The endangered grey nurse shark is its own worst enemy, its young eat each other in the womb, so Australian scientists have a radical rescue plan to artificially inseminate and breed the ocean predator in test-tubes.
Currently browsing posts found in July2005
Grey Nurse Shark Gets help from Test Tubes
“What the Hack?” Convention a Success
There are hundreds of tents on the hot and soggy campground, but this isn’t your ordinary summertime outing, considering that it includes workshops with such titles as “Politics of Psychedelic Research” or “Fun and Mayhem with RFID.”
Viruses for Cars
Here’s a new excuse for not getting to work on time on a Monday morning: My car caught a virus.
New Research Capabilities with Super Magnet
This definitely ain’t no refrigerator magnet. The new super magnet at The National High Magnetic Field Laboratory weighs more than 15 tons and has a magnetic field 420,000 times that of the Earth’s — strong enough to pull a metal object out of a person’s hand and send it flying — if people were allowed [...]
San Francisco: Guy Gets Arrested for Shooting Photos of Building
So I’ve been hassled and harassed many time in the past for shooting photographs in privately owned public spaces (Starbucks, PF Chaings, Toys ‘R Us, the new burger spot on Sacramento St. at Drumm, Tosca, Grand Central Terminal in New York, etc.) but yesterday was the first time I’ve actually been harassed on a public [...]
Senators Threaten P2P Network Providers
Anyone who thought the Supreme Court’s Grokster decision would get Congress off the peer-to-peer industry’s back might want to think again.
New Study says Trees not good for Water Conservation
Many countries are wasting millions of dollars planting trees because of myths that forests always help improve water flows and offset erosion, a British-led study said on Friday.
Senator backs Expansion of Federally Funded Stem Cell Research
In a rare break with President Bush and anti-abortion conservatives, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist on Friday endorsed legislation that would expand federally funded embryonic stem cell research.
Trial Version of Windows Vista Released
Microsoft Corp., the world’s largest software maker, began offering software developers and technology partners a trial version of its next major upgrade to Windows on Wednesday.
Next Generation says: E-mail is for Olds
E-mail is for grown-ups and U.S. teenagers now prefer instant messaging to communicate with each other online, according to a survey released on Wednesday.
Wireless Wallet
Imagine being able to pay for a song on the jukebox, buy a bag of groceries or gain admission to a sports arena by simply waving your phone by a machine.
Wayback Machine and Google Become Key Lawyer Tools
Earlier this year, executives at Dell Inc. tried to shut down DellComputersSuck.com, a Web site promoting an obscure brand of computers. Dell’s lawyers dispatched a stern letter, and within a few days, the site’s owner revamped it into an online discussion group about computers. The old version disappeared from view.
Hollywood Vs. Reality
There are three reasons why filmmakers distort science and technology: 1) to make things look cooler, 2) to make a story work, and 3) because they have no clue what they’re talking about.
The Battle of the Satellite Radio
Until recently, XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. and its rival Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. were engaged in a tit-for-tat, deal-for-deal face-off. Sirius landed the NFL; XM responded with baseball. XM signed an exclusive deal with General Motors Corp.; Sirius partnered with DaimlerChrysler AG. XM scored former NPR Morning Edition host Bob Edwards; Sirius lured away [...]
The Next Big Thing: Tablet PCs
Researcher says the devices will become much more popular, but Microsoft could make or break the market.
Ice Lake Found on Mars
A giant patch of frozen water has been pictured nestled within an unnamed impact crater on Mars. Cool photo.
Futurists Looking Beyond
Imagine a future in which terrorists seize an embassy and police can send in a remote-controlled insect outfitted with a microscopic video camera that reveals where the gunmen are hiding and what kind of weapons they hold.
