Quite the tension from China's numbers. Growth rebounds to 5% but population numbers are the disaster we've always known.
They also apparently don't really plan on stopping at all, and to cope with US tariffs with incur a 2025 deficit of 4% (with growth targets still at 5%).
This year will see several African countries consolidate their return to a growth trajectory in the aftermath of COVID, even as security challenges in the Horn and Sahel endure.
Anyone wondering what an invasion of Taiwan might look like now has a fresh visual clue. Defence analysts watching Chinese shipyards have noticed an increase in a particular type of vessel. A number of special and unusual barges, at least 3 but likely 5 or more, have been observed in Guangzhou Shipyard in southern China with large (essentially) roads protruding from them, which would make a Taiwan invasion much easier, bypassing entirely their beaches.
Microsoft researchers introduce MatterGen, a model that can discover new materials tailored to specific needs—like efficient solar cells or CO2 recycling—advancing progress beyond trial-and-error. Pretty epic stuff.
Instead of screening the candidates, it directly generates novel materials given prompts of the design requirements for an application. It can generate materials with desired chemistry, mechanical, electronic, or magnetic properties, as well as combinations of different constraints.
By using MRI brain scans to identify regions linked to hand movements and sensations, researchers were able to restore a sense of touch to two people with paralysis – and one was able to control and feel a robot arm using his thoughts.
A completely new polymer structure, the first 2D mechanically interlocked polymer, which contains 100 trillion mechanical bonds per 1 square centimeter — the highest density of mechanical bonds ever achieved.
This tool works by controlling the shape and permeability of the giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs), which are simple, cell-sized structures that mimic living cells.
There are some times when commonly accepted wisdom seems completely insane, at least to me. Modern evolution theory is like this: the fact that I'm supposed to believe that evolution happens only though random gene mutations and we then just select for the best one is, to me, insane. Most species would have gone extinct waiting for their perfect gene for their perfect evolutionary need.
Finally it's now ok to have a discussion on the developmental theory of evolution. Going to read this book this year.