A robotic doctor is gearing up for action0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- July 5, 2017
A robotic doctor that can be controlled hundreds of kilometres away by a human counterpart is gearing up for action.

A robotic doctor that can be controlled hundreds of kilometres away by a human counterpart is gearing up for action.

Robots are paving the way toward lucrative space mining as NASA and private startups launch pioneering prospecting missions to precious metal-rich asteroids.

CERN and the Large Hadron Collider depend on a massive computer grid, as does the global network of scientists who use LHC data. CERN scientists are now teaching an AI system to protect the grid from cyber threats using machine learning.




Stories and tales about gigantic beings inhabiting the Earth occur in almost all ancient cultures and civilizations.

Seven hundred years ago, Timbuktu was a dream destination for scholars, traders, and religious men. At the southern edge of the Sahara desert in what is now Mali, travelers from Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, Egypt, and Morocco met in the bygone metropolis to exchange gold, salt, and ideas. According to a description of Timbuktu in 1526 by the diplomat Leo Africanus, “more profit is to be made there from the sale of books than from any other branch of trade.”

Since the mid-1990s, when the first planet around another sun-like star was discovered, astronomers have been amassing what is now a large collection of exoplanets—nearly 3,500 have been confirmed so far.





























































