Space Station Sunday Standby
Good afternoon, space fans! We've swung a little outside the usual orbit today, but will be back later on this evening (or possibly early tomorrow, depending on your Earthling location) with all of this week's stories from space! Standby for the science...watch this space!
Space Station Sunday: National Treasures
Sounds Like Victory: New Ultrasonic Brain Surgery Heals Tremors Sans Cracking Skulls
It sounds like something out of the future, but it's actually in operational trials for human beings right now: a new type of surgery that uses ultrasonic sound waves to target specific neurons for eradication, thus healing certain brain malfunctions non-invasively...
This is a "song" that can heal certain brain anomalies, if it gets stuck in your head properly. (Image courtesy itnonline.com.) |
3-D Print-ception: Scientists Create New, Working Ovaries Via 3-D Printing
It seems that the only technology progressing as rapidly as
the robots who are going to take your jobs is that of 3-D printing. Capable of creating clothes, huts, offices, art, prosthetic limbs, space station parts, and more, the science has now expanded to being able to
reproduce the organs that are used to reproduce.
Even though they actually work, can we please call them "faux-varies"? (Image courtesy chicagotribune.com.) |
Spice Up Your Dinner Conversation With ACTUAL Conversation, Courtesy "Pepper Hacker"
Sometimes, it doesn’t take Wikileaks or the Russians to make
a hack that changes everything. Even a
small-scale rerouting of the information superhighway can have an impact on
everyday humans, and possibly even work in everyone’s best interests. That was the thought behind this one
unassuming new invention…
The Internet of Things? How about the NON-Internet of Things? (Image courtesy news.co.au.) |
Space Station Sunday: Dock Stars
And We All Float On, Alright: Flying Taxis To Be Tested In 2017
Alright nerds. It’s
Friday, and while you’re dreaming about the impending weekend, why not also
dream about the phenomenal parts of our future?
Especially that old (new?) chestnut, flying cars. Why aren’t they already floating around in
this glorious 21st-century utopia we’ve created for ourselves? Well, glorious 21st-century utopia
or no, the flying cars could be swooping in for testing as early as next year.
It is time. (Image courtesy darkroastedblend.com.) |
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