Prosthetic extensions to replace or enhance damaged or aging human body parts are becoming not only more commonplace but far more advanced – even without the use of anything more complex than mechanics. Lisa Bufano’s dance routines are full of leaps and bounds thanks to her springy replacement feet, and if you can afford a set (and wait for him to make them) Dan Didrick’s X-Finger prosthesis provides the ability to grip to those who have lost their fingers – if you have $11m to spare, he’s in desperate need of investors, by the way. It turns out Futurismic even has a cyborg contributor – essayist and foresight consultant Jamais Cascio got BoingBoinged for this story about his new hi-tech hearing aids.
Category Archives: Blog
More activity on Saturnian moons
It turns out that little Enceladus isn’t the only moon around Saturn doing more than spinning quietly in its orbit. The Cassini probe reveals that Tethys and Dione are mimicking their brother and ejecting spumes of matter into space, which may be evidence of geological activity of some sort. Of course, we’ll not know for sure until we get a proper mission ot there to land on these bodies – so let’s hope Ad Astra’s new plasma rocket continues breaking records during testing procedures. For more local transport, though, Astrium’s new space tourism vehicle would be more suited – and the design looks pretty sexy, too.
UK’s first ‘zero emission’ home designed
Hands up who’d like a home that cut their utility bills by 90%? Yeah, me too – but being a low-earner in the UK, the chances of me ever owning my own home are next to nothing, unless I happen to stumble across a huge briefcase full of unmarked used bank-notes. Should that ever happen, though, I’ll be sure to drop the lot on buying something like Kingspan’s ecologically-sound ‘zero emission’ home, the first UK building to pass level 6 of the Code for Sustainable Homes. It actually looks pretty cool, too – though in a decade’s time it’ll probably be very dated indeed.
Player of games – fame and fortune for Fatal1ty
Iain M. Banks’s classic space opera novel The Player of Games (which you should definitely read) stars a man whose skill and luck at all manner of games has earned him a galaxy-wide reputation in his civilisation. Johnathan Wendel may not be known in the far reaches of the spiral arms just yet, but as far as computer game players go, Fatal1ty (as he is known) is their equivalent of Tiger Woods – complete with dedicated training schedule, a considerable income from prize money, and a growing sports star lifestyle. Question is, how long before the first doping scandal hits professional gaming?
Your monthly serving of ‘wet Mars’ waffle
Regular readers will know how frustrated I get by the continual see-sawing about water on Mars … but it’s like a particularly thick and itchy scab I just can’t leave alone. So here we go again – remember the terrain that was too hilly to have been evidence of oceans on the Red Planet? It were disfigured by a massive warping of the Martian rock! Says one Mark Richards, “This really confirms that there was an ocean on Mars.” Right … until next month at least. It’s a shameful thing to admit, but I’m so sick of this whole business I was actually pleased to hear New Scientist had to retract the ‘puddles of liquid’ story. Can we please just get some proper damned missions out there and sort this out once and for all? Either that, or stop making dramatic sweeping announcements based on insufficient evidence?