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New Scientist has a piece with video of a monkey feeding itself using a robot arm wired up to its brain.  This is a first - and an important first for properly intent-driven prosthetics.  Electrodes in the monkeybrain's motor cortex send signals to a computer which translates into command for the robot arm.  It sounds obvious but so far, ain't been done before.  You can see how easy the little fellow finds it from the bored "mmm, nom nom nom" face he's pulling.
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Fall of the damned3D printing - fabrication or fabbing - is a funny thing.  You start with a digital file and a make-anything 3D printer machine.  The printer chugs away and makes whatever you've given it, from shot glasses to Second Life characters, through to the Danté-esque Fall of the Damned on the right, lamp depicting writhing, interwtined bodies.

The lamp is a limited run of forty pieces at a super-premium $45,000 price.  But there's absolutely no reason for that.  Digital file, makey-machine.  This is only limited because someone has chosen it to be limited.

Fabbing has the potential to be a truly disruptive technology: think of the Feed in Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age - a consumer-level technology that lets the average person work a consumer-level interface to get shoes or a burrito.  Closer to reality is the RepRap project, home 3D-printing open-source enthusiasts who are trying to make printers which can print their own parts.  Now that truly would be a disruptive technology.

So, if anyone wants to upload Fall of the Damned to BitTorrent, let's get the revolution started. 
andygates: (Default)
Here be a nifty Wired article on some projects for getting more out of their soldiers.  No super-soldier serum (sorry RB) but some very interesting stuff about using hydrogen sulphide to suspend animation in critically-injured cases (applicable way more off the battlefield: give a first-responder motorbike a tank of the stuff!), and fascinating heat-transfer gear that can get your core up (or down) to temperature fast.  This chimes with the way I always use my hands as heatsinks but the extent to which it worked was awesome.  Stick a Glove in every lifeboat!

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