A Study Reveals the Place Where Time Moves 9% Slower for Humans Finally, science has confirmed that time does slow way down when you’re inside the gym. But it’s not the boredom or the person on the next elliptical who won’t stop talking on the phone. In a small study, participants completed stationary bicycle trials and then measured 30 seconds to the best of their ability. The results show that participants were about 8-9 percent faster than the real time, indicating that the clock would have appeared to move slowly to them. originally posted at
World's first computer that combines human brain with silicon now available The CL1 computer is the first in the world that combines human neurons with a silicon chip. It could be used in disease modeling and drug discovery before it expires after six months. originally posted at
China reveals how Covid originated after being accused of a cover-up http://archive.today/5xdi7 Beijng has sensationally claimed that America not China is to blame for the Covid-19 pandemic. In a white paper released Wednesday, China's State Council Information Office suggested the virus that killed 1.2 million Americans and at least 7 million people worldwide may have originated in the United States. The document appears to be a direct rebuttal to renewed attacks from the Trump campaign, which has doubled down on claims that Covid leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) — a lab known to be conducting coronavirus experiments — calling it the only plausible explanation for the pandemic. originally posted at
Physicists unveil controversial device that generates power from Earth's spin: originally posted at
Hackers Exploited 17-year-old Vulnerability to Weaponize Word Documents Security researchers at Fortinet’s FortiGuard Labs have uncovered a sophisticated phishing campaign that uses weaponized Microsoft Word documents to deliver information-stealing malware to unsuspecting Windows users. The attack exploits a well-known vulnerability to deploy FormBook, a dangerous malware variant designed to harvest sensitive user credentials and data. originally posted at
Scientists discover elusive third type of quantum particle Researchers suggest a new class of quantum particles, paraparticles, could exist, expanding beyond the known fermions and bosons. originally posted at