Science & Technology
A group of researchers working at the Human Genome Project indicate that they made an astonishing scientific discovery: They believe so-called 97% non-coding sequences in human DNA is no less than genetic code of extraterrestrial life forms.
Comment: Although this article claims that scientists have found ET's genes in our DNA, it offers no proof. It spends most of its time rehashing old stories.
Sala, the founder of the Expolitics Institute, was at one time associated with Eric Julien, well-known in France in certain circles for his hoaxes -- such as the
Cosmic Spam message of several years ago.
It's articles like this that discredit any attempt to look at these questions critically, but with an open mind.
From the moment they started to pull data from their machines, their findings produced fascinating information about one of the most conspicuous aspects of the British and Irish population: our redheads. Whether they are called carrot-tops, ginger-heads or "Titian blondes", these people are blessed - or cursed, according to some of them - with flaming locks that have been a feature of people for millenniums, from Boudicca to Prince Harry.
Beijing,-- A U.S. scientist has advanced a theory about life on Mars that has members of a National Research Council panel nicknamed the "weird life" committee nodding their heads -- slightly -- and may entice NASA to look in a different direction.
BEIJING, Jan. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Astronomers have created the first three-dimensional map of the large-scale distribution of dark matter in the universe, according to the journal Nature on Monday.
In
Collapse: How Societies Choose To Fail or Succeed, Jared Diamond sets out to determine what causes a society to fail and eventually collapse. The five factors that Diamond believes drive societal failure are: hostile neighbors, loss of trading partners, environmental damage, climatic change, and how societies respond to these potentially devastating environmental problems. The general assumption is that civilizations evolve from benign environments that sustain what we may consider a natural state of being, but where poor resource management will lead to certain failure. The point has been received well by many who believe
Collapse to be an adequate exploration of societal failure. And yet the subsequent arrival of another hypothesis has turned Diamond's theory on its head by arguing that climate change doesn't always spell the end for civilizations, but can actually drive the formation of complex and sophisticated societies.
A magnetic resonance imaging machine at the University of Illinois at Chicago tracks neurons in a way that reveals how real-time thoughts form, a report says.
The Chicago Tribune said the machine is one of the world's most advanced MRI machines. Scientists said the machine's ability to reveal real-time thoughts by tracking the firing of individual neurons in the brain could lead to a major breakthrough in the diagnosis of strokes, autism, Alzheimer's and other disorders.
Comment: No kidding...
The fossil bones of what may have been Europe's largest animal ever, a new type of dinosaur, have been discovered in Spain. Discovery of the sauropod, estimated to have weighed between 40 and 48 tons, is reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.
Named Turiasaurus riodevensis, the animal lived in the Teruel area of what is now Spain in the late Jurassic period, about 150 million years ago.
Mark Ward
BBC NewsMon, 01 Jan 2007 12:42 UTC
It is often said the only constant in the world of hi-tech is change - a fact that makes prediction notoriously difficult. But here three tech veterans give their view about what will drive change over the next 12 months and beyond.
There is little doubt that 2006 was the year that web users started to flex their muscle.
Although everyone is familiar with web giants such as Google, Yahoo and Amazon, the last 12 months have shown that their reign at the top is perhaps not going to last forever.
In 2006 it was YouTube, MySpace, Bebo, Facebook and many other social sites that grabbed the headlines.
The focus on users and online communities will continue in 2007 said Kathy Johnson from Consort Partners - a Silicon Valley-based firm that advises start-ups targeting the so-called Web 2.0 space.
For more than 30 years, patent sleuth Barry Fox has trawled the US patent applications for New Scientist. Here we provide a round-up of his most interesting, surprising and sometimes alarming, discoveries of 2006.
Tariq Malik
space.comFri, 29 Dec 2006 12:00 UTC
A giant, 40 stories tall wave could one day drench the eastern United States, the result of an asteroid-driven tsunami. However seaside dwellers need not move just yet, the asteroid isn't due for another eight centuries.
Researchers in California have developed a computer simulation depicting the ocean impact of the asteroid 1950 DA, a half-mile wide (1.1-kilometer) space rock that swings uncomfortably close to Earth in 2880. Although the probability of such an impact is remote to say the least -- astronomers estimate it to be somewhere around 0.3 percent -- the computer model does give researchers insight into the destructive power of tsunamis caused by near-earth objects.
Comment: Although this article claims that scientists have found ET's genes in our DNA, it offers no proof. It spends most of its time rehashing old stories.
Sala, the founder of the Expolitics Institute, was at one time associated with Eric Julien, well-known in France in certain circles for his hoaxes -- such as the Cosmic Spam message of several years ago.
It's articles like this that discredit any attempt to look at these questions critically, but with an open mind.