Monday, December 27, 2010

Today's Tech News - Travel through time with 'Back to the Future' game

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A scanning electron micrograph of Halomonadaceae bacteria strain, a salt-loving bacteria which comes from the toxic and briny Mono Lake in California. The bacterium thrives on arsenic and redefines life as we know it, NASA-funded researchers reported.
 
Arsenic microbe answers a long way off
By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY
"In scientific controversies, fights that challenge existing knowledge take several years to settle, at least," says scientific communication expert Dominique Brossard of the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Planck's distance from today's world, filled with battling blogs, turbulent tweets and pugnacious press conferences, doesn't make his message matter any less, Brossard suggests, as we ponder the latest high-profile hullabaloo in science NASA's arsenic microbe kerfuffle. Read more
Technology Live
A camera bag that doubles as portable studio; RSS feed.
Game Hunters
First impressions: 'Dead Space 2' demo; RSS feed.
Science Fair
Neanderthal cousins genome reaction; RSS feed
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