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Final Round: What Is The Most Important Invention Of The Last 25 Years?

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Vote on the final matchup in our Best of What's New bracket!

Graphic by Katie Peek

Welcome to the final round of our bout!

There was no shortage of impassioned debate when we gathered to anoint the top 25 innovations in the history of Best of What's New. But a dozen editors locked in a room can only get you so far. How do you rank the best of the best - the iPhone versus the Large Hadron Collider, the TiVo versus the Chunnel? How do you name the one product that has affected more, lasting change than all others? That friends, calls for a smackdown.

We've been tallying your votes through five rounds of head-to-head matchups (thanks to our friends over at Grantland whose Wire character smackdown inspired us). The ultimate goal: to name the most important product of the last quarter century.

We move on now to the last round: Wi-Fi versus the Human Genome Project! You may cast only one vote, so deliberate carefully. This poll will close Sunday, December 16, at 16:00 Eastern time.





Pasta And Bamboo Reimagined As Bacteria And DNA

Sculptures Reimagine Pasta And Bamboo As Bacteria And DNA

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Blue BacteriumSinead Foley
Artist Sinead Foley remakes kitchen goods, modeling them on the microscopic.


Click to enter the gallery

We only know a few things about these sculptural interpretations of the microscopic world from artist Sinead Foley. 1) The bacteria and cells are made mostly from everyday objects, like pasta. 2) The results are surprisingly detailed (maybe done through 3-D modeling?). 3) Every photo is stunning. Be sure to check out Foley's tumblr for more projects.

[The Main Dish]



How Many Model Rockets Would You Need To Get To Space? [Infographic]

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XKCD Explains What We've All Been Wondering About Model Rockets
A lot of them! And that's just if you know how to stack them for optimal use.

Today, the always-great web-comic XKCD gets Wile E. Coyote on everyone by explaining how many model rockets you'd need to shoot a rocket into space. (Spoiler: you will need several model rockets.)

The creator of XKCD, Randall Munroe, is a former NASA roboticist, and he gives a pretty straight-faced answer on the necessary number of model rockets (65,000-ish) and the best way to arrange them (layer-upon-layer).

So it can be done! But that's just enough to make it to space--making it to orbit on model rockets is a tougher proposition. Basically, you'd need a gigantic model-rocket spacecraft. And as Munroe writes: "If it went up in flames--which it would--it would break the record for the largest manmade non-nuclear explosion in history."

Maybe just buy a ticket to space instead.

[XKCD]



BeerSci: 6 Gift Ideas For Aspiring Homebrewers

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Beersci!Todd Detweiler
BeerSci's complete guide to the brew kits, books, and oak barrels needed to make tasty beer at home

As a homebrewer, I field many questions from curious beer fans on how to start homebrewing, including what kind of equipment and supplies one needs to buy. Because we're at the height of the gift-giving season, I figured I would channel some of that advice into a holiday gift guide covering what to buy current or aspiring homebrewers. I'd be lying if I said that a couple of these items weren't on my personal wish list. (You hear that, Mom? Oak barrels!) Happy shopping, and don't forget the immortal words of homebrew guru Charlie Papazian when the holiday rush gets overwhelming: Relax. Don't Worry. Have a homebrew.

Tune in almost every week for a new installment of BeerSci, the column that pops the cap off the science of brewing.



Adorable Beagle Diagnoses Deadly Infections By Sniffing You

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Cliff The Dogvia BMJ
Cliff the beagle can sniff out a dangerous bacterium just by smelling patients--no stool sample or long lab analysis necessary.

In hospitals, a nasty little bacterium called Clostridium difficile causes problems for patients--it's highly infectious and can cause diarrhea among people who are already sick. Diagnosing whether a patient has C. diff, as it's called, requires a stool sample, which can take days to analyze. So scientists at the VU University Medical Centre in Amsterdam trained a beagle named Cliff to sniff out the nasty bacterium. The craziest part? Cliff doesn't need to sniff stool samples--he can tell just by walking up to a patient as the patient lies in bed.

You can read the full study over at BMJ.



Who Were The First Organisms To Live On Land?

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Life in the Ediacaran Sea?Ryan Somma
Most scientists give the credit to a group of mossy swamp-dwellers that originated underwater, but new evidence points to a mysterious life-form that lived--and died--millions of years earlier.

A new paper out in the journal Nature this week has stirred up an old debate among geologists about when, exactly, life on Earth first colonized dry land.

The conventional viewpoint is that the first terrestrial life migrated out of the water about 430 million years ago, in the midst of a period known as the "Cambrian Explosion of Life"--an evolutionary heyday when favorable conditions allowed life to swell and branch into most of the major forms in existence today. During this time, the theory goes, a group of freshwater plants inched their way onto muddy shores and into swamps and watery lowlands, and true land plants evolved from there. Before that, there was nothing living on the land.

But that's not what Gregory Retallack, a geologist at the University of Oregon, thinks. Instead, Retallack argues that that the very first landlubbers belonged to an extinct group of organisms called Ediacara, which last lived on Earth some hundred million years before the rise of amphibious plants.

The Ediacara's lack of living ancestors makes it a hard group of organisms to learn about. The clues that do exist come from the physical traces the Ediacara left behind. Those fossils suggest that they were small tubular or frond-shaped creatures, and that they first evolved some 630 million years ago at the end of an extraordinarily cold ice age, and that they disappeared about 90 million years later, right as the Cambrian period and its explosion were getting started.

But Ediacara's faint remains also leave a lot of room for interpretation, as evidenced by the current controversy. When Retallack's colleagues examine the fossils and their surrounding sediment, they see the outlines of marine animals articulated in hardened mud from the ocean floor. But when Retallack looks at Ediacara fossils, he sees traces of lichens, surrounded by the kind of rock that forms, not in the ocean, but on dry land.

Retallack's Ediacara-first hypothesis is definitely the minority viewpoint, but--to quote EO Wilson paraphrasing Schopenhauer, "All truths--if that's what you're dealing with--are met first with ridicule, then with outrage, and finally with acceptance, saying 'Well, it's essentially what we knew all along.'"



A Geographic Guide To American Mass Shootings

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Mass Shootings MapMother Jones and Google

Depressingly, Mother Jones already created a map of mass shootings in America the last time we had one, so it was all ready to go when news of this morning's shooting in a Connecticut elementary school broke. By their tally, there have been 61 mass murders in the past 30 years. It's important not to forget them. See the map here.


How Roald Amundsen Won The Race To The Bottom Of The World

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Roald AmundsenWikimedia Commons
On this day in 1911, Roald Amundsen became the first explorer to reach the South Pole. From the Popular Science archives, this is the story of "the last of the vikings."

On December 14, 1911, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen's five-man expedition arrived at the South Pole on skis and dogsleds, beating Robert F. Scott's ill-fated team by a month. Amundsen, who left medical school at age 21 for a life at sea, was also the first person to cross the North Pole by airship and the first to traverse Canada's Northwest Passage.

After he disappeared trying to rescue a fellow explorer in 1928, Popular Science published a tribute to the lost adventurer, calling him "the last of the vikings" who, of all humans, "alone had stood at both frozen tips of our spinning world."

As a Boy Scout of today hunts out sparse woodland near our cities to practice "frontier" life, so young Amundsen practiced living as an Arctic explorer. He began to train his body to endure hardships. Because he insisted upon sleeping with his windows wide open to the blasts of a Norwegian winter, he was regarded as a freak by neighbors...

Read the full story of Amundsen's boyhood, and his famous expeditions, in our December 1928 issue.

Watch: Asteroid Toutatis Twirling Through Space During Earth Flyby

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NASA scientists use radar to make a video of a rock four million miles away

The three-mile-long chunk of space rock that swung past Earth early this week never got closer than a distance of about four million miles, but NASA scientists still managed to catch it on tape.

On December 12 and 13, scientists aimed NASA's Goldstone Solar System Radar precisely at the passing asteroid, and used the returning radio-waves to build detailed pictures of the object's surface. They then assembled all those still frames into two short video clips.

There's just something amazing about watching a rock spin through space millions of miles away:



A Nest Made For People And Other Amazing Photos Of The Week

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A Nest For Humans Studio 1984 designed this human "nest" for a competition where the challenge was to create a dwelling made from natural components. Various types of wood were used, but the most important parts were carefully placed bales of straw. Studio 1984 via Co.Design
Including surreal pictures of food, a rarely seen "singing" dog, and more


Click to enter the gallery



How Do Rampage Killings Affect Our Opinions On Gun Control?

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P14-45 HandgunWikimedia Commons

During his tearful address to the nation today, President Obama said we need to take "meaningful action to prevent tragedies" like the one that left 20 children and 7 adults dead in a Connecticut elementary school this morning. And on Twitter, the public's grief-mingled outrage is being directed largely @NRA. Sadly, this is something we're getting used to as a nation--everyone expects to hear a few calls for more gun control laws right after somebody goes on a rampage and shoots lots of our fellow Americans. But then what? How do those events affect the way Americans, in general, feel about gun laws? According to this story at Quartz, they don't.



This Week In The Future: Fish On Land, Wolves In The Sky

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This Week In The Future, December 10-14, 2012Baarbarian
In the future, the great Pixel Wolves Of The Sky will look down below on the mutated fish. The wolves will be hungry but also weirded out.

Want to win this mutational Baarbarian illustration on a T-shirt? It's easy! The rules: Follow us on Twitter (we're @PopSci) and retweet our This Week in the Future tweet. One of those lucky retweeters will be chosen to receive a custom T-shirt with this week's Baarbarian illustration on it, thus making the winner the envy of friends, coworkers and everyone else with eyes. (Those who would rather not leave things to chance and just pony up some cash for the T-shirt can do that here.) The stories pictured herein:

And don't forget to check out our other favorite stories of the week:



What The Research Says About "Rampage Violence"

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Studies of "rampage violence" have only been around for about a decade, but researchers are still working hard to understand and prevent it. Here's the current state of the field.

It's only been about a decade since psychological research has begun looking at what's increasingly being called "rampage violence," of the type that led to this morning's elementary school shooting in Connecticut as well as this year's shooting in Aurora, CO, and so many more. They are all separate events, but the psychological community has begun to attempt to analyze them as a whole to see if we can better understand why these "rampages" happen--and if there's a way to prevent them.

Journalist's Resource rounds up a whole bunch of these studies, which attempt to nail down such specifics as the motivation, the aesthetics, the specific classification, and the attitudes of the shooters in these events. "The ‘Pseudocommando' Mass Murderer: Part I, The Psychology of Revenge and Obliteration," for example, identifies a type of murderer "who kills in public during the daytime, plans his offense well in advance, and comes prepared with a powerful arsenal of weapons. He has no escape planned and expects to be killed during the incident."

A few other studies try to predict the dangerousness of various people perceived to be at risk of displaying this kind of behavior, a few look at the post-traumatic effects on those who have survived or known victims in shootings, and there are also a couple oddballs. One compares support for gun rights with support for gay marriage, and one takes an aggregated look at studies comparing violence with videogames.

And of course you have to take these with a grain of salt; it's a new area of study, and one which requires a lot of guesswork and shaky connections. But examining these events from a psychological perspective could hopefully give us clues in the future that could help stop them from occurring.

[Journalist's Resource]



To Pinpoint Audio Evidence, UK Police Record 7 Years Of Background Noise

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The electrical hum in the background of a call can identify precisely when it happened.

Metropolitan police in London have been recording the hum of the nation's electrical grid for the last seven years, the BBC reports. And not just for fun: fluctuations in the sound enable audio forensic experts to pinpoint the time when any digital recording--of, say, a phone call--was made.

The hum varies subtly, a matter of millihertz, due to power demand and supply, so that there is a consistent signature associated with any point in time since the recording has begun. Simultaneously, any other recording that's made in the vicinity of a power line or appliance picks up the faint hum in the background.

By matching the hum in the background of a telephone recording with the master record of all electrical humming over the last seven years, the police can ascertain the exact time when the recording was made. This Electric Network Frequency analysis can verify the provenance and continuity of a recording as well, and has held up as crucial evidence in UK court.

[BBC]




Video: Arctic Fox Cubs Practice Their Pounces

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Learning skills that will be invaluable in later foxhood

The BBC's new television show "Snow Babies" (premiering next week) explores the lives of baby animals in cold places -- penguins, reindeer, polar bears, and others. This preview video follows a family of Arctic foxes to see what the youngsters do when their parents aren't supervising. The answer: dramatic vertical pounce play.



And The Winner Is...

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Your choice for the most important invention of the last 25 years Graphic by Katie Peek

Our five-round bracket is done, and the people have spoken. The most important invention of the last 25 years?

The Human Genome Project!


The HGP defeated Wi-Fi, the International Space Station, Viagra, and even seedless watermelons to take the title. Congratulations, Human Genome Project.



Google Hires Ray Kurzweil To Head Its Engineering Lab

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Kurzweil: Now With GoogleEd Schipul via Wikimedia
The futurist and inventor famous for his predictions on the technological singularity will be Google's new chief of turning the theoretical future into consumer products.

The singularity is nearer. Or, if you take the viewpoint of Technology Review, maybe the singularity is dead, now that Google has hired Ray Kurzweil to lead its engineering lab.

The futurist, sci-fi writer and genius inventor is perhaps best known for popularizing and proselytizing the idea of the singularity, when greater-than-human intelligence will be achieved technologically. Kurzweil isn't just a theorist, however, and he's actually a pretty natural fit for Google. Some of the things he has been predicting for years (if there's one thing Kurzweil has been reliably good at over the years, it's technological predictions) are now realities in Google's labs--things like self-driving cars, machine learning algorithms, and speech recognition programs that could answer verbal questions. Kurzweil himself has invented various technologies, including software that wrote original music (he was just 14 at the time) and, notably, a print-to-speech reading machine that put him on the map as one of modern technology's great thinkers and developers.

At Google, Kurzweil will take the title of Director of Engineering, where he will be in charge of shaping the future by turning some of Google's (and his own) most forward-leaning ideas into consumer products. That's pretty exciting, given both Google's and Kurzweil's track records. According to Kurzweil's blog, he'll clock in at Google starting this morning.

[Kurzweil]



5 Petitions For Things Less Important To National Prosperity Than A Death Star

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Death StarYouTube
So much is less important, obviously. But these things especially.

The people have spoken. A White House petition to begin construction of a Death Star by 2016 has reached the 25,000-signature threshold, meaning the White House now has to respond.

President Obama: We've entreated you to tackle some significant science and tech issues before, but now we really need your help. And, anyhow, look at all of these things that are way, WAY less important than the construction of a Death Star.

Texas wants to secede, for example.

First of all, Texas, cut it out. Second of all, go ahead and secede, and when we have a Death Star, surely you will reconsider your position.

Also Louisiana wants to secede.

A lot of other states, actually.

Nationalizing the Twinkie industry has been proposed, too, and while that's clearly an endeavor worthy of presidential consideration, there is still no way that deserves the attention of a Death Star. Why are we bailing out the confection industry one-percenters when so many jobs would be created by the construction of a Death Star?

And Anna Wintour is being considered for the position of ambassador to somewhere, which more than 4,000 people apparently do not like. Not even close to Death Star worthiness.

Folks against mandatory vaccinations are also making a petition, but even they must agree that a Death Star is a great improvement to Homeland Security.

Mr. President: We recognize the naysayers who claim this project will cost 13,000 times the world's GDP, and find their lack of faith disturbing. We patiently await word on the government's progress.



Paralyzed Woman Can Eat A Chocolate Bar, With Graceful Mind-Controlled Prosthetic Arm

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The World's Most Dexterous Mind-Controlled Prosthetic ArmUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center
University of Pittsburgh researchers have allowed a paralyzed woman to pick up and reorient objects--and even feed herself--by controlling a robotic arm with her thoughts.

Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have created a prosthetic arm that is the most sophisticated mind-controlled prosthesis ever created. Using a mix of cutting edge hardware and complex programming, the team has enabled a 52-year-old woman paralyzed from the neck down by a degenerative neurological disorder to move a robotic arm and hand with a degree of nuance and fluidity never before seen.

That's not just a boon for the prosthetics community of course, but for the whole discipline of brain-machine interfaces--a field that is enjoying both an influx of funding (in the wake of two wars that have seen many soldiers lose appendages to improvised explosive devices) and huge leaps in capability thanks to better algorithms that can translate brain signals into the appropriate mechanical movements.

The U. of Pittsburgh arm relies on just two microelectrodes implanted in the patient's left motor cortex based on functional MRI scans that pinpointed the exact nerve clusters that lit up when they asked the patient to think about moving her arm and hand. A complex set of algorithms then turns the brain signals into their corresponding movements, allowing the patient to not only move the arm but to pick up and reorient objects--with a 91.6 percent rate of success (video here). She was even able to feed herself a chocolate bar. It took her just two weeks to gain full control of the hand (though she was able to move it after just two days), and her speed increased with practice, suggesting that both the algorithms and the human brain are capable of improving performance of these kinds of brain-machine interfaces over time.

The next steps will be to incorporate wireless technology into the system and perhaps integrate some kind of sensory data into the systems so the patient can feel things like temperature, texture, and pressure.

[Reuters]



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