As workers age, robots take on more jobs -study0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- September 16, 2021
It turns out robots are taking over jobs fastest around the world in places where their human counterparts are aging the most rapidly.
It turns out robots are taking over jobs fastest around the world in places where their human counterparts are aging the most rapidly.
You’ve heard of startups building computer chips, delivery drones and social networks. One called Colossal has a very different goal: bringing the woolly mammoth back from extinction by 2027 using CRISPR, a revolutionary gene editing technology.
The findings suggest a way to rescue “doomed” animal hybrids.
The roundworms can warn others to avoid bacteria by transferring genetic material.
A researcher from AWS has combined two quantum processors to create near-perfect randomness. It could help improve modern cryptography protocols.
This is a technological triumph.
For the first time, scientists have created embryos that are a mix of human and monkey cells.
We rely on experts all the time. If you need financial advice, you ask an expert. If you are sick, you visit a doctor, and as a juror you may listen to an expert witness. In the future, however, artificial intelligence (AI) might replace many of these people.
Researchers have managed to pack the same amount of voltage found in a AAA battery cell into a microsupercapacitor as small as a speck of dust. This is the first time such an achievement has been reported, paving the way for tiny energy storage systems that can be safely embedded in the human body for biomedical gadgets and treatments.
Scientists have created “living materials” from bacteria that can repair themselves when damaged. Researchers say the materials could one day be used in medicine to improve skin repair.