many as 163,000, according to recent U.S. Census data. CNBC reported that only a few thousand AOL users were paying for dial-up access."

Starlink?.....or please wake up from your coma and cancel.
 

"Sometimes they observe a flurry of activity from the organoids before they die – similar to the increased heart rate and brain activity which has been observed in some humans at end-of-life.

'There have been a few events when we had a very fast increase in activity just the last minutes or 10s of seconds [of life],' Dr Jordan said.

'I think we have recorded about 1,000 or 2,000 of these individual deaths across the past five years.'

'It's sad because we have to stop the experiment, understand the reason why it died, and then we do it again,'"

What happens if we take the silicon AI generated LLM and put it on biocomputing?
 

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