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RSS/ATOM 記事 (67740)

ここに表示されている RSS/ATOM 記事を RSS と ATOM で配信しています。


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[ニュース] NBC災害で活躍するレスキューロボットたち〜救助支援活動のデモも  from Robot Watch  (2007-10-12 13:30) 

Enigmatic supernova smashes brightness record  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 13:03) 
An odd celestial explosion recorded two years ago has now been confirmed as the brightest supernova ever identified
Forecasters call for morning drizzle on Titan  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 3:34) 
Morning brings a drizzle of methane on the moon's brightest continent, Xanadu?meanwhile, Cassini finds lakes near the south pole
Cheaper running shoes win comfortably  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 1:12) 
Low-end athletic shoes might outperform "gimmicky" expensive ones when it comes to absorbing shock, suggests a UK study
Zero emissions needed to avert 'dangerous' warming  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 0:56) 
Only the total elimination of industrial emissions will succeed in limiting climate change to a 2°C rise in temperatures, say researchers
Pentagon backs plan to beam solar power from space  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 0:46) 
The US should spend $10 billion to build a test satellite to collect solar energy and beam it to Earth, a new Pentagon report argues
Lap dancers 'in heat' are the ones to watch  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-12 0:33) 
Take some lap dancers, some lustful men and a fistful of dollars, and you have the best evidence yet that women undergo oestrus
[ニュース] バーチャルヒューマノイドと握手できる「ASIAGRAPH 2007 in Tokyo」開催  from Robot Watch  (2007-10-12 0:00) 

'Transparent' gadget could trump iPhone interface  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-11 23:09) 
Putting a touch-sensitive zone on the back of a device, rather than in the screen, would make finger operation easier and more accurate
Language 'mutations' affect least-used words  from New Scientist - Latest Headlines  (2007-10-11 20:24) 
Frequently spoken words tend to remain unaltered, while rarer ones mutate, show studies?researchers even predict which words will change next



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