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Big Pic: Mushrooms Make Wind To Send Spores Flying

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The spores released by an Amanita form a cloud of bright little specks.
Patrick Hickey

Mushrooms produce spores in order to reproduce and spread their mushroomy goodness throughout the land—or at least propagate the species. And for a long time, scientists believed they released these spores at random. Hopefully they would catch wind and carry, but what if the air was still? At the American Physical Society's annual meeting of the Department of Fluid Dynamics yesterday, scientists presented a possible alternative. 

Mushrooms might not be so passive—in fact, they might be creating their own wind. The researchers found that at least some mushrooms, and maybe all of them, can manipulate their environment through water vapor and active cooling, producing air flow. The extra lift granted by the process gives the spores an extra four inches horizontally and vertically. The team observed the spore winds using high-speed videography, and used a laser beam to illuminate the image above.


    







Elderly Spaniards Can Get Medical Checkups Via Kinect

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screenshot of woman standing in front of motion sensor
Woman Uses TEKI System
Screenshot from "Teki Kinect Accenture Osakidetza English.mp4" by palomito97 on YouTube

In Spain's Basque Country, some of the oldest residents are getting the newest communications technology. The region is piloting a system that allows doctors to monitor elderly patients remotely using motion sensors originally developed for Microsoft's Xbox.

The system also includes more mundane things, such as apps that let people of all ages access their health records, a call center for medical advice, and an online appointment-making service. The idea is to reduce healthcare costs in Basque Country by reducing the number of face-to-face doctor's appointments people have to make, CNBC reports. The company in charge of the system, Accenture, says the system saved the region of 2 million people $55 million in its first year.

Elderly residents using the remote monitoring system, called TEKI, also get a heart rate monitor and a spirometer for checking their respiration. Their doctors are able to get their data in real time and to write prescriptions over TEKI. TEKI focuses on elderly people because Basque Country has one of the longest life expectancies in the world, 72 years for men and 84 years for women. According to an Accenture document, about 77 percent of the region's healthcare costs go toward managing chronic diseases, which appear more often in elderly people and which lend themselves to home monitoring.

The system doesn't sound super revolutionary, but it does sound cool. I'm not exactly elderly yet, but I would love to have consistent, quick, remote access to a doctor or nurse for the small stuff, too.

[CNBC]


    






Occipital Structure Sensor

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Occipital Structure Sensor
Sam Kaplan

The Structure is the easiest way to digitize the world. The iPad-mountable 3-D scanner uses diffracted laser light to create a depth map, which it can merge with an image from the tablet’s camera to create 3-D renderings of objects. Three apps currently work with the Structure—one scans objects, one maps rooms, and one is an augmented-reality game—but Occipital also released an SDK to developers, so they can make even more applications. $350

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How Scientists Could Watch Brain Chemicals Through The Skull

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illustration of neurons
Neurons
Nick Kaloterakis

Researchers have discovered a way to see chemicals at work behind bone. In the future, they hope to develop their technique as a way of watching chemical messages as they blip through the brain, underneath the skull.

The work is still preliminary. So far, the researchers have tested their method in… a cut of lamb shoulder. A team of chemists and bioengineers from Northwestern University injected chemically modified gold nanoparticles inside their raw lamb meat, then shined laser light at the bone on the other side of the injection. Using Raman spectroscopy methods, the scientists found they could detect the gold through the bone, Chemical & Engineering News reports.

If this technique does work in living brains, scientists would have to get the gold particles to attach to the brain chemicals they want to study. That way, when the laser detects the gold particles, it would be detecting the brain chemical, too. The Northwestern team plans to try to attach the neurotransmitter dopamine to their nanogold, Chemical & Engineering News reports.

Another important consideration? Making sure such injections are safe for the living creatures that will get them, whether lab animals or people.

[Chemical & Engineering News]


    






Software Puts Together A Playable Score From Historical Music Manuscripts

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detail from a drawing of a child Mozart playing music with his father and sister
From a Drawing of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Playing with His Father and Sister, by Louis Carrogis Carmontelle

Just as books come in different editions, so do historical pieces of music. Different manuscripts from the time the music was written may have slight variations… and their composers aren't around anymore to say which they prefer.

That's why musician-engineer Zoltan Komives made meiView, an experimental piece of software that lets musicians compare manuscript variations side by side and choose which ones they like. The software then automatically puts together a playable score with all the chosen variants. Now, in spite of years of childhood piano lessons, I don't really have the judgment to make these kinds of calls (It's not your fault, Ms. Judy; I just never practiced. I'm very sorry). But I know some people do.

You can check out meiView applied to a piece of 15th century choral music here, and read about how Komives made the software.


    






Brunton Hydrogen Reactor

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Brunton Hydrogen Reactor
Sam Kaplan

A single Hydrogen Reactor cartridge carries a week’s worth of smartphone power—more juice than any other portable source. When a user inserts one of the 3-inch cartridges into the Reactor, a catalyst frees electrons from hydrogen. The freed electrons move into a circuit that delivers power to gadgets over USB. The remaining hydrogen reacts with oxygen to produce the process’s only byproduct: water vapor.

 

STATS

Output: 2 amps

Cartridge capacity: 8,500 mAh

Price: $150 (includes two cartridges)

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Can Red Wine Really Heal Cancer And Prolong Your Life?

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Red Wine

The health benefits of resveratrol, a compound found in the skin of grapes (and thus in red wine), have long been known. Studies have indicated that it serves as an antioxidant, that it has anti-tumor properties, that it can help you live longer, and that it may be responsible for the "French paradox" (the French have a high-fat diet and yet low instances of health disease). A new study examined resveratrol's effects on melanoma, and found that it has anti-cancer properties. Cool! But, well, ignore.

First question: has resveratrol been proven to fight cancer? First answer, to that first question: Resveratrol has been studied significantly, but never in a clinical trial on humans. Yes, it's been tried on rats and mice, but only clinical trials on humans can say for sure whether a compound has a proven effect. Additionally! Clinical trials of other antioxidants have been performed, and failed to demonstrate the positive effects that earlier trials predicted. As Stephen Barrett over at Quackwatch notes, some, like beta-carotene, have even produced adverse effects. The only clinical study we could find for humans was this one, which only tested resveratrol's ability to battle a specific disease (Friedrich ataxia).

So, definitely a lack of research here. There's also the problem of exactly how resveratrol is introduced to the body. Without clinical trials, we can't really say whether resveratrol as it's present in red wine would be metabolized in any kind of beneficial way. Let's take a look at another possible cancer-fighter for an example: mushrooms. Mushrooms, including common varieties like shiitake and maitake, contain lentinan, a substance that inhibits tumor growth and has been linked to fighting cancer. Except, to get the dose of lentinan you need, don't bother eating a bunch of shiitakes. You have to inject it intravenously on a weekly basis, in quantities far greater than are present in any conquerable pile of mushrooms. Youch. So resveratrol in wine might not actually have the same effect as resveratrol supplements.

Red Wine Bottles
Wikimedia Commons

But the biggest problem, by far, with the idea that red wine will help you fight cancer is that no human alive is hardcore enough to get the benefits of resveratrol from drinking wine. To get the amount of resveratrol from wine to equal the amount given to the animals in these studies, you'd be dead from alcohol poisoning a few times over. Red wine has about 160 µg of resveratrol per ounce. Assuming each glass of wine has about five ounces, that's 800 µg per glass, or 0.0008 grams. (That's a pretty big glass, by the way.) The amount of resveratrol used in these studies ranges from two to five grams. So if we're being conservative and assuming you only need two grams of resveratrol, and you're having a pretty big glass of wine, that means you'd need 2,500 glasses of wine to get the dose used in these trials. That's 492.9 bottles of wine.

Of course, you can buy resveratrol supplements from most health supplement stores or online. But resveratrol supplements, which are completely unregulated by the FDA and unproven in any clinical trials with humans, usually have between 200 and 500 mg of resveratrol--up to 25 times less than is used in these studies. There's no indication that these relatively small doses of resveratrol will have the wonderful effects you might be expecting.

That's not to say that these resveratrol studies aren't interesting and important, of course. Very possibly this research will end up being important sometime down the road. But studies supposedly proving the magical properties of red wine are sexy and fun, much like red wine itself, which brings them an awful lot of visibility. Resveratrol is promising, but if you've been guzzling wine for its medical benefits, you might be getting drunk for no good reason.


    






Nonprofit Sends Free Kits Of Potential Malaria Cures To Researchers

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photo of a field of dead mosquitoes awaiting lab analysis
Killed Mosquitoes about to Undergo a Lab Analysis for Diseases, 1976
CDC/ James Stewart

All you have to do is write in. A nonprofit malaria research organization, the Medicines for Malaria Venture, is offering boxes for free that each contain samples of 200 substances that the venture has determined are promising as malaria cures. The Malaria Box is meant to be a starting point for researchers at universities or small companies, who wouldn't otherwise have access to a starting ground of 200 promising molecules.

The Malaria Box takes a cue from large pharmaceutical companies, which have long had a clever way of discovering new medicines. Companies perform what are called high-throughput screens, using robots to test thousands of chemicals to see if any kill a bacteria species, for example. At this step, it doesn't matter why a chemical works, just that it does. Once a screen has identified a smaller number of interesting chemicals, human researchers at the company might perform more detailed tests on them.

photo of a Malaria Box
A Malaria Box
Medicines for Malaria Venture

The Malaria Box helps researchers at smaller facilities skip right to the step where a human comes in to do more detailed work on screened molecules. It's likely only a few of the chemicals in the box, if any, would be good as medicines. The success rate of high-throughput screens is usually very low, below one percent. But like that guy or girl you know who maximizes his chances with romance partners by asking out a looot of people, high-throughput screens count on the luck of sheer volume.

The 200 Malaria Box chemicals came out on top after the Medicines for Malaria Venture and cooperating companies screened 4 million molecules. Scientists at the nonprofit found 200,000 promising chemicals after an initial screen, then chose their final 200 by looking for those that were structurally the least like malaria drugs already on the market, German broadcaster Deutsche Welle reports. The differences could help any new drugs that come from Malaria Box research overcome drug resistance in malaria, one of the box's creators, Thomas Spagenberg, told Deutsche Welle. The box also includes 200 screened chemicals that are promising as helpers for malaria research, though not directly as cures.

Researchers may order the Malaria Box for free from the Medicines for Malaria Venture website. One major condition for use is that any research from the Malaria Box must be openly published for other scientists to read. The box campaign started two years ago, but it will be years yet before the venture knows whether the box yielded any cures. 


    







The Microbiome and the Future of Artisanal Gastronomy

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Earlier this week, the media caught the stinky wind of a rather unique art exhibit at the Dublin Science Gallery.  Called SELFMADE, the installation featured a number of cheeses made by a variety of different bacteria.  While this may not seem all that strange, the fact that the bacteria came from different body parts, such as the feet, the bellybutton and armpits, suggested that this was not an ordinary cheesy experience.

This isn’t the first time that gastronomists have taken advantage of the human body to create artisanal treats.  In Newport, Oregon, Rogue Ales has seen good business thanks to a unique brew known as The Beard Beer, which is made using the yeast collected from the beard of the brewmaster. In a similar manner, several restaurants and bakeries in New York have turned to the microbiome of the city instill – quite literally – the taste of the metropolis in their foods.   

The growing interest in using the human and environmental microbiome as a culinary collaborator may seem to be novel but in reality, this practice has been performed for centuries.  Each ecological system, whether landscape or biological, has provided a means to turn raw foods such as milk, meat and flour into delicious gourmet products.  What is even more interesting is that turning to microbes may have saved many from some of today’s chronic disease problems.

The most pertinent of these microbial saviours comes from a once standard staple in our diets: sourdough.  This bread is made with flour that has been fermented in a mixture of bacteria and yeasts prior to baking.  When performed in the traditional way, the result is a delicious loaf that is almost entirely gluten-free.  In Victoria, BC, Fry's Red Wheat Bread, is using this technique to create breads that even celiac patients can eat. 

Studies on the bacteria contained in the sourdough cultures have been numerous and shown that there are several different types contributing to the reduction of gluten that benefits celiac patients. In one such study from 2012, the actual source of one of the predominant strains, Lactobacillus reuteri happened to be intestinal in nature.  While there was no correlation between the other types of bacteria found in the culture and the human gut microbiota, the authors did suggest that the human gut might be the perfect place to find starter cultures.  

The benefits of sourdough may seem remarkable but pale in the context of the benefit of including fermented foods in the diet.  In 2006, a group from Puleva Biotech in Spain revealed that a diet that did not include fermented foods led to a reduced immune function and an increase likelihood of preventable infections.  Last year, a group from the David Geffen School of Medicine in Los Angeles demonstrated how incorporation of a fermented milk product could modulate brain activity and relieve emotional stress.  One of the most intriguing benefits came from the Ohio State University in 2010 in which the authors showed that a fermented papaya preparation helped to heal wounds associated with diabetes.              

What links all the benefits of these fermented foods is the nature of the bacteria contained within the starter culture, most of which are probiotic. Researchers are still learning which strains are associated with health although the work may reveal the best options can be found not in the lab, but inside us.   

Each of us has an individual microbiome consisting of thousands of different types of bacteria.  Many of these are also associated with the development of fermentation.  Through identification of these bacteria contained in our guts and on our bodies, a personal starter culture could be developed, which could then be used to make individualized artisanal foods.  The various lactobacilli could easily help to make yogurts, sourdough and even sausages.  A selection of bifidobacterial strains could help to ferment various cereals and soy products.  Other bacteria, such as Propionibacterium from the face, Corynebacterium from the armpits and Enterococcus from the nostrils may be harnessed, cultured and then used to produce individualized fermented foods including cheeses, pickled vegetables and dry sausages.

The premise may seem outrageous but research hints that this may soon be a part of a personalized healthy diet.  At the National Taiwan University, a team of researchers examined Lactobacillus strains isolated from both picked cabbage and the feces of breast-fed infants.  They found the bacteria from the babies were superior to those found in cabbage.  They were more stable in the environment; they were more competitive against pathogens; they survived better over time and offered better support once ingested.  The authors suggested that when it comes to finding optimal fermented foods, the best place might indeed be the human body. 

For the moment, personalized gastronomic fare is still just an idea with only a few options available for observation and tasting.  However, over the coming years, there will no doubt be more culinary curiosities appearing as more people turn to their own bodies for culinary inspiration.  Whether this will ever become a fad, no one can tell, but in a world where odd eats can lead to a windfall of attention and purchases – the cronut anyone? – then we can be sure someone out there will give it their best try.  

        

  

 

 

 


    






FYI: Why Doesn't Plan B Work For Heavier Women?

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photo of the fronts and backs of tablets of Plan B One-Step
Front and Back of a Tablet of Plan B One-Step, an Emergency Contraceptive
Pillbox, U.S. National Library of Medicine

If you're a lady—or even if you're not—you might have heard already. Mother Jonesreported on Monday that a European manufacturer of a pill identical to Plan B One-Step, the U.S.' best-known "morning-after pill," is warning patients that its product doesn't work well for women who weigh more than 165 pounds. And it doesn't work at all for women over 176 pounds. The average American woman weighs 166 pounds. (Mother Jones also published a story today clarifying that the strongest evidence ties emergency contraceptive's effectiveness directly to weight, not to body mass index or BMI, which is a measure of weight in proportion to height. Here, we'll consider weight and BMI interchangeable, although they aren't exactly so.)

Interestingly, researchers suspect it's not just a matter of getting heavier women to take more of the Plan B chemical, called levonorgestrel. There have been no studies to check whether more levonorgestrel would work for heavier women, but, in general, the contraceptive scientists Popular Science spoke with thought that that is unlikely to solve the problem. (If you'd like to try anyway, levonorgestrel is safe to take in a double dose.) With levonorgestrel, what you put in isn't directly related to what you get out. In other words, when you take a double dose of levonorgestrel, the amount of the chemical that shows up in your bloodstream doesn't double. That's true no matter what you weigh.

This phenomenon is called non-linear pharmacokinetics, and it's pretty common in drugs. "It is a nightmare for pharma companies as such phenomenon will make their drugs less appealing to clinical practice," Ganesh Cherala, a pharmaceutical scientist at the Oregon Health & Science University, wrote in an email. "They usually weed out drugs with high potential for non-linear pharmacokinetics." Levonorgestrel-based emergency contraceptives made their way to doctor's offices anyway because the original studies on contraceptives of all kinds were usually done in normal BMI women.

Cherala works with obstetrician-gynecologist Alison Edelman, who has published numerous studies on the effectiveness of contraceptives in women of different weights. In addition to levonorgestrel's non-linear pharmokinetics, Edelman and her collaborators are trying to figure out whether heavier women's bodies treat levonorgestrel differently. So far, they've determined that in obese women, levonorgestrel leaves the bloodstream at a different rate than in normal-weight women.

Levonorgestrel may also enter the bloodstream at a different rate in obese women. Patients take the morning-after pill by swallowing it, which means it passes through the liver before it reaches the bloodstream. This happens to everybody, no matter her weight, but overweight and obese women's livers also happen to create more drug-metabolizing enzymes than normal-weight women's livers, Cherala says. That means more levonorgestrel may be chewed up in an obese women's liver before it ever makes it to her bloodstream, which would carry it to her reproductive organs, where it does its work.

So heavier women have a lot of things working against them when they try to use levonorgestrel as an emergency contraceptive. That doesn't mean they're totally out of luck. They may get copper intrauterine devices fitted as an emergency contraceptive. IUDs aren't affected by weight, Edelman says. They may also use an emergency contraceptive called ulipristal acetate, brand name Ella. The same study that found levonorgestrel doesn't work well for women over 165 pounds also found that ulipristal is not as affected by weight, although it, too, seems to lose its efficacy in women over 194 pounds (88 kilograms) or with BMIs over 35. Bonus: Copper IUDs and ulipristal are actually slightly more effective as emergency contraceptives than levonorgestrel at any given weight.

Nothing is quite as convenient in the U.S. as levonorgestrel, however. It's the only emergency contraceptive available over-the-counter to anybody of any age. IUDs must be professionally fitted, and ulipristal requires a prescription for patients of all ages.


    






Big Pic: The Subarctic Lakes Of Canada Are Drying Up

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Desiccated lakes in Wapusk National Park near Churchill, Manitoba (Canada)
Hilary White
The East Coast may be getting a little damp at the moment, but the subarctic region of Canada has seen a decrease in snowfall in recent years. Because of that, the lakes in the area are drying up significantly, according to a study published on the Geophysical Research Letters website. A team of researchers from Université Laval, Wilfrid Laurier University, Brock University, and the University of Waterloo, studied 70 lakes, most of them less than about three feet deep. These lakes rely on meltwater as a significant source of water. And with dwindling winter precipitation, the meltwater has also taken a hit. The researchers analyzed the lakes on flat terrain and surrounded by scrub vegetation and found that more than half show signs of desiccation. The drying-out phenomenon was first obvious to the naked eye back in 2010, but became even more pronounced this summer.

An analysis of phytoplankton remains accumulated in the lakebeds show that before being disrupted a few years ago, lakes like the ones in the above photo from Manitoba were keeping water levels balanced for about 200 years. 


    






The Physics Of Making Someone's Beer Foam Over

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photo of cold mud volcanoes
Tapped Beer Acts Like This
Cold mud pots in Fort Bragg, California

I had actually never seen this before, but maybe that's because I don't hang out with jerks? In any case, apparently if you hit someone's open beer bottle firmly at its mouth, it will foam up and over immediately. NPR's The Salt has a helpful gif. The Salt also talked with a physicist, Javier Rodriguez Rodriguez of Carlos III University in Madrid, who's discovered why this happens.

Rodriguez and two colleagues filmed tapped beer with high-speed cameras to uncover the physics of the foam explosion. They even presented their work this weekend at a meeting of the American Physical Society (the fluid dynamics division, naturally). The Salt has the breakdown, using more gifs of slo-mo bubbles. The physics are similar to those of bubbles found in oil reservoirs hit by seismic waves and in mud volcanoes, Rodriguez et al. wrote in a short paper about their work.

There is no way to save beer that has been struck, The Salt reports. It's part of a chain reaction that ultimately pushes beer out of the bottle in a matter of "a few hundred milliseconds." Guess you'll just have to brew some more to replace it.

[The Salt]


    






Gray Matter: How Not To Deep-Fry A Turkey

Google Glass

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Google Glass
Sam Kaplan

When the Google Glass concept debuted in June 2012, it became one of the most anticipated gadget launches ever—rivaling the first iPhone. For all intents and purposes, Project Glass, as it was then called, promised Terminator vision, a hovering overlay of information as crisp as a 25-inch HDTV. Impossible as it sounds, the product, which came out as a developer version in April, goes beyond that pledge: It’s like wearing a piece of the future. 

Glass is, in essence, a consumer head-up display. Incoming calls, messages, and calendar alerts pop up just above eye level. It also has a videocamera, turn-by-turn navigation, voice search, Google Now, and partner apps, including Twitter, Facebook, and The New York Times. With such a basic set of features, it would be easy to write Glass off as a novel accessory, but the fact is that we’ve only just begun to tap into its potential. About 2,000 developers are working to broaden its uses before the final consumer version arrives next year. Glass—like the PC and the smartphone before it—represents a new way to display and transmit information. How we’ll use it from here is anyone’s guess.

 

STATS

Apparent screen size: 25 inches

Weight: 1.4 ounces

Price: $1,500 (Explorer edition)

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FYI: How Much Weight Can You Gain From Thanksgiving Dinner?

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Preparing To Chow Down
Superstock/Getty Images

Postprandial weight gain is all a matter of timing. In the short term—I mean the very short term—any food and drink that you put into your body will make you exactly that much heavier. Eat a pound of marshmallows, and you'll have added one pound to your mass, at least until your body starts to excrete the food or use it for energy. So until metabolic processes kick in, the amount you gain from Thanksgiving dinner depends exactly on the amount you've decided to stuff down your gullet.

That increase will start to wane almost as soon as it begins. The time it takes for food to pass through our digestive tracts varies widely. In general, the "colonic transit" of a meal takes between 20 and 56 hours.

Once you've metabolized and excreted your food and drink, how much remains in your body the next day? If you ate a very salty meal, you'll tend to retain water, and a greater proportion of the weight will linger on your frame. But that water weight, too, will disappear, leaving you with a tiny fraction of your Thanksgiving dinner as lasting weight gain. How much depends on the energy content of the foods consumed: A calorie-packed serving of stuffing will be more fattening than a tall glass of club soda. Excess calories are converted into fat to be used for energy in the future.

Other factors, like the time of day, might also have an impact. For a study published in March, a team of Israeli scientists tested different diets on almost 200 obese adults. One group consumed a greater proportion of their calories at breakfast and lost significantly more weight, on average, than the others in the study.

But whatever your eating schedule, the net weight gain associated with any one repast, no matter how sumptuous, will be very small. Even so, says Lawrence Cheskin, director of the Johns Hopkins Weight Management Center, a series of overindulgences, however slight, can accumulate to have a significant, long-term effect. "Even a tiny excess over what your body needs has to be stored. And people do this three times a day, if not more."

Have a burning science question you'd like to see answered in our FYI section? Email it to fyi@popsci.com.


    







Sandia National Laboratories Non-Detonable Fertilizer

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Sandia National Laboratories Non-Detonable Fertilizer
Sandia National Laboratories

In 2012, ammonium nitrate fertilizer was used in about 65 percent of the 16,300 IEDs found in Afghanistan. Engineer Kevin Fleming developed a fertilizer that uses iron sulfite in the mixture to suppress detonation. Sandia chose to keep the formula open-source so that it could more quickly be adopted in developing countries.

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Pat's Backcountry Beverages Pale Rail

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Pat's Backcountry Beverages Pale Rail
Pat's Backcountry Beverages

Much to the lament of most hikers, beer is too heavy to schlep into the backcountry. Pat’s beer concentrate solves this problem adeptly. Instead of evaporating a finished beer’s water, the company quadruple brews its concentrate, preserving the hops and other aromatics that impart flavor. When paired with seltzer (the company sells a $30 CO2 bottle that carbonates any potable water), a 1.7-ounce packet makes a pint of refreshing pale ale. $9.95 for four packets

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The 8 Greatest GIFs Of BigDog In Action

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A Pair Of Robots On A Stroll
The LS3, a robotic pack-mule developed by Boston Dynamics, is the latest bot to be greeted with ubiquitous Terminator quips.
Boston Dynamics

The BigDog family of robots, developed by Boston Dynamics, has come a long way since it was first created in 2005. To celebrate some of the headless robot's coolest technological achievements, I made these eight GIFs. Enjoy.

Here's the first time BigDog learned how to throw things. Cinderblocks, specifically, which are less "playing fetch with a ball in the park" and more "that robot is trying to bash in my head." Nice arm, BigDog!

WildCat is BigDog's newest sibling. It likes to run really fast, and it recovers quickly when it crashes. WildCat is an evolution of Boston Dynamic's Cheetah. Aww, it's like an excited robot puppy.


LS3 (for Legged Squad Support System) is a robot attempting to be a donkey or mule. DARPA is especially interested in this one, which is why has an acronym instead of a cool animal name.

One of the most remarkable things about the original BigDog is its sense of balance, whether recovering from a slip on ice...

...or a mean kick from a human.

Sometimes BigDog has fun! Here it is playing pretend with a person. I would totally go to robot bull fights in the future.

Boston Dynamics took BigDog on a vacation to Thailand, and, like an actual living creature, the robot frolicked in the water. Here is BigDog playing in the surf.

Thanks for eight years of good times, BigDog! Please don't kill us all.


    






Deciwatt GravityLight

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Deciwatt GravityLight
GravityLight

By taking advantage of an immutable force, the GravityLight may be the most reliable electric light source of all. A person simply lifts a 22-pound bag of ballast up to the base of the device; the weight falls over a period of 30 minutes, pulling a strap that spins gears and drives a motor, which continuously powers an LED. Peripheral LEDs can be attached to focus light on certain spots. DeciWatt is field-testing units to replace kerosene lamps in developing countries and plans to sell them there for $10 next year.

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Philips Hue

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Philips Hue
Philips

How many electricians does it take to install a smart lighting system? Zero—if it’s the Hue. Homeowners just need to screw in the multicolor LED bulbs, connect a wireless hub to their router, and download an app. They can control a network of up to 50 bulbs from a smartphone or other device. $200 (hub and three bulbs)

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