You’ll be seeing several articles this week about how scientists have suddenly attained nuclear fusion this week for the first time – right here we’re going to brief you on … Continue reading
Diamonds might be a girl’s best friend, but not everyone is able to afford a bunch of diamonds to as accessories to go along with their evening gowns at black tie events. Of course, there are always other kinds of alternatives such as semi-precious gems or even crystals, but how about taking this opportunity to truly stand out from the crowd with some tech-infused baubles? This is what the PosturAroma is all about, where this particular project would not only help complement your dressing, but it will also be able to perform other kinds of functions such as sensing your pulse, your posture, as well as watch your stress levels?
PosturAroma Monitors Your Posture Via Scent original content from Ubergizmo.
At the end of last month, we brought you word that the first lunar rover from China, known as Yutu, which can be translated to Jade Rabbit, has already run into a mechanical control abnormality which could signal its “death” in a matter of a month. Apparently, it has frozen itself to “death” on the moon, at least according to China’s ECNS news. Basically, there is no more hope to restore any form of communication with Jade Rabbit, and as the temperatures on the moon’s surface plunge, the rover’s mast which was designed to fold down in order to protect its delicate instruments within, malfunctions.
China’s Jade Rabbit Calls It A Day On The Moon original content from Ubergizmo.
The European Space Agency’s new solar satellite will be partially shielded using a bone-based pigment found in prehistoric cave paintings. The result will be a surreal cross between the earliest era of human cognition and creativity—that underground cinematic world of flickering animal images found in European caves—and the outer reaches of our current mechanical sciences.
High tech smart glasses that help doctors see cancer cells developed by researchers
Posted in: Today's ChiliCancer is one of the most common diseases in the world and affects tens of thousands of people. One of the issues that surgeons and patients alike face is that … Continue reading
The First Ever Battery
Posted in: Today's ChiliFourteen cm in height and eight around, the world’s first battery looked more like primitive pre-Columbian art than an amazing piece of ancient technology. Although most experts agree that the device produced electricity, there is little consensus on what that power was intended to do.
Everyone tells us to stretch before exercise, but does it actually help improve performance and recovery?
In fact, wireless chargers are already here, but these still require that your gadget is physically connected to a charging pad or similar. However, I mean the type of charging where there is no contact whatsoever, so that you can charge your mobile phone or tablet anywhere you are in by just… being there. It seems (and, in fact, is) amazing, and this technology is closer than you might think.
Cancer surgery is tough. Even with high-powered microscopes, surgeons have a very difficult time distinguishing cancer cells from healthy cells. But these new glasses developed by Washington University, St. Louis could change all that.
How would you feel if you knew that you were being studied or your every move is being recorded? “An invasion of privacy!” is what one would most probably cry out. Well, a company known as Persistent Surveillance Systems has come up with the HAWKEYE II camera surveillance system which can be installed in light aircraft that delivers truly detailed snooping capabilities. In this particular camera system, one would find a dozen underbelly 192-megapixel cameras that have been fitted to a Cessna light aircraft, where each of these cameras will snap a new photo every single second over an area which could be eventually as large as five miles by five miles. When one is flying in the air at 10,000 to 12,000 feet, the plane’s cameras will be able to capture general snapshots of a large area, where these photos will then be sent over to ground-based operators for further analysis.
HAWKEYE II Camera Surveillance System – Be Very Afraid original content from Ubergizmo.