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Submission + - Infrared Contact Lenses Allow People To See In the Dark, Even With Eyes Closed (phys.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Neuroscientists and materials scientists have created contact lenses that enable infrared vision in both humans and mice by converting infrared light into visible light. Unlike infrared night vision goggles, the contact lenses, described in the journal Cell, do not require a power source — and they enable the wearer to perceive multiple infrared wavelengths. Because they're transparent, users can see both infrared and visible light simultaneously, though infrared vision was enhanced when participants had their eyes closed. [...] The contact lens technology uses nanoparticles that absorb infrared light and convert it into wavelengths that are visible to mammalian eyes (e.g., electromagnetic radiation in the 400–700 nm range). The nanoparticles specifically enable the detection of "near-infrared light," which is infrared light in the 800–1600 nm range, just beyond what humans can already see.

The team previously showed that these nanoparticles enable infrared vision in mice when injected into the retina, but they wanted to design a less invasive option. To create the contact lenses, the team combined the nanoparticles with flexible, nontoxic polymers that are used in standard soft contact lenses. After showing that the contact lenses were nontoxic, they tested their function in both humans and mice. They found that contact lens-wearing mice displayed behaviors suggesting that they could see infrared wavelengths. For example, when the mice were given the choice of a dark box and an infrared-illuminated box, contact-wearing mice chose the dark box whereas contact-less mice showed no preference. The mice also showed physiological signals of infrared vision: the pupils of contact-wearing mice constricted in the presence of infrared light, and brain imaging revealed that infrared light caused their visual processing centers to light up. In humans, the infrared contact lenses enabled participants to accurately detect flashing morse code-like signals and to perceive the direction of incoming infrared light.

An additional tweak to the contact lenses allows users to differentiate between different spectra of infrared light by engineering the nanoparticles to color-code different infrared wavelengths. For example, infrared wavelengths of 980 nm were converted to blue light, wavelengths of 808 nm were converted to green light, and wavelengths of 1,532 nm were converted to red light. In addition to enabling wearers to perceive more detail within the infrared spectrum, these color-coding nanoparticles could be modified to help color-blind people see wavelengths that they would otherwise be unable to detect. [...] Because the contact lenses have limited ability to capture fine details (due to their close proximity to the retina, which causes the converted light particles to scatter), the team also developed a wearable glass system using the same nanoparticle technology, which enabled participants to perceive higher-resolution infrared information. Currently, the contact lenses are only able to detect infrared radiation projected from an LED light source, but the researchers are working to increase the nanoparticles' sensitivity so that they can detect lower levels of infrared light.

Submission + - CJIT - C, Just in Time! 2

jaromil writes: As a fun project, we hacked a C interpreter (based on tinyCC) that compiles C code in-memory and runs it live. CJIT today is a 2MB executable that can do a lot, including call functions from any installed library on Linux, Windows, and MacOSX.

Submission + - CJIT - C, Just in Time! 2

jaromil writes: As a fun project, we hacked a C interpreter (based on tinyCC) that compiles C code in-memory and runs it live. CJIT today is a 2MB executable that can do a lot, including call functions from any installed library on Linux, Windows, and MacOSX.

Comment Devuan Pi (Score 1) 71

Devuan is name-checked in Klaus Zimmerman's linked article as a winner, along with Debian, as a desktop distribution.

For those who run Desktops on Raspberry Pi models, take a look at Devuan Pi. Nightly builds can be found here https://arm-files.devuan.org/R... (with RPi5 builds coming soon).

Devuan Pi images are optimised & tuned for Desktop use of each hardware variant of the Raspberry Pi family and shipped by default with drivers and hardware-specific user tools (for video, bluetooth, etc).

While Devuan Pi may still not be as performant as FreeBSD, it offers pragmatic build images to allow good desktop experiences even on RPi Zeroes.

Comment The card is not yours - it's the bank's (Score 1) 38

You do not own the card. The computing device commonly known as your card is not yours, and is not designed, made or operated for your best interests. The card is made and owned by the bank, it is designed and manufactured for their interests within the bounds of regulatory and legal environments. EMV applications loaded onto the card are run in the interests of the industry group represented by the TLA within the above environments. The focus of security threat mitigation is concentrated on the threat landscape of the cards owner. You have someone else's computer in your wallet (oh, and in your phone - but that's another story).

Comment US & EU event based regional net shutdowns (Score 1) 111

Listen to our podcast on Internet Shutdowns, where Alp Toker of NetBlocks talks about documenting cases in EU, and potentially future documentation of incidents in US (some have claimed this has already happened, but there has been no accepted evidence ... yet).

The Gentleman Hacker: Episode 1 - Internet Shutdowns

Shine ...

Submission + - The file /var/lib/dbus/machine-id matters for your privacy (and Devuan fixed it)

jaromil writes: A few days ago Devuan ASCII 2.1 was announced and one update has been overlooked by most media outlets: our dbus patch to re-generate machine-id at every boot. This patch matters for everyone's privacy and I hope more distributions will follow our example, let alone Debian. We are dealing with important privacy implications: non-consensual user tracking is illegal in many countries and is not even mentioned in the machine-id documentation so far.

Comment hear the EU bell (Score 1) 173

EU has made GDPR to put an end on data extractivism and commodification of data by profit driven agendas.

Slashdot mates: this Internet thing cannot be just a business and many of us know it here.

Now with this ruling we are giving subjects the sovereignty on their digital self. I believe there are masses of young people hooked to instagramming their idiocy who need this sort of defense. Its also called "the right to be forgotten" and right in the USA there is a fantastic foundation fighting for it for years EPIC.org

disclaimer: I work as a EU commission researcher on the DECODE project that was acqui-hired by FB (see Wired article)

ciao

Comment Re: Has anyone got SystemD usable? (Score 1) 313

I maybe up for a promotion using Redhat/CentOS in a few months and will be judged on uptime and ability to recover from reboots. I am nervous after reading all the hate here.

RH/COS is serving a lot of farms with OpenStack.
but then...
Google is pressing kubernetes at huge trade fairs. M$ is catching up with open source culture.
Ubuntu is enforcing snap and the other everywhere...

who knows what will happen???

I'm sorry it makes you feel nervous. I mostly feel excited :^) and compelled to study where it all goes.

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