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MSNBC.com: Technology & Science
'Speed Racer' car faces reality check

COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PHOTOGRAPHS TO BE USED SOLELY FOR ADVERTISING, PROMOTION, PUBLICITY OR REVIEWS OF THIS SPECIFIC MOTION PICTURE AND TO REMAIN THE PROPERTY OF THE STUDIO. NOT FOR SALE OR REDISTRIBUTIONThe technology for the individual features already exists, including military drones to send for help. But engineering, testing and producing all the car's special features would cost millions of dollars, she added.



Are the rovers cut out to detect alien life?

Scientists at the University of Leicester find that the more instruments a robotic explorer uses, the better it is at finding signs of life.



Astronaut laughs it up for 'Colbert Report'

American astronaut Garrett Reisman smiles while describing space living with comedian Stephen Colbert during a May 8, 2008 taping of the 'Colbert Report' from aboard the ISS. His Colbert-supporting Wrist Strong bracelet is visible at on his right hand (left side of image).NASA astronaut Garrett Reisman squeezed in some laughs amid his busy day aboard the international space station Thursday during an orbital call from comedian Stephen Colbert.



Dirt problem overlooked in food crisis

Farm laborers plant rice seedlings at the experimental plots of the International Rice Research Institute, IRRI, at Los Banos, Laguna province 70 kilometers (43 miles) south of Manila, Philippines Saturday May 3, 2008. IRRI scientists are working on better ways to improve rice yields through better soil and water management. Started in 1963, IRRI, planted Saturday its 133rd crop in long term trials in plots with zero fertilizer and nitrogen. Science has provided the souped-up seeds to feed the world, through biotechnology and old-fashioned crossbreeding. Now the problem is the dirt they're planted in.



Facebook, states set predator safeguards
Facebook, the world's second-largest social networking Web site, will add more than 40 new safeguards to protect young users from sexual predators and cyberbullies, attorneys general from several states said Thursday.
Games don't create killers, book says

Playing video games does not turn children into deranged, blood-thirsty super-killers, according to a new book by a pair of Harvard researchers.



How 'GTA IV' trounced 'Iron Man'

A customer checks out a copy of Grand Theft Auto IV inside a GameStop store in Chicago Tuesday, April 29, 2008, after the long-awaited title from developer Rockstar Games was released today. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)While vying for similar audiences at the same time, "Grand Theft Auto IV" bested "Iron Man" by about $300 million in their respective first weeks on the small and big screens.



Is Mother Nature acting out?

This image provided by NASA's MODIS instrument on board the Aqua satellite shows Cyclone Nargis in the Bay of Bengal Friday May 2, 2008. The image shows the storm traveling over Myanmar, with the storm's well-defined eye visible just off the western coast. When the storm made landfall at Cape Negrais, Nargis had sustained winds of up to 130 mph and gusts of 150-160 mph, making the storm a strong Category 3 or minimal Category 4.  Damage and casualties from Myanmar have not yet been reported. (AP Photo/NASA)The recent Midwestern quake and temblors near Reno and the Myanmar cyclone were just another day for Planet Earth.



Killer storms around the world

Myanmar cyclone ranks among the deadliest Asian storms in modern times. Here are nine more of the deadliest storms since 1970, plus the deadliest hurricane in U.S. history.



Mixed-up platypus genome unscrambled

The ancient, patchworked platypus is a relatively unchanged animal that may be a scientific boon for researchers, who are learning a lot from its recently decoded genome about mammalian gene regulation and immune systems, which could have huge implications for human disease susceptibility research.The platypus sports fur like a mammal, paddles its duck feet like a bird and lays eggs in the manner of a reptile. Nature's instruction manual for this oddball, it turns out, is just as much of a mishmash.



N.C. TV market to make early switch to digital
The Federal Communications Commission on Thursday formally announced that the North Carolina TV market on would be the first to switch from analog signals to an all-digital format.
Panel chair offers network neutrality bill
The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee on Thursday introduced legislation that would bar network providers from discriminating against some Internet content.
Perils of the pocket call
Pocket calling, the accidental dialing of a cell phone, is an all-too-common 21st-century phenomenon. It's not hard to find anecdotes of pocket calls placed during the most embarrassing and intimate moments.
Readers respond: Some are printing less now

Brother's HL-2140 monochrome laser printer in one of the company's personal laser printers on the market. It retails for $120, and prints 23 pages per minute.When it comes to printers and printing, some of you are going green and saving green. Thats what you said in e-mail responses to questions about whether youre printing more now at home than you did a year ago, or even five years ago.



Safer alternatives to standard earbuds

AirDrives earphones go on the outer ear, so that sound isn't directly pummeled into the inner ear.With a growing number of young people plugged into digital music players, hearing loss is a concern. A number of companies have come up with earphones that are safer to use.



Seaweed solves ancient American mystery

Remains of meals that included seaweed are helping confirm the date of a settlement in southern Chile that may offer the earliest evidence of humans in the Americas.



Shop like your favorite star on this Web site

Launched on Wednesday, the site helps you identify and eventually to buy virtually any product featured in your favorite shows and movies or used by a celebrity.



Top 5 hardest levels in video games

As much fun as video games are, they can also be incredibly frustrating. Its infuriating to play and replay (and replay) a level. But it's so gratifying once you beat it!



What's Microsoft's next move for search?

** FILE ** In this March 3, 2008 file photo, Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft, addresses the media during a news conference at the CeBIT in Hanover, northern Germany.  Without the influx of Web traffic Microsoft bet would quickly follow a Yahoo buyout, the software maker is facing a long slog if it wants to turn its money-losing online services business into a Google-killer. (AP Photo/Joerg Sarbach, file)Without the influx of Web traffic that Microsoft bet would quickly follow a Yahoo buyout, the software maker is facing a long slog if it wants to turn its money-losing online services business into a Google-killer.



When E.T. phoned home, where did he call?

Where might extraterrestrial life lurk? Check out eight of the most promising prospects, ranging from Mars to distant stars.



Which games hooked you and why?
Two weeks ago, I asked gamers what made games addictive. Hundreds of you wrote to tell me why and which games had hooked you.
Your boss declares martial law on Facebook

Where would these United States be if the first Continental Congress convened to efficiently jot down a petition to King George delineating the colony rights and grievances, but never got around to it because they got too distracted poking Betsey Ross and checking out Thomas Jeffersons Twitter feed?




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