The devastating earthquake originated close to the surface, thus producing intense shaking
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.14.2008 at 11:19 am
The death tolls from the massive earthquake that shook China on Monday have reportedly climbed as high as 13,000 people. More than 18,000 people are still unaccounted for in Mianyang in Sichuan province. And soldiers and medics have just broken through to reach the city of Wenchuan - home to a population of 100,000 - which sits right at the epicenter of the quake.
A British government agency explores the potential impact of key technological trends in the next twenty years
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.13.2008 at 9:54 am
The British telecom regulator, Ofcom, released its most recent technology research report last week—a research project that tries to project where various trends will take us in the next ten or twenty years.
Alternative-energy firm starts testing its innovative airborne wind turbines
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.13.2008 at 9:49 am
The Canadian startup Magenn Power has started testing its airship-based wind turbines. The Magenn Power Air Rotor System, or MARS, consists of a blimp-like device that is tethered to the ground, and rotates about its horizontal axis in the breeze. This action generates electrical energy, which is sent down the tether to a transformer, and eventually routed through to the grid.
The social-networking site may have to give up the identities of some high school jokers who impersonated a dean online
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.12.2008 at 1:38 pm
This probably seemed really funny until they heard about the court order.
A few anonymous Facebook users—most likely students—created a fake profile for the dean of Roncalli High School, a Catholic prep school in Indianapolis, then sent out messages and images from the account to other students. The profile has since been pulled down, but the dean sued Facebook to find out who created it.
Scientists use 3-D ultrasound technology to test a robot's ability to independently perform surgeries
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.08.2008 at 10:01 am
Duke University engineers think they've made an important step towards developing robotic surgeons that operate independently. The robot they used in their experiments—which were just feasibility studies, and were not performed on real people—uses 3-D ultrasound as its eyes, and an AI program that processes the 3-D information it gathers to determine the robot's next steps.
NASA's Terra satellite captures startling before and after pictures of the coast of Burma
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.08.2008 at 9:57 am
Tropical Cyclone Nargis slammed the Burmese coast with 130 mph winds and bursts of up to 160 mph—the equivalent of a category 3 or low-level category 4 hurricane. It reportedly led to thousands of deaths, and as of Monday, thousands more were missing. Now NASA has released a set of images that show how drastically the flooding has drenched Burma's coast.
A laser with amazing properties may help astronomers fine-tune planet hunting tools
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.06.2008 at 10:16 am
Scientists have shown off a new laser that boasts an incomparable mix of speed, short pulses and power. That's newsworthy in and of itself, but this laser, developed by researchers at the University of Konstanz in Germany and, here in the U.S., at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, could also lead to a 100-fold increase in the sensitivity of observatories searching for extrasolar planets. The laser itself is the size of a dime, and pops out 10 billion pulses per second with an average power of 650 milliwatts.
A sensitive, space-based X-ray observatory focuses between galaxies at low-density gas
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.06.2008 at 10:12 am
Granted, it might not seem like such a big deal when astronomers find some of the missing mass in the universe, since there's very little that isn't missing. Roughly 95 percent of the cosmos is either dark matter or dark energy. About five percent of the universe is made up of the normal mass we're familiar with—baryonic matter. Yet by adding up the known stars and galaxies and gas, astronomers have only accounted for about half of that five percent.
Paper finds that some of the space agency's employees have been abusing company cards
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.06.2008 at 9:50 am
NASA has been catching some extra criticism in the past few days after The Houston Chronicle—Johnson Space Center's hometown paper—ran an expose on credit card abuses at the agency.
The paper reportedly reviewed 451,000 transactions, and among plenty of apparently legitimate purchases, found that NASA employees had also bought iPods, video games and jewelry. The first two you might be able to slide past accounting, if you were, say, an astronaut doing isolation chamber testing, and needed a few gadgets and games to pass the time.
Astronaut Peggy Whitson talks about dropping down to Earth in an out-of-control Soyuz
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.05.2008 at 9:07 am
Yes, it ended well, but the rough-and-tumble landing that astronauts experienced recently as a Soyuz capsule on its way back from the International Space Station missed its landing target by 300 miles sure doesn't sound like something you'd want to do twice.
The Finnish handset maker plans to roll out a range of new phones in the U.S.
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.05.2008 at 9:00 am
Nokia indicated today that it intends to release a bunch of new phones through U.S. carriers in the next few months. The Finnish manufacturer sells 40 percent of the mobiles worldwide, but only accounts for about 10 percent of the U.S. market. But a daily paper in Finland quoted a Nokia chief designed as saying that the company plans to ramp up its U.S. presence.
Combining salvaged parts and an unusual light source, a DIY slide projector beams strange, mesmerizing images from hundreds of feet away
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.02.2008 at 1:43 pm
Australian artist Chris Poole was driving around his native Perth recently, when some curbside garbage caught his eye. Unlike the average scavenger, Poole wasnt searching for couches or chairs. He had his eye on an old slide viewer—a key component for his next project, a laser-based projector that could display family photos (albeit with a green hue) to the entire town.
A group of neuroscientists are using new technology to understand how the brain performs under the influence of drugs
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.01.2008 at 11:10 am
Alan Gevins and his team at SAM Technology in San Francisco are nearing the end of a large study analyzing the effects of various drugs on cognitive performance. An editor at Technology Review recently visited their offices, and downed a stiff cocktail, to experience their work first-hand.
An exotic meteorite fails to garner interest at an auction, but bidders jump at fossilized feces
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.01.2008 at 11:04 am
In an auction battle between two odd items yesterday at Bonhams New York, a few fossilized pieces of 130-million-year-old dinosaur dung sold for nearly one thousand dollars, but a 4.5 billion-year-old meteorite didn't find any takers.
The space agency's in-house watchdog recommends booting six members of the board charged with reviewing Moon plans
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.01.2008 at 10:59 am
The board that has been tasked with reviewing NASA's plans to build a craft that will return astronauts to the Moon apparently has too many insiders.