Students Shoot for 2,500 MPG. Seriously
The car runs, so there is that.
But as the Cal Super Mileage Vehicle Team loaded its ultralight carbon-fiber three-wheeler into a trailer for the long haul from Berkeley to Houston, Murphy was definitely in the driver's seat. Anything that could go wrong did — and did so in the last 12 hours before the team was to leave for the Shell Eco-marathon.
The Eco-marathon is a race, of sorts. The only goal is doing 10 laps around a Houston park at an average speed of 15 mph while consuming the teeniest, tiniest amount of energy possible.
Last year's winners, from Laval University in Quebec, achieved a...
April 15, 1726: Apple Doesn't Fall Far From Physicist
1726: Isaac Newton tells a biographer the story of how an apple falling in his garden prompted him to develop his law of universal gravitation. It will become an enduring origin story in the annals of science, and it may even be true.
Newton was apparently fond of telling the tale, but written sources do not reveal a specific date for the fabled fruit-fall. We do know that on this day in 1726, William Stukeley talked with Newton in the London borough of Kensington, and Newton told him how, many years before, the idea had occurred to him.
As recounted in Stukeley’s Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton’s L...
Alt Text: Artifical Dumbness Will Trigger Spam Apocalypse
Standard Futuristic Dystopia #43-C: Artificial superintelligence takes over humanity by force and enslaves us into forced labor or worse.
This is a time-honored scenario, reworked into stories from R.U.R. to Wall-E. It’s also slightly less likely than Standard Futuristic Dystopia #683-A: “Pyrokinetic produce incinerates the world’s supermarkets.”
But what about reality? When, in history, has intelligence done more harm than mindlessness? Countries have been cowed into obeisance by the strong, the merciless, the charismatic and the rich, but rarely do you see a résumé that includes both i...