Jeff Bezos to open Center for Innovation this fall, aims to inspire young would-be entrepreneurs

Bezos Center for Innovation to open this fall

What’s an e-commerce tycoon to do after funding everything from nuclear fusion startups to commercial spaceflight ventures? Why, help develop a museum exhibit to inspire young folks and teach them about innovation, of course. After more than two years of development and $10 million from Jeff Bezos’ own pockets, the Museum of History and Industry will open the doors to the Bezos Center for Innovation on October 12th. Not only does the center aim to help visitors learn about “the importance of innovation” through interactive exhibits, but it will toot Seattle’s horn for being “the birthplace of so many trailblazing companies.” If you can’t make it to The Emerald City, we’re sure Bezos has a few learning alternatives in mind.

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Source: Museum of History and Industry

Negobot: a virtual chat agent engineered to trap pedophiles

Negobot a virtual chat agent engineered to trap pedophiles

Online chat agents are far from novel, but they’re evidently getting a lot more sophisticated with age. In a bid to trap pedophiles, engineers at the University of Deusto have concocted Negobot. Essentially, the tool employs game theory in order to meticulously extract vital identification nuggets from a suspected abuser. In order to disguise itself from being a digital representation of a child, it actually employs seven different conversational agents, with each having its own way of behaving. In use, the program begins with a neutral stance that it can maintain indefinitely, and if the subject shows interest, it can elevate its approach in an attempt to get said subject to give himself / herself up. Developers are still working on language and linguistic abilities, but we wouldn’t be shocked if it ends up being put to use by certain agencies in the very near future.

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Source: Physorg

Hubble researchers identify color of an exoplanet for the first time (video)

Hubble telescope identifies an exoplanet as blue, but it's no Earth video

While exoplanets are seemingly a dime a dozen, their looks have been mysteries; they often exist only as measurements. Scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope have partly solved that riddle by pinpointing the visible color of an extrasolar world for the first time. By measuring reflected light, they can tell that HD 189733b (conceptualized above) is a cobalt blue, much like Earth’s oceans. Not that we can claim much kinship, though. The planet is a gas giant 63 light-years away — its blue tint comes from an atmosphere likely full of deadly silicate. As disappointing as that may be, the discovery should at least help us understand planet types that don’t exist in the Solar System.

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Source: ESA

All Electric Vehicle Rally ends with Tesla S in top spot

There they were, a caravan of nine electric car enthusiasts with a lot of free time on their hands, “tearing” down North America’s west coast in a bunch of environmentally conscious vehicles. That was just last week in what organizer Tony Williams called the All Electric Vehicle Rally, and nearly all nine participants arrived in the rally’s end location of Tijuana, Mexico.

The convoy started in Blaine, Washington and took to I-5 in four chunks. This year a Tesla Model S piloted by Jack Bowers and Georg Kuhnke arrived first, with just 41 hours of driving time — a far cry from the eight days and five hours the course took Williams last year. The approximately 1,400 miles were covered by the winner at an average speed of about 34 MPH. Sadly, one Nissan Leaf owner got stuck charging their car for 15 hours in California due to a lack of CHADEMO chargers en route. Despite years of promises, CHADEMO sites haven’t made their way south of the Oregon/California border as part of the west coast’s Green Highway. Still, that we’ve reached the point where even some EVs can clear that many miles in under two days using only public chargers is pretty impressive.

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Source: Plug In Cars, All Electric Vehicle Rally

Alt-week 7.6.13: deep-space radio, scent-ography and the new hunt for Aliens

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Alt-week 7.6.13: deep-space radio, scent-ography and the new hunt for Aliens

It’s not often that smell gets a look-in when it comes to gadgets and technology. That all changes this week with the “scent camera” you see above. But, while you’re thinking about preserving the aroma of those killer cookies you baked, others are wondering what’s going on in the deep, dark sky above. This is alt-week.

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Solar Team Eindhoven crafts solar-powered family car (video)

Solar Team Eindhoven claims first solarpowered family car

The solar-powered cars we’ve seen to date are usually built for just one person — not very useful when many of us need to carry passengers. TU/e’s Solar Team Eindhoven just brought some much-needed realism on that front by unveiling Stella, which it claims is the world’s first solar-powered family car. The vehicle’s combination of efficient solar cells with lightweight construction allows such radical concepts as back seats and a trunk while maintaining a 373-mile range. The barebones design won’t rival most modern cars for luxury, but it’s also energy-positive — in typical use, it can contribute back to the power grid. You may even see it outside of competitions; while Stella is designed with October’s World Solar Challenge in mind, Solar Team Eindhoven plans to make the car road-legal. Let’s hope we catch it putting around Dutch streets.

[Image credit: Bart van Overbeeke]

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Via: Phys.org

Source: Solar Team Eindhoven (Facebook)

Scientists grow human liver from stem cells, hope to relieve transplant woes (video)

Stem cells used to create human liver tissue

Stem cell research has resulted in several important breakthroughs in medicine, such as rebuilding the larynx and regenerating spinal cord connectors. Now the liver, one of the most highly sought after organs on the donor transplant list, could get some serious stem cell assistance as well. A team of scientists led by Takanori Takebe of Yokohama City University has successfully created a miniature version of the human liver with the help of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), which are derived from adult somatic cells. They developed the iPSC into generalized liver cells called hepatocytes, at which point the researchers mixed in endothelial cells and mesenchymal stem cells, left the petri dishes alone for a couple days, and voila — an extremely tiny version of a human liver, said to be the first-ever functional human organ grown from stem cells, was born.

The liver “buds,” as they’re known, measure five millimeters long and are the sort you would find in human embryos shortly after fertilization. When implanted in mice, the baby livers managed to perform all the functions of their adult equivalents. The researchers’ next step would be to generate liver buds that are a touch closer to normal liver tissue — like the addition of bile ducts — and to see if they can mass produce them by the tens of thousands. Don’t go wasting your liver just yet though, as it’ll likely be years before the likes of you and me will be able to have a lab-grown liver in our bodies. In the meantime, check out the time-lapse video after the break to see a young liver bud take shape in a petri dish.

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Via: Smithsonian

Source: Nature

Meet Styx and Kerberos, Pluto’s newly named moons

Meet Styx and Kerberos, Pluto's newly named moons

SETI’s best known for its search for sentient life in the cosmos, but when the Hubble space telescope found a pair of new moons orbiting Pluto (at SETI’s behest), it decided to do some planetoid naming, too. Today, SETI announced those names: Styx and Kerberos. The institute didn’t grant titles to the moons itself, however. Instead, it put the onus on the public to come up with the proper names — with instructions from the International Astronomical Union (IAU) that the nomenclature have something to do with the mythological underworld known as Hades. Voting lasted for two weeks, and SETI received over 450,000 regular votes and around 30,000 write-ins. Though many wished for the moons to be named for Stephen Colbert or the Romulan home world, the IAU found those choices to be unfit for the new moons. Instead, we have Styx (the river that separates earth from the underworld) and Kerberos (the three-headed dog that serves as the guardian to Hades) — who said studying Classics was a waste of time?

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Source: SETI Institute

Engadget Giveaway: win an HTC One Google Play edition, courtesy of dbrand!

Engadget Giveaway win an HTC One Google Play edition, courtesy of dbrand!

Ever since Google announced that it was joining forces with Samsung and HTC to push out a stock Android version of the two biggest flagships on the market, we knew that a giveaway of at least one of these devices would need to follow quickly. True to our intent, we’ve teamed up with dbrand, a company dedicated to making customized skins for the phone of your choice, to offer you the chance to win the Google Play edition of the HTC One! To enter, head to the widget below — remember, leaving comments doesn’t work anymore. While you’re at it, feel free to enjoy dbrand’s latest video showing off what it does best.

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Journey through the cosmos with In Saturn’s Rings, heading to IMAX in 2014 (video)

DNP Journey through the cosmos with In Saturn's Rings, heading to IMAX in 2014 video

Ever since NASA’s Cassini-Huygens spacecraft entered Saturn’s orbit in 2004, filmmaker Stephen van Vuuren has been enthralled with its progress. So much so that he’s spent years collecting over a million insanely high-res photos from Cassini’s mission and quilted them together into a 45-minute film called In Saturn’s Rings. Without relying on CGI or fancy visual effects, van Vuuren has patched together a seamless visual journey through our solar system, culminating in a breathtaking view of Saturn’s rings and moons. Distributed by BIG & Digital, the movie is expected to make its way to IMAX theaters sometime in 2014, though there’s no word yet on a specific release date. The first official trailer dropped today, and you can watch it — in 4K if you’ve got the right screen — after the break.

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Source: In Saturn’s Rings