Mega Man 2 (1988): Mega Man rockt

Ein blauer Pixelroboter erobert im Golem retro_ die Welt – mit seiner farbenfrohen Grafik und einem der besten Soundtracks der 80er. Von Martin Wolf (golem retro_, Capcom)

Ein blauer Pixelroboter erobert im Golem retro_ die Welt - mit seiner farbenfrohen Grafik und einem der besten Soundtracks der 80er. Von Martin Wolf (golem retro_, Capcom)

Blu-ray, 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending November 11, 2023

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 11, 2023, are in. A popular video game series turned movie is the top-seller for the week. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 11, 2023, are in. A popular video game series turned movie is the top-seller for the week. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

A locally grown solution for period poverty

A Kenyan tinkerer and Stanford engineer team up to make maxi pads from agave fibers.

Image of rows of succulents with long spiky leaves and large flower stalks.

Enlarge / Sisal is an invasive species that is also grown agriculturally. (credit: Chris Hellier)

Women and girls across much of the developing world lack access to menstrual products. This means that for at least a week or so every month, many girls don’t go to school, so they fall behind educationally and often never catch up economically. 

Many conventional menstrual products have traditionally been made of hydrogels made from toxic petrochemicals, so there has been a push to make them out of biomaterials. But this usually means cellulose from wood, which is in high demand for other purposes and isn’t readily available in many parts of the globe. So Alex Odundo found a way to solve both of these problems: making maxi pads out of sisal, a drought-tolerant agave plant that grows readily in semi-arid climates like his native Kenya.

Putting an invasive species to work

Sisal is an invasive plant in rural Kenya, where it is often planted as livestock fencing and feedstock. It doesn’t require fertilizer, and its leaves can be harvested all year long over a five- to seven-year span. Odundo and his partners in Manu Prakash’s lab at Stanford University developed a process to generate soft, absorbent material from the sisal leaves. It relies on treatment with dilute peroxyformic acid (1 percent) to increase its porosity, followed by washing in sodium hydroxide (4 percent) and then spinning in a tabletop blender to enhance porosity and make it softer. 

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Renault: VW prüft Allianz für 20.000-Euro-E-Auto

Wie aus Konzernkreisen zu hören ist, erwägt Volkswagen eine Kooperation mit Renault bei der Entwicklung eines Elektroautos zum Kampfpreis von 20.000 Euro. (Elektroauto, Auto)

Wie aus Konzernkreisen zu hören ist, erwägt Volkswagen eine Kooperation mit Renault bei der Entwicklung eines Elektroautos zum Kampfpreis von 20.000 Euro. (Elektroauto, Auto)

DoS-Schwachstellen: Angreifer können 714 Smartphone-Modelle vom 5G-Netz trennen

Forscher haben mehrere Schwachstellen in gängigen 5G-Modems offengelegt. Damit können Angreifer vielen Smartphone-Nutzern 5G-Verbindungen verwehren. (Sicherheitslücke, Smartphone)

Forscher haben mehrere Schwachstellen in gängigen 5G-Modems offengelegt. Damit können Angreifer vielen Smartphone-Nutzern 5G-Verbindungen verwehren. (Sicherheitslücke, Smartphone)

The quest to turn basalt dust into a viable climate solution

Sprinkling rock dust on farmland to soak up atmospheric carbon will be tested at large scale.

The quest to turn basalt dust into a viable climate solution

Enlarge (credit: Lithos Carbon)

Mary Yap has spent the last year and a half trying to get farmers to fall in love with basalt. The volcanic rock is chock full of nutrients, captured as its crystal structure forms from cooling magma, and can make soil less acidic. In that way it’s like limestone, which farmers often use to improve their soil. It’s a little more finicky to apply, and certainly less familiar. But basalt also comes with an important side benefit: It can naturally capture carbon from the atmosphere.

Yap’s pitch is part of a decades-long effort to scale up that natural weathering process and prove that it can lock carbon away for long enough to make a different to the climate. “The bottleneck is getting farmers to want to do this,” Yap says.

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