Pop on a pod at Heathrow
December 12, 2011 in Blog
December 12, 2011 in Blog
November 1, 2008 in Biotechnology
In this month’s Comment Visions we journey to the cutting edge of science to discover how a greater understanding of what makes cells work could help the future of our planet.
Professor Miroslav Radman is an internationally-renowned scientist whose research has developed our understanding of genetics and molecular biology. An expert on evolutionary biotechnology, his current research examines what we can learn from the way different cells behave in nature.
Comment Visions travels to Paris to meet with Professor Radman and discuss his groundbreaking research and its potential applications. In a fascinating and wide-ranging discussion he talks about the way in which understanding and analysing processes in nature can enable us to adapt and apply them to our needs. Can understanding the smallest building blocks of life bring us closer to solving the greatest problems of our time?
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July 1, 2008 in Automation and Robotics
Solutions to the energy crisis will come from all sectors of science and technology. This month’s Comment:Visions looks at one of the most fascinating and futuristic areas of research; robotics.
Stefano Stramigioli is professor of the chair of Advanced Robotics at the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. Over the past decade he has been researching intelligent machines and their practical applications. Advanced robotics, he believes, can reap positive benefits for societies as the automation of tasks by increasingly intelligent machines grows more widespread.
A new age of robotics is coming as the next generation of machines develop from research projects into public initiatives and in this Comment Visions we ask Professor Stramigioli how he thinks this age will look. What are the practical applications of advanced robotics in a changing world and what role can robotics play in challenging the energy crisis?
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June 6, 2008 in Space Exploration
There is little doubt among experts and observers that the world’s resources are stretched and will continue to be depleted in decades to come. It is the best solution to this resource shortage that animates the debate in international society. How to keep the globe going in the face of resource shortages is a question that encompasses issues of energy, population, migration, and technology.
But what if the answers to the problems our planet is encountering do not lie on the planet at all? This month’s Comment Visions talks to Dr Athena Coustenis, an Astrophysicist who specialises in studying planetary atmospheres and is an international authority on Titan, the moon of Saturn that has long fascinated scientists due to its environmental similarities to Earth.
Discussion: Some ideas for producing energy seem completely unrealistic today, but are there, in fact, new technologies waiting to be developed that we are yet to explore?Related Content:
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