Programmable fluid...... Read “The hidden message of water”
Ron Immink
I empower innovative, purpose driven companies by crafting compelling visions for the future. Make them more compelling for all stakeholders. Strategist, positive futurist, coach, advisor, mentor, author and speaker.
Situational awareness is a key component of strategy development. If any of the scenario prompts are relevant, come as a surprise, and you have not considered how to respond, you should sign up for my four-step strategy development programme. See https://www.ronimmink.com/strategy-development/
The topics are desalinisation, Gin, understanding animals (spiders), programmable fluid, cognitive digital twins and growing mini livers.
Programmable fluid. Read “The hidden message of water”
New Solar-Powered Desalinator Keeps Producing Clean Water Without Needing Sunshine
https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/new-solar-powered-desalinator-keeps-producing-clean-water-without-needing-sunshine/?
It works through a process called electrodialysis which separates the salt using a set of specialized membranes that channel salt ions into a stream of brine, leaving the water fresh and drinkable.
Science Is Here to Clean Up the Wild West of Gin
A fingerprinting technique similar to MRI scanning is finally revealing what makes the ultimate gin. Will it be a blessing or a curse for an unregulated industry drunk on innovation?
Spider conversations decoded with the help of machine learning and contact microphones
A new approach to monitoring arachnid behavior could help understand their social dynamics, as well as their habitat’s health.
Harvard team engineers shape-shifting metafluid that can program robots
The metafluid is programmable……. Read https://www.ronimmink.com/water-and-consciousness-read-these-two-books-and-you-will-never-be-the-same/
Cognitive Digital Twins are a Leap Forward
But as technology evolves, so does our capacity to imbue digital replicas with a previously unimaginable layer of intelligence
‘Mini liver’ will grow in person’s own lymph node in bold new trial
Biotechnology firm LyGenesis has injected donor cells into a person with liver failure for the first time.