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6 Results:
A 3D image of the COVID-19 virus on a black background.
3 m
Article
Engineering & Technology
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How novel X-ray technology made in Waterloo can help COVID-19 patients

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Apr 28, 2020
A detector from Waterloo, Ontario’s KA Imaging allows for clearer visualization of a patient’s lungs.
Two pairs of robotic legs are pictured next to a snowbank and a thermometer.
3 m
Article
Engineering & Technology
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The punishing polar vortex is ideal for Cassie the Robot

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Feb 1, 2019
You may be cursing the harsh cold of winter, but roboticists at the University of Michigan are capitalizing on the cold temperatures. A team working on the development of Cassie the Robot took advantage of the recent cold snap to perform testing. Read how Cassie performed in this article from Wired.
A page from the Harvard Mark II electromechanical computer's log, featuring a dead moth that was removed from the device.
3 m
Article
Computing
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Why do we call computer glitches “bugs”?

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Dec 12, 2018
The term “bug” is another way of saying something is wrong with our computer or software, but where did the term come from? While many attribute the reference to computer scientist Grace Hopper, this article from Curiosity explains that it dates back to Thomas Edison’s private journals.
BEEcosystem
5 m
Article
Agriculture
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Emerging tech: Honeybee habitats can now be inside your home

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Jun 15, 2018
A new product will soon enable novice beekeepers to keep honeybees inside their houses. The BEEcosystem is modular honeybee habitat that can be hung almost anywhere; it simply needs to be placed near a window if inside, or in a sheltered location outside. Watch a video that shows how the technology works.
Clumping together of Janus molecules after binding with E.coli substitute
3 m
Article
Engineering & Technology
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The Future of Food Safety: Bacterial Detection through a Smartphone

Profile picture for user Lauren DiVito
Lauren DiVito
Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation
Nov 17, 2017
Researchers at MIT and the Max Planck Institute have developed a method for quick, on-site E. coli detection in food. While current food safety testing either requires days to complete or expensive equipment, this new method, paired with a smartphone and QR code, will make testing inexpensive and portable. The new detection process uses Janus emulsions, droplets consisting of two hemispheres of different densities. In water, the less dense, hydrocarbon hemisphere sits above the denser hemisphere
An artists impression of a neural network.
7 m
Article
Engineering & Technology
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Microsoft AI Masters "Ms. Pac-Man"

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
Have you ever played Ms. Pac-Man? If so... have you played over 3000 rounds of it? Because that's how long it took for a Microsoft Artificially Intelligent program called Maluuba to learn how to get the highest possible score in the game, 999999. Check out how it did it... and don't worry, there's no worry of this AI taking over the world.

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