(g+) Gauss Fusion: “Das erste Fusionskraftwerk wird in den 2040ern kommen”

Magnet oder Laser, Stellarator oder Tokamak? Bei Gauss Fusion aus München arbeitet man hart an der Kernfusion – und hofft, dass das erste Kraftwerk bald in Europa stehen wird. Ein Interview von Werner Pluta (Forschung in D, Interview)

Magnet oder Laser, Stellarator oder Tokamak? Bei Gauss Fusion aus München arbeitet man hart an der Kernfusion - und hofft, dass das erste Kraftwerk bald in Europa stehen wird. Ein Interview von Werner Pluta (Forschung in D, Interview)

Internet-Suche Open Source: Ein-Mann-Suchmaschine will besser werden als Google

Werbung und SEO-Optimierung machen Suchen im Netz zur Qual, und mittlerweile verwässert auch noch KI das Ergebnis. Jetzt kommt die Hacker-Suchmaschine Stract. Ein Bericht von Florian Zandt (Internet, Google)

Werbung und SEO-Optimierung machen Suchen im Netz zur Qual, und mittlerweile verwässert auch noch KI das Ergebnis. Jetzt kommt die Hacker-Suchmaschine Stract. Ein Bericht von Florian Zandt (Internet, Google)

Anzeige: Der definitive Python-Basiskurs im E-Learning-Format

10 reale Projekte, 352 Lektionen, mehr als 33 Stunden Videomaterial: Dieses umfassende E-Learning führt von den Grundlagen zu fortgeschrittenen Python-Techniken – ideal für Einsteiger und zur Festigung bestehender Kenntnisse. (Golem Karrierewelt, Inter…

10 reale Projekte, 352 Lektionen, mehr als 33 Stunden Videomaterial: Dieses umfassende E-Learning führt von den Grundlagen zu fortgeschrittenen Python-Techniken - ideal für Einsteiger und zur Festigung bestehender Kenntnisse. (Golem Karrierewelt, Internet)

UP Xtreme i14 board lets you build your own Intel Meteor Lake mini PC (or industrial computer, or whatever)

The UP Xtreme i14 from AAEON is a 120 x 123mm (4.7″ x 4.8″) computer board with support for up to an Intel Core Ultra 7 H-series Meteor Lake processor, support for up to four displays, four M.2 slots for NVMe storage, AI accelerators, wire…

The UP Xtreme i14 from AAEON is a 120 x 123mm (4.7″ x 4.8″) computer board with support for up to an Intel Core Ultra 7 H-series Meteor Lake processor, support for up to four displays, four M.2 slots for NVMe storage, AI accelerators, wireless cards, and other add-ons, a SATA connector, and a 40-pin GPIO header. […]

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Anbernic RG Cube now available for $160 and up (Android handheld game console with a 4 inch square display)

The Anbernic RG Cube is a handheld game system with a compact design and an unusual display: a 3.95 inch, 720 x 720 pixel IPS LCD touchscreen display positioned between a set of game controllers. First introduced a few weeks ago, the RG Cube is powere…

The Anbernic RG Cube is a handheld game system with a compact design and an unusual display: a 3.95 inch, 720 x 720 pixel IPS LCD touchscreen display positioned between a set of game controllers. First introduced a few weeks ago, the RG Cube is powered by a Unisoc T820 processor, runs Android 13 software, and […]

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The world’s largest fungus collection may unlock the mysteries of carbon capture

Research is uncovering the key role that fungi play in getting soils to absorb carbon.

Fungus samples are seen on display inside the Fungarium at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, west London in 2023. The Fungarium was founded in 1879 and holds an estimated 380,000 specimens from the UK.

Enlarge / Fungus samples are seen on display inside the Fungarium at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, west London in 2023. The Fungarium was founded in 1879 and holds an estimated 380,000 specimens from the UK. (credit: Henry Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images)

It’s hard to miss the headliners at Kew Gardens. The botanical collection in London is home to towering redwoods and giant Amazonian water lilies capable of holding up a small child. Each spring, its huge greenhouses pop with the Technicolor displays of multiple orchid species.

But for the really good stuff at Kew, you have to look below the ground. Tucked underneath a laboratory at the garden’s eastern edge is the fungarium: the largest collection of fungi anywhere in the world. Nestled inside a series of green cardboard boxes are some 1.3 million specimens of fruiting bodies—the parts of the fungi that appear above ground and release spores.

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