On a recent night last week, dinner for Jill Taormina and her family was Totino’s Pizza Rolls with a side of canned pears. There was no other food on the table. “I’d rather make a roast with potatoes in the Crock-Pot. My kids like to eat healthy," said Taormina, who lives with her daughters, Angela,... Continue Reading →
A GERMAN GUY WANTS TO GIVE YOU A BUNCH OF MONEY FOR NOTHING
What would happen if we didn't have to worry about making a living anymore? Would people just sit on their asses all day or actually do something meaningful with their lives? Michael Bohmeyer, a 29-year-old founder of a tech startup in Berlin, wanted to find out.After he stopped working earlier this year to live off... Continue Reading →
Forget cloaks, this invisibility BOTTLE bends sound waves to hide objects
Sound waves move much like light waves. They travel on a straight path but this path -- through reflection, diffraction or refraction -- can be bent. This is the basis for ultrasound medical imaging and non-destructive testing of materials. An intense search has been underway in recent years to develop techniques that can bend the... Continue Reading →
Race in America: Tracking 50 Years of Demographic Trends
Data from U.S. government sources show a mixed picture of the racial and ethnic gaps among whites, blacks, Asians and Hispanics over the past several decades. We’ve tracked and categorized the areas where the white-black racial gap has narrowed, widened or remained roughly the same. Hispanic and Asian data is also included in years available.... Continue Reading →
Study: You Have ‘Near-Zero’ Impact on U.S. Policy
The startling study, titled "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens," is slated to appear in an upcoming issue of Perspectives on Politics and was authored by Princeton University Professor Martin Gilens and Northwestern University Professor Benjamin Page. An early draft can be found here. Noted American University Historian Allan J.... Continue Reading →
Efforts aimed at slowing the aging process have produced some promising results
Caloric restriction:In moderation, limiting caloric intake has been shown to lower the incidence of aging-related deaths in many strains of mice and rats and in rhesus monkeys, reducing the incidence of diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular disease and brain atrophy. Because few people would be expected to adopt a diet that cut back significantly on their diets,... Continue Reading →
Mainstream Media’s 3 Biggest Blunders This Week
"If you're watching the TV coverage of the Iraq crisis, you might feel inclined to check your calendar to see if it's really not 2003."On the show this week: Media reactions to the police shooting of Mike Brown and the protests in Ferguson. Plus a look at the pundits' reaction to Obama's Iraq bombing and... Continue Reading →
Quantum Materials Achieves 95% – Quantum Yield by Automated Quantum Dot Production
QMC is pleased to offer high quantum yield quantum dots with reproducible FWHM uniformity, reliable system redundancy, and the ability to scale production to any quantity necessary for industrial purposes with modest capital expense (CAPEX) and low ongoing manufacturing costs. QMC’s ability to achieve economies of scale with automated production is unmatched and offers supply... Continue Reading →
LAB-GROWN NEURONS GIVE SCIENTISTS A REAL-TIME GLIMPSE INTO HOW THE BRAIN WORKS
Currently, researchers study the human brain by inference. Because they can’t closely observe a living brain in the lab as its owner goes about his day—they do the next best thing, tracking blood flow and electrical activity as subjects perform various tasks.Scientists, however, are now growing brain tissue in petri dishes to study neurons up close and personal.... Continue Reading →
$619 billion missed from federal transparency site
A government website intended to make federal spending more transparent was missing at least $619 billion from 302 federal programs, a government audit has found.And the data that does exist is wildly inaccurate, according to the Government Accountability Office, which looked at 2012 spending data. Only 2% to 7% of spending data on USASpending.gov is... Continue Reading →