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Feed SubscriptionSkybox Imaging’s Dan Berkenstock Uses Satellites To Make Sense Of The World
For some Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, simply coming up with lines of well-written code can turn a startup into a smashing success. But Skybox Imaging founder Dan Berkenstock is aiming much (much) higher.
Read More »German researchers set world record in one-loop computations
Professor Dr.
Read More »The Pen Is Mightier Than The Phone: A Case For Writing Things Out
Writing things down, with your actual hands, is just plain better at getting you to remember and execute good ideas. Here's why. There’s all kinds of advice across the web about when to use which app for each small thing that needs doing.
Read More »Testing a Start-up 8,000 Miles From Silicon Valley
%excerpt% See the original post here: Testing a Start-up 8,000 Miles From Silicon Valley
Read More »In the quantum world, diamonds can communicate with each other
Researchers working at the Clarendon Laboratory at the University of Oxford in England have managed to get one small diamond to communicate with another small diamond utilizing "quantum entanglement," one of the more mind-blowing features of quantum physics.
Read More »How Do You Decide On Price? Experiment
The story of how two professors landed on the price at which a California winery would sell the most Cabernet Sauvignon. How do you decide what to charge for your products or services? This is one of the most frequent questions I hear at conferences and inside corporate offices
Read More »CNST collaboration tunes viscous drag on superhydrophobic surfaces
(PhysOrg.com) -- By measuring the motion of a vibrating, porous membrane separating water and air, researchers from the NIST Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology, the NIST Physical Measurement Laboratory, the University of Maryland, and Boston University have revealed a new regime of fluid behavior near solid surfaces that has not been previously observed.
Read More »Researchers’ new recipe cooks up better tissue ‘phantoms’
The precise blending of tiny particles and multicolor dyes transforms gelatin into a realistic surrogate for human tissue. These tissue mimics, known as "phantoms," provide an accurate proving ground for new photoacoustic and ultrasonic imaging technologies.
Read More »The interplay of dancing electrons
Negative ions play an important role in everything from how our bodies function to the structure of the universe.
Read More »Therapy in the Air
Feeling tense?
Read More »Opinion: Officials wrong to put obese boy in foster care
An 8-year-old Ohio boy weighing 200 pounds was taken by officials who said his mother wasn't doing enough to control his weight. That was the wrong call, says Arthur Caplan, msnbc.com contributor and professor of bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Read More »The art of stabilizing entangled spaghetti-like materials
Gene therapy can only be effective if delivered by a stable complex molecule.
Read More »Creating Artificial Muscles More Powerful Than Anything In Nature
By observing the inner workings of an octopus's leg or an elephant's trunk, scientists have created muscles from carbon nanotubes that could one day power machines.
Read More »Physicists find charge separation in a molecule consisting of two identical atoms
Physicists from the University of Stuttgart show the first experimental proof of a molecule consisting of two identical atoms that exhibits a permanent electric dipole moment.
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