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You can t stab someone with a blood icicle like Sub-Zero

Screenshot: HBOMax Well, this is a real bummer way to start off the week, but let’s get into it. One of the coolest moments in the new Mortal Kombat movie was also the coolest moment in the trailer for the new Mortal Kombat movie: Sub-Zero (Joe Taslim) is engaged in battle with his eternal arch-nemesis, Scorpion (Hiroyuki Sanada). Sub-Zero slices open Scorp’s chest, and as the blood spills forth from his enemy, he flash-freezes it into a deadly icicle and stabs Scorpion with it. Again: it is cool. But is it actually possible? According to The Lovely Bones, you could kill Stanley Tucci with an errant icicle, so why not a deliberate bloodsicle magicked into existence by a mythological freezer man in the midst of Mortal Kombat (with a K)? This is the question

Bridging the distance

Hussein assembles hardware that her students and others from around the world could access remotely. Rania Hussein had a dilemma: The 60 students in her Design of Digital Circuits and Systems course would need access to materials they’d normally use in an in-person lab. She knew the UW wasn’t alone in facing this problem so Hussein partnered with educators at universities in Michigan, Malaysia, Spain and Brazil to create a distributed remote circuit board lab. Thanks to this collaboration, students at any of the participating universities could remotely access hardware located at any of the other institutions. Hussein’s approach was centered on equity: “I wanted students to continue designing and testing circuits after the class ended and develop their technical skills equitably, without having to return borrowed kits or purchase expensive hardware.”

Carnegie Mellon Uses AI, Robots To Explore Qatar s Waters – India Education| Global Education |Education News

Share Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar’s (CMU-Q) Associate Teaching Professor Gianni Di Caro is using artificial intelligence and a fleet of autonomous marine robots to better explore the marine environment around Qatar. To better understand marine environments, researchers create information maps of data such as depth, water quality and salinity. This information is critical for a country like Qatar, which balances offshore oil and gas operations with the preservation and sustainability of a fragile marine ecosystem. Typically, information maps are created by a manually operated boat sampling data at pre-defined points, one at-a-time and sharing that information every a few months. Di Caro said this method has serious drawbacks, including the fact that sampling is sequential and static. It also doesn’t adaptively select where to sample based on gathered evidence, since data processing is done offline.

Things to Do at Penn State: April 8-15 | Penn State University

Things to Do at Penn State: April 8-15 | Penn State University
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