Tuesday, July 7, 2015

SUPER SOLDIERS: Sci-fi comics from the 1930s reveal accurate predictions of the future

 

 

 

 

  Developed by Ekso Bionics and Lockheed Martin, Hulc is a lower extremity exoskeleton powered by a lithium-ion battery that works to redistribute the weight across the hips and legs, allowing its operator to comfortably carry 200lbs (91kg) with less effort (graphic illustrated)Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is currently testing Warrior Web - a wetsuit-like 'soft exosuit' designed to be worn under the soldier's uniform to provide leg and joint support on only 100 watts of power. It uses computer-controlled textiles to offer orthopaedic support (features illustrated)BAE Systems' Broadsword range  revolve around a vest called Spine. Spine uses so-called e-textiles to wirelessly charge military equipment and this energy use can be monitored using a smartphone app. Other equipment includes the Q-Warrior augmented reality headset and car seats that wirelessly charge devices    

Rise of the SUPER SOLDIER: Liquid armour, indestructible exoskeletons and weapons that never miss revealed as the future of warfare

  • Soldiers of the future will be trained using virtual reality headsets
  • Their bodies will be protected with self-healing armour and smart wetsuits
  • US military has developed a bullet that changes course on way to its target
  • And microdrones will help soldiers explore battlefields from a distance

War has been one of the greatest spurs to science in history.

Developments as diverse and far-reaching as space travel, superglue, duct tape and microwaves owe their origins beneath camouflage netting and behind sandbags.

Today's military innovations, though, are focused not just on getting the job done, but doing so as quickly as possible and bringing the soldiers home to their families in one piece.

Wearing head-mounted displays (HMD) or VR glasses such as Oculus Rift, soldiers can explore scenarios, such as the challenges of administering first aid to wounded comrades while under enemy fire, in a realistic 360-degree 3D environment (pictured) that changes the image with the movement of the head and the body

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Wearing head-mounted displays (HMD) or VR glasses such as Oculus Rift, soldiers can explore scenarios, such as the challenges of administering first aid to wounded comrades while under enemy fire, in a realistic 360-degree 3D environment (pictured) that changes the image with the movement of the head and the body

THE (VIRTUAL) REALITIES OF WAR

For example, simulations may already have a place in air force training, but soldiers can now put their skills to the test in virtual reality combat zones.

Wearing head-mounted displays (HMD) or VR glasses such as Oculus Rift, soldiers can explore scenarios, such as administering first aid to wounded comrades while under enemy fire, in a realistic 360-degree 3D environment that changes the image with the movement of the head and the body, via an in built tracking system.

Some battlefield simulation programs are even more realistic still.

Super Soldiers: How Tech Is Transforming The Future Of Warfare is in the latest issue of How It Works Magazine on sale now  (pictured)

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Super Soldiers: How Tech Is Transforming The Future Of Warfare is in the latest issue of How It Works Magazine on sale now  (pictured)

Polish troops train with integrated feedback that administers a small electric shock when the soldier gets ‘shot’.

While the US Department of Defense is so committed to the idea, it wants every soldier to have a virtual avatar that can be customised to reflect their individual skills and weaknesses.

NIMBLE AND AGILE EXOSKELETONS  

Elsewhere, soldiers powered by exoskeletons may have long been a staple of science fiction, but they're too becoming reality.

Taken from the Greek word meaning 'outer skeleton', exoskeletons are inspired by the hardened shells of the insect world and involve a frame of hydraulics which magnify the leg and arm movements of the wearer, allowing them to take more effortless strides and carry greater weights.

Military exoskeletons trialled as far back as the 1960s - such as General Electric's Hardiman - were able to increase the magnitude by a factor of 25.

This made lifting 25lb (11kg) loads as easy for the wearer as lifting 1lb (0.5kg), and had force feedback - similar to a XBox or PlayStation controller - so the operator could get an idea of the resistance that he or she was experiencing.

These projects were ultimately unsuccessful as the early exoskeletons reacted unpredictably - and sometimes violently - to anything less than gentle movements.

While many current exoskeleton projects have medical uses in mind, XOS and XOS 2, developed for the US Army by Raytheon-Sarcos, Hercule by firm RB3D, and Human Universal Load Carrier, better known by its acronym HULC, are primarily military endeavours.

A US Army soldier is shown training using the Dismounted soldier Training System (DSTS). The DSTS is the first fully-immersive virtual reality training system which simulates a combat environment

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A US Army soldier is shown training using the Dismounted soldier Training System (DSTS). The DSTS is the first fully-immersive virtual reality training system which simulates a combat environment

Virtual reality battlefield simulator helps train military medics

LOCKHEED'S HULC EXOSKELETON WITH A 72-HOUR BATTERY LIFE

Developed by Ekso Bionics and Lockheed Martin, Hulc is a lower extremity exoskeleton powered by a lithium-ion battery that works to redistribute the weight across the hips and legs, allowing its operator to comfortably carry 200lbs (91kg) with less effort (graphic illustrated)

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Developed by Ekso Bionics and Lockheed Martin, Hulc is a lower extremity exoskeleton powered by a lithium-ion battery that works to redistribute the weight across the hips and legs, allowing its operator to comfortably carry 200lbs (91kg) with less effort (graphic illustrated)

While many current exoskeleton projects have medical uses in mind, XOS and XOS 2, developed for the US Army by Raytheon-Sarcos, Hercule by firm RB3D, and Human Universal Load Carrier, better known by its intimidating acronym of Hulc, are primarily military endeavours.

Developed by Ekso Bionics and Lockheed Martin, Hulc is a lower extremity exoskeleton powered by a lithium-ion battery that works to redistribute the weight across the hips and legs, allowing its operator to comfortably carry 200lbs (91kg) with less effort.

The increasing weight of a soldier's gear, which includes as a standard weapons, ammunition, rations, water, first aid kits, basic tools, satellite phone, GPS, helmet and body armour is a growing worry for commanders.

Far more flexible than earlier exoskeletons, sensors mounted throughout Hulc's titanium frame and linked to an on-board micro-computer spur electric motors into action allowing the limbs to match the operator's movements instantly.

Lockheed's ambitions is that the system will allow for troops to be equipped with otherwise back-breakingly heavy sensor gear or - as Hulc offers no physical protection in itself – the sort of body armour that simply impractical for a soldier on foot to carry.

Lockheed is currently investigating electrochemical and solid oxide fuel cells to solve this problem, and the plan is for a 'long-range HLC' with a 72-hour battery life and bursts of speed up to 10mph (16 km) per hour.

Developed by Ekso Bionics and Lockheed Martin, Hulc is a lower extremity exoskeleton powered by a lithium-ion battery that works to redistribute the weight across the hips and legs, allowing its operator to comfortably carry 200lbs (91kg) with less effort.

The increasing weight of a soldier's gear, which includes a standard weapons, ammunition, rations, water, first aid kits, basic tools, satellite phone, GPS, helmet and body armour is a growing worry for commanders.

Early military exoskeletons (General Electric's Hardiman 1960s prototype pictured) were  unsuccessful as they sometimes reacted violently

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Early military exoskeletons (General Electric's Hardiman 1960s prototype pictured) were unsuccessful as they sometimes reacted violently

Indeed, the consequences of lugging around a weight of anywhere between 80lbs and 120lbs (36 and 54kg can be severe - perhaps even deadly.

'Distributing and managing a soldier's load can give enormous benefits in terms of combat endurance and efficiency,' explained Justin Bronk, military sciences analyst at The Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies.

'People ended up toting around up to 40 kilos [88 pounds] of stuff which means if they've been on patrol for a couple of hours and they go prone when they start taking fire, often they just can't get back up again!;

Far more flexible than earlier exoskeletons, sensors mounted throughout Hulc's titanium frame and linked to an on-board microcomputer spur electric motors into action allowing the limbs to match the operator's movements instantly.

Lockheed's ambitions is that the system will allow for troops to be equipped with otherwise back-breakingly heavy sensor gear or - as Hulc offers no physical protection in itself - the sort of body armour that simply impractical for a soldier on foot to carry.

According to Mr Bronk, what's really holding them back from a roll out across battlefields is simple - energy.

'The basic problem with exoskeletons still is you need about ten kilowatts of power to run a typical load-bearing, armour-protected exoskeleton,' he continued.

'And you need to be able to run it for ten hours or so to make it mission capable because if the power runs out, an exoskeleton becomes a massive impediment to ability rather than a bonus.'

Lockheed is currently investigating electrochemical and solid oxide fuel cells to solve this problem, and the plan is for a 'long-range HLC' with a 72-hour battery life and bursts of speed up to 10mph (16 km) per hour.

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is currently testing Warrior Web - a wetsuit-like 'soft exosuit' designed to be worn under the soldier's uniform to provide leg and joint support on only 100 watts of power. It uses computer-controlled textiles to offer orthopaedic support (features illustrated)

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Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is currently testing Warrior Web - a wetsuit-like 'soft exosuit' designed to be worn under the soldier's uniform to provide leg and joint support on only 100 watts of power. It uses computer-controlled textiles to offer orthopaedic support (features illustrated)

SMART WETSUITS THAT PREVENT INJURY IN THE BATTLEFIELD

Meanwhile, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is currently testing Warrior Web - a wetsuit-like 'soft exosuit' designed to be worn under the soldier's uniform to provide leg and joint support on only 100 watts of power.

Instead of a titanium frame covered with battery-sapping hydraulics, Warrior Web uses computer-controlled textiles and wires that offer conventional orthopaedic support as well as powered robotic systems in the legs to reduce strain on muscles and tendons.

'There's obviously a trend toward trying to increase personal protection as far as possible given that training is ever more extensive and armies are getting smaller and smaller,' added Mr Bronk,

'I think the basic picture of a soldier probably won't change too much - body armour which is scalable depending on the threat expected.

'Until you see full exoskeletons there'll still be a trade off between how much a threat and therefore how protected you want to be versus how much you want to be able to move, so you'll still probably have your pelvic body armour, helmet, and various kinds of advanced night vision scopes.'

Scientists in Poland are developing a 'magic liquid' (left) that harden on impact in body armour systems. The liquid is called Shear-Thickening Fluid (STF) and instantly hardens upon impact at any temperature

In 'liquid armour ' this offers protection from penetration by bullets (right) and disperses energy over a larger area

Scientists in Poland are developing a 'magic liquid' (left) that harden on impact in body armour systems. The liquid is called Shear-Thickening Fluid (STF) and instantly hardens upon impact at any temperature. In 'liquid armour ' this offers protection from penetration by bullets (right) and disperses energy over a larger area

LIQUID ARMOUR STOPS BULLETS AND HEALS ITSELF

Armour could be significantly strengthened by a number of means beyond the current protection that's offered to infantry.

There are ongoing experiments in liquid armour, for example, which harden on impact but remain flexible enough to allow the soldier free movement, and nanotechnology, which allows materials to be manipulated an atomic, molecular, and supramolecular scale.

For example, scientists at Polish company Moratex, which produces body armour systems, are working to put a 'magic liquid' that can harden on impact in its products.

The liquid is called Shear-Thickening Fluid (STF), and instantly hardens upon impact at any temperature.

In a 'liquid armour' this provides protection from penetration by high-speed projectiles and additionally dispersing energy over a larger area.

The 'magic liquid' that can stop a bullet in its tracks

'If you are engineering something to a nanoscale you can create vastly more resistant and strong materials,' said military sciences analyst Justin Bronk. 'Because they don't have any imperfections and you can design a lattice structure instead of having to either kiln something or cast something' (large-scale example shown)

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'If you are engineering something to a nanoscale you can create vastly more resistant and strong materials,' said military sciences analyst Justin Bronk. 'Because they don't have any imperfections and you can design a lattice structure instead of having to either kiln something or cast something' (large-scale example shown)

'If you are engineering something to a nanoscale you can create vastly more resistant and strong materials,' said Mr Bronk.

'Because they don't have any imperfections and you can design a lattice structure instead of having to either kiln something or cast something.

'You can effectively build up, for example carbon fibre-infused ceramics at a nano-scale if you were doing it like that.

'You can build it so its perfect lattice structure and you get fantastic integration between the materials so it's more stronger pound-for-pound than something that's made in the more traditional way.'

Earlier this year the US military successfully tested a .50-caliber sniper round called Exacto (illustrated) that can change direction on its way to its target 

Earlier this year the US military successfully tested a .50-caliber sniper round called Exacto (illustrated) that can change direction on its way to its target

SELF-GUIDING BULLETS THAT NEVER MISS

Earlier this year the US military successfully tested a .50-caliber sniper round called Exacto that can change direction on its way to its target.

Video footage shows the bullet changing direction in mid-air in response to a target's movements.

According to Darpa: 'For military snipers, acquiring moving targets in unfavourable conditions, such as high winds and dusty terrain commonly found in Afghanistan, is extremely challenging with current technology.

Darpa claims the new system is the first ever guided small caliber bullet.

Snipers typically work in two-man teams with a spotter assisting the gunman identifying targets as well as providing security.

But environmental details such as wind, rain and even humidity can affect the flight path of a bullet.

Also bullets have to counter gravity and droop down over longer distances.

Under the Exacto system, a sniper will be able to adjust the bullet's direction mid-flight in case a target moved or the bullet shifted due to a gust of wind.

The video shows two tests filmed earlier this year. In the both tests the round is fired deliberately off target but turns in mid-air.

In the second target, the round it its intended target despite being fired several feet to the left.

Video footage (screengrab pictured) shows the bullet changing direction in mid-air in response to a target's movements. Darpa claims the new system is the first ever guided small caliber bullet

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Video footage (screengrab pictured) shows the bullet changing direction in mid-air in response to a target's movements. Darpa claims the new system is the first ever guided small caliber bullet

Snipers typically work in two-man teams with a spotter assisting the gunman identifying targets as well as providing security. But environmental details such as wind, rain and even humidity can affect the flight path. Under the Exacto system (illustrated), a sniper will be able to adjust the bullet's direction mid-flight

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Snipers typically work in two-man teams with a spotter assisting the gunman identifying targets as well as providing security. But environmental details such as wind, rain and even humidity can affect the flight path. Under the Exacto system (illustrated), a sniper will be able to adjust the bullet's direction mid-flight

SENSORS GIVE SOLDIERS SUPER HUMAN POWERS

Mr Bronk believes the main focus for standard infantry is going to be a mix of sensors.

'For example we're already seeing trials of a combination of thermal and infrared vision aids, so night vision,' he said.

'At the moment soldiers tend to use infrared, your standard green Predator-style night vision to see and move around, but when they're actually engaging targets at night, they use a thermal.

BAE'S SPINE AND Q-WARRIOR

BAE Systems' Broadsword range of devices revolve around a vest called Spine.

Spine uses so-called e-textiles to wirelessly charge military equipment and this energy use can be monitored using a smartphone app.

Other equipment in the range includes the Q-Warrior augmented reality headset and car seats that wirelessly charge the wearable technology.

BAE has additionally created an inductive seat charger that automatically transfers energy from a vehicle to the vest.

This means the Spine never runs out of energy and can be charged as soldiers travel around battle zones.

And all this power usage can be managed using a smartphone app.

Elsewhere, the Q-Warrior see-through augmented reality display integrates with the Spine and smartphone to overlay useful information such as GPS locations, temperatures and other data.

BAE and Intelligent Textiles Design said that although the technology is designed for the armed forces  it could also be used by fire and rescue services and the police.

'Obviously this involves more equipment and thermal scopes are traditionally rather large, but they give much better definition.

'So an integrated binocular/monocular attached to the helmet, again that's one way of increasing efficiency - you don't have to carry two things, you can carry one power pack for both to switch quickly.'

These sort of fixes in existing technology might not sound like much, but they can make a huge difference to both the weight a soldier carries and the convenience of not having to fumble around with a variety of equipment.

'There are things like the Fighting Load Carrier vest which uses a small amount of power to distribute the load from the shoulders toward the hips and make sure the load is even,' added Mr Bronk as an example.

'It also gives an exact GPS fix of the soldier to within an axis of about 16 to 33 feet (five to 10 metres) and it also integrates a radio, so you're there looking at addressing one major problem and then seeing "What could I add in there that would also make the overall equipment package more efficient and lighter?"

BAE Systems has created its Broadsword range of devices that revolve around a vest called Spine.

Spine uses so-called e-textiles to wirelessly charge military equipment - and this energy use can be monitored using a smartphone app.

Other equipment in the range includes the Q-Warrior augmented reality headset and car seats that wirelessly charge the wearable technology.

BAE Systems' Broadsword range  revolve around a vest called Spine. Spine uses so-called e-textiles to wirelessly charge military equipment and this energy use can be monitored using a smartphone app. Other equipment includes the Q-Warrior augmented reality headset and car seats that wirelessly charge devices

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BAE Systems' Broadsword range revolve around a vest called Spine. Spine uses so-called e-textiles to wirelessly charge military equipment and this energy use can be monitored using a smartphone app. Other equipment includes the Q-Warrior augmented reality headset and car seats that wirelessly charge devices

BAE and Intelligent Textiles Design said that although the technology (illustrated) is designed for the armed forces - and conforms to the standards set by the Ministry of Defence - it could also be used by fire and rescue services and the police

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BAE and Intelligent Textiles Design said that although the technology (illustrated) is designed for the armed forces - and conforms to the standards set by the Ministry of Defence - it could also be used by fire and rescue services and the police

BAE has additionally created an inductive seat charger that automatically transfers energy from a vehicle to the vest.

This means the Spine never runs out of energy and can be charged as soldiers travel around battle zones.

And all this power usage can be managed using a smartphone app.

Elsewhere, the Q-Warrior see-through augmented reality display integrates with the Spine and smartphone to overlay useful information such as GPS locations, temperatures and other data.

BAE and Intelligent Textiles Design said that although the technology is designed for the armed forces - and conforms to the standards set by the Ministry of Defence - it could also be used by fire and rescue services and the police.

  • Super Soldiers: How Tech Is Transforming The Future Of Warfare is in the latest issue of How It Works Magazine on sale now
THE MICRODRONES THAT EXTEND THE SIGHT OF SOLDIERS

As professional armies grow smaller and technology grows more advanced, soldiers may have to rely on drones (Switchblade pictured)

As professional armies grow smaller and technology grows more advanced, soldiers may have to rely on drones (Switchblade pictured)

As professional armies grow smaller and technology grows more advanced, soldiers may have to rely on machines for backup.

'You'll start to see more things like a microdrone called a Switchblade, which can be carried in a backpack,' said Justin Bronk, military sciences analyst at The Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies.

'It comes in a sort of tube, you launch this and you use a set of first person-view goggles to see what it sees.

'That can be launched from behind cover, you chuck it up and it flies around, and once you've seen who's shooting at you, you can pile it straight into them and it's got a roughly-grenade sized warhead in it. That sort of smart microdrone technology should soon be hugely influential.'

The potential disruption caused by hacking and jamming technology will also ensure that while a soldier’s ability to scan, transmit and receive more detailed information on what’s round the next corner will increase, so will a potential foe’s means to block it.

'In the land environment you'll start seeing greater capability for soldiers to connect with a network, to link up with, for example, helicopters that are coming to give them support, or fast jets or vehicles in order to increase the situational awareness and therefore effectiveness,' confirmed Mr Bronk.

'That's got to be played off against the fact that you can't rely on electronics, particularly networked electronics against a serious opponent who really knows what they're doing because the first thing they'll do is jam it.'

 

 

From landing on the moon to mind-controlled robots: Sci-fi comics from the 1930s reveal scarily accurate predictions of the future

  • The comics, from titles including Marvel and Amazing Stories, were all published between 1929 and 1939
  • Topics including plastic surgery, time travel, living on Mars, and a giant robot controlled by a human brain
  • The now infamous moon landing of 1969 was predicted 40 years earlier in the Moon Strollers comic of 1929
  • Illustrators also predicted that scientists would one day develop machines that read the subconscious mind
  • Breakthroughs in field of mind control were made last week by scientists at the University of Washington, for example

These vibrant comic book covers appear to be the epitome of science fiction, but within their eye-catching illustrations are scarily accurate predictions of life in the 21st century.

The retro covers imagine a world where plastic surgery is common place, man walks on the moon and patients are fitted with artificial hearts.

And although these subjects may not seem that groundbreaking today, all of the covers were published more than 80 years ago between 1929 and 1939.

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The retro covers imagine a world where plastic surgery is common place, man walks on the moon and patients are fitted with artificial hearts. On the left is a 1939 cover depicting a fountain of youth which rejuvenates the human body in a beauty parlour of the future. The left image of World without Women depicts a robot saving humanity from extinction. It was published in 1939

For instance, the now infamous moon landing of 1969 was predicted 40 years earlier in the Moon Strollers comic of 1929.

That same year, illustrators predicted that in the future scientists would develop machines that read the subconscious mind and project its thoughts as images, titled Into the Subconscious.

A number of breakthroughs in this field were made just last week.

A student from the University of Washington, fitted with an EEG cap, successfully controlled the hand of a friend sitting half a mile away.

The two students played a game in which cannons had to be fired on-screen. The ‘sender’ thought about firing the cannon, which then moved the hand of the ‘receiver’. 

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Yesterday, Google-owned Boston Dynamics unveiled its latest version of the Atlas robots, and the tech giant is developing software that acts like a human.These areas of research will pave the way for the Robot A.1, featured on a comic book cover in 1939, which shows a giant robot controlled by a human brain (left). Pictured on the right is an 1932 illustration of what a city on Mars might look like

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This retro cover of Kidnapped into the Future shows a man from the year 4230 travelling by time machine back to mid-20th century

Meanwhile, the '#scanners' project allows users to manipulate a digital art installation using a headset that creates a visual record of a person's subconscious mind.

An animator in Manchester said it will give people a glimpse into a dream world, and it uses a £100 ($150) headset developed by technology company NeuroSky. 

The collection - from titles including Marvel, Amazing Stories and Wonder Stories - also includes a host of recognisable scenes including one cover, created in 1939, called World Without Death.

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On the left is Secret of the Buried City, a 1939 comic about how the Earth is destroyed to make way for a better civilisation. The right image of 4-sided triangle, also from 1939, shows a scientist cloning the body of a young woman in his laboratory

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These vibrant comic book covers appear to be the epitome of science fiction, but within their eye-catching illustrations are scarily accurate predictions of life in the 21st century. For instance, the now infamous moon landing of 1969 was predicted 40 years earlier in the Moon Strollers comic of 1929 (pictured)

CAN BODIES PREDICT THE FUTURE?

Deja vu, unexplained shivers down the spine, hairs on the back of your neck...people have always believed the body has many ways of telling you something that is about to happen.

But a recent scientific research paper claims to have discovered that your body can predict the future. 

Scientists said that during tests they found proof people can anticipate events, or realise something is about to happen, without cues.

The paper, in the Frontiers of Perception Science journal, claimed that after studying people's reactions in different tests, they found that subjects could 'predict' that something out of the ordinary was about to happen.

But some scientists said the findings showed scientists were looking for evidence of 'presentiment' and didn't actually prove that it existed.

In the image, a doctor is seen fitting a patient with an artificial heart - reminiscent of Matthew Green, who become the first Britain discharged from hospital with a completely artificial heart in 2011.

Yesterday, Google-owned Boston Dynamics unveiled its latest version of the Atlas robots, and the tech giant is developing software that acts like a human.

These areas of research will pave the way for the Robot A.1, featured on a comic book cover in 1939, which shows a giant robot controlled by a human brain.

During this year’s World Cup, for example, a paraplegic used a mind-controlled exoskeleton to walk on the pitch and kick the first ball of the tournament.

And last month, scientists revealed two patients fitted with radical new mind-controlled artificial limbs that link directly with their skeleton and nervous system.

While many of the covers appear to be a fairly accurate prediction of the future, others are thankfully yet to come to fruition.

One comic, dubbed Cities in the Air, sees New York become an airborne city, elevated above the Earth’s surface to avoid pollutants and Secret of the Buried City, in which Earth is destroyed to make way for a better civilisation.

Another retro cover of Kidnapped into the Future shows a man from the year 4230 travelling by time machine back to mid-20th century America. 

Scientists may not have achieved time travel yet, but that hasn't stopped it being source of fascination for science fiction writers and illustrations, today, as it was back in the 1930s.  

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Illustrators predicted that in the future scientists would develop machines that read the subconscious mind and project its thoughts as images, titled ‘Into the Subconscious’. A number of breakthroughs in this field were made just last week. A student from the University of Washington, fitted with an EEG cap, successfully controlled the hand of a friend sitting half a mile away

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One-Way Tunnel shows the American city being destroyed while the Statue of Liberty looks on, published in 1935. (left). The World without Death by Polton Cross, published in 1939, shows a doctor fitting a patient with an artificial heart (right). This is reminiscent of Matthew Green, who become the first Britain discharged from hospital with a completely artificial heart in 2011

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The 1929 Cities in the Air comic shows New York as an airborne ‘travelling city’, elevated above the Earth’s surface to avoid pollutants (left). On the right, the 1935 Phantom Monsters comic shows a diver finding marine life in the depths of the ocean

 

 

 

Sunday, July 5, 2015

ON THE WATER FRONT BEFORE AND AFTER

 

 

 

 

People in bathing suits and business suits could be seen taking in the sights and sun in Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1911  Pier 55 will look more like an island than a pier and will sit atop 341 concrete columns that will range in height from 70 feet above the water to 15 feet above - roughly the minimum required post-Hurricane Sandy

ON THE WATER FRONT BEFORE AND AFTER 

When Coney Island reigned supreme and bathing suits grazed your knee: Photos of New York beachgoers from 1880 to 1940s capture incredible change of fashions and timeless love of the sand

  • Blast from the past photos show how modest bathing suits morphed into the bikinis and trunks we know today
  • Pics also capture Coney Island's once massive popularity when it was the biggest amusement park in the country
  • Cuddling couples, girlfriends running out of the water, and a nun on a roller coaster also seen in sweet snaps

Knee-length bathing suits instead of bikinis, television sets with antennas instead of iPads, and lovers canoodling in the sands.

These blast from the past black and white pictures of beachgoers in New York show how the fashions and attractions that make up our summers have changed, even as our love for being under the sun has stayed exactly the same.

The pictures date from as far back as 1880, to a family portrait where a mother's hoop skirt grazes the sand as they pose on a boat, to 1948, where a couple sporting swim trunks and a bikini top enjoy a show on the tiny screen of a portable TV. 

An 1880 family portrait shows one mother's hoop skirt graze the sand and her fashionable children sporting sunhats 

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An 1880 family portrait shows one mother's hoop skirt graze the sand and her fashionable children sporting sunhats

This 1901 photo shows five women sporting short-sleeved ankle-length dresses as they sit in the sand at Sea Gate, a gated community surrounded by private beaches in Brooklyn where wealthy dynasty families such as the Morgans and Vanderbilts had addresses

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This 1901 photo shows five women sporting short-sleeved ankle-length dresses as they sit in the sand at Sea Gate, a gated community surrounded by private beaches in Brooklyn where wealthy dynasty families such as the Morgans and Vanderbilts had addresses

The hemlines of bathing suits got considerably shorter only 10 years later, as seen in this couple dancing the tango at Brighton Beach

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The hemlines of bathing suits got considerably shorter only 10 years later, as seen in this couple dancing the tango at Brighton Beach

Here a crowd watches as Olympian Champion Diver Aileen Riggin twist dives at a special diving contest in Brighton Beach 

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Here a crowd watches as Olympian Champion Diver Aileen Riggin twist dives at a special diving contest in Brighton Beach

This group of girlfriends running out of the cold October sea in 1925 are sporting the now-sleeveless bathing suits popular with the time 

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This group of girlfriends running out of the cold October sea in 1925 are sporting the now-sleeveless bathing suits popular with the time

One 1901 photo shows five women sporting short-sleeved ankle-length dresses as they sit in the sand at Sea Gate, a gated community surrounded by private beaches in Brooklyn where wealthy dynasty families such as the Morgans and Vanderbilts had addresses.

By 1914 the hemline gets considerably shorter as seen in the picture of a couple dancing the tango in their bathing suits in Brooklyn's Brighton Beach, with the woman's dress reaching her still stocking-covered knee.

Pictures from the 1920s and 1940s feature women in sleeveless suits that now graze their thighs, such as in one photograh of a group of girfriends playfully running out of the cold October water in Brooklyn in 1925.

The suits length stay the same but their fit gets tighter a decade later as two young girls at the Playland amusement park in Rye pose in front of a sign called the 'Tan-O-Meter', whose caption reads ‘choose the color you want to be’ and lists how long beachgoers need to stay out in the sun to reach their desired complexion. 

Two young women at the Playland amusement park in Rye pose in front of the Tan-O-Meter, whose caption reads ‘choose the color you want to be’ and lists how long beachgoers need to stay out in the sun to reach their desired complexion

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Two young women at the Playland amusement park in Rye pose in front of the Tan-O-Meter, whose caption reads ‘choose the color you want to be’ and lists how long beachgoers need to stay out in the sun to reach their desired complexion

A couple watch a show from a tiny television screen on the sand in Brooklyn in 1948, sporting now modern swim trunks and bikini

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A couple watch a show from a tiny television screen on the sand in Brooklyn in 1948, sporting now modern swim trunks and bikini

A couple share a passionate kiss in the sand on Coney Island in 1949, three years before a similar scene would become famous in the Burt Lancaster film From Here To Eternity 

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A couple share a passionate kiss in the sand on Coney Island in 1949, three years before a similar scene would become famous in the Burt Lancaster film From Here To Eternity

Two pairs of couples cuddle in 1942 Coney Island during a 'dim-out', when the park had to cut the lights due to WII gasonline rationing - which created the perfect environment for sandy canoodling that would earn this pier spot the nickname Necker's Neck 

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Two pairs of couples cuddle in 1942 Coney Island during a 'dim-out', when the park had to cut the lights due to WII gasonline rationing - which created the perfect environment for sandy canoodling that would earn this pier spot the nickname Necker's Neck

Navymen aboard the USS Sandpiper celebrate their return from Hawaii with grass skirts and some hulu dancing 

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Navymen aboard the USS Sandpiper celebrate their return from Hawaii with grass skirts and some hulu dancing

Aviation troops fill Long Beach in Long Island with dancing in this photograph from 1922 

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Aviation troops fill Long Beach in Long Island with dancing in this photograph from 1922

It's not just changing fashions that are showcased in these relics of the past. Romance is on full display in one steamy 1949 photo of a couple locked in a passionate kiss on Coney Island.

Another picture shows two pairs of couples cuddling during the beach's 'dim-out', when Coney Island had to cut the park's lights during WWII gasoline rationing - which just happened to create the perfect environment for a canoodling spot that would sport the nickname Necker's Neck.

The massive popularity of Atlantic City and Coney Island are on full-display in these photographs for their heyday.

One breathaking aerial picture of Coney Island, once the largest amusement park in the country, shows the boardwalk and beach almost completely covered with people, while another photo shows people lining up at Nathan's Famous, the hot dog restaurant that still stands today.

Perhaps most wonderfully though, are the human moments captured in these snapshots of time.

There is a quick snap from a roller coaster ride, a nun in the front cart with the blind boys and girls she took for a day at the park.

One snap shows a musician entertaining beachgoers on top a piano planted right there in the sand, while another shows a group of friends enjoying each other's company during a birthday celebration at a beach house right by the waves.

People in bathing suits and business suits could be seen taking in the sights and sun in Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1911 

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People in bathing suits and business suits could be seen taking in the sights and sun in Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1911

This breathtaking snap of Coney Island in 1950 shows the amusement park, once the biggest in the country, in its full glory as crowds almost completely cover the boardwalk and sand 

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This breathtaking snap of Coney Island in 1950 shows the amusement park, once the biggest in the country, in its full glory as crowds almost completely cover the boardwalk and sand

A crowd of people wait in line for hot dogs at Nathan's Famous, a Coney Island restaurant that still stands today 

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A crowd of people wait in line for hot dogs at Nathan's Famous, a Coney Island restaurant that still stands today

This heartwarming snapshot captures a moment of joy for a nun and the blind boys and girls she took out for a day at Rockaway Beach

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This heartwarming snapshot captures a moment of joy for a nun and the blind boys and girls she took out for a day at Rockaway Beach

Here musician Dorothy Jardon and members of Bennie Kruger's Brunswick Orchestra gave beachgoers a performance right there on the sand in Brooklyn circa 1922 

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Here musician Dorothy Jardon and members of Bennie Kruger's Brunswick Orchestra gave beachgoers a performance right there on the sand in Brooklyn circa 1922

Here a group of friends enjoy what seems to be a birthday party celebration on a beach house in New York in 1927

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Here a group of friends enjoy what seems to be a birthday party celebration on a beach house in New York in 1927

Beachgoers dine and tan outside a Boardwalk restraurant in Jones Beach State Park in Long Island circa 1931

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Beachgoers dine and tan outside a Boardwalk restraurant in Jones Beach State Park in Long Island circa 1931

 

 

  • Pier 55 will be a 2.7-acre park built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the Hudson at West 14th St
  • Look more like an island than a pier and will sit atop 341 mushroom-shaped concrete columns that will range in height from 70 feet above the water to 15 feet above - roughly the minimum required post-Hurricane Sandy
  • The park's three venues will host free and low-cost arts events and performances under the direction of Oscar-winning producer Scott Rudin
  • It will replace the narrow and crumbling Pier 54, which is where the steamship Carpathia brought survivors of the sunken Titanic 102 years ago
  • The majority of the funding, some $140 million will be provided by billionaire Barry Diller and his fashion designer wife Diane von Furstenberg

New York’s latest spectacular riverfront attraction looks set to be a $170 million island park and open-air performance space on the Hudson River.

The grand scheme, called Pier 55, was announced on Monday and the majority of the funding for the project will be provided by billionaire Barry Diller and his fashion designer wife Diane von Furstenberg.

The 2.7-acre park will be built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the Hudson at West 14th Street, not far from the lower end of the highly popular High Line urban park.

An artist's rendering shows the proposed park and performance space to be known as Pier 55, in the Hudson River on the lower west side of New York. The park will be built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the river

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An artist's rendering shows the proposed park and performance space to be known as Pier 55, in the Hudson River on the lower west side of New York. The park will be built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the river

Pier 55 will look more like an island than a pier and will sit atop 341 concrete columns that will range in height from 70 feet above the water to 15 feet above - roughly the minimum required post-Hurricane Sandy

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Pier 55 will look more like an island than a pier and will sit atop 341 concrete columns that will range in height from 70 feet above the water to 15 feet above - roughly the minimum required post-Hurricane Sandy

Pier 55 will look more like an island than a pier and will sit atop 341 mushroom-shaped concrete columns that will range in height from 70 feet above the water to 15 feet above, roughly the minimum required post-Hurricane Sandy.

The undulating form is also an attempt to address environmental issues. It will allow more sunlight to come through for fish in an area that has been designated a marine sanctuary.

Two pedestrian walkways from a widened West Street esplanade will take visitors to the free-to-all park which has been designed by British firm Heatherwick Studio and landscape architect Mathews Nielsen.

The park will replace the narrow and crumbling, flat-topped structure of Pier 54. That is where the steamship Carpathia brought survivors of the sunken Titanic 102 years ago and the rusty Cunard arch that stands at the foot of the pier will be restored to maintain a link with the past.

Diller, chairman of the New York-based media company IAC/Inter-ActiveCorp, and the Hudson River Trust made the announcement on Monday.

He and von Furstenberg, have agreed to provide $140 million to build and maintain the attraction through their family foundation.

The city will provide $17 million for the project while the state will offer $18 million for an adjacent esplanade.

As well as grass and trees, the park will have three venues to play host to arts events and performances under the direction of a team headed by Oscar-winning producer Scott Rudin

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As well as grass and trees, the park will have three venues to play host to arts events and performances under the direction of a team headed by Oscar-winning producer Scott Rudin

Two pedestrian walkways from a widened West Street esplanade will take visitors to the free-to-all park which has been designed by British firm Heatherwick Studio and landscape architect Mathews Nielsen

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Two pedestrian walkways from a widened West Street esplanade will take visitors to the free-to-all park which has been designed by British firm Heatherwick Studio and landscape architect Mathews Nielsen

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Pier 55, was announced on Monday and the majority of the funding for the project will be provided by billionaire Barry Diller and his fashion designer wife Diane von Furstenberg. The rusty Cunard arch that stands at the foot of the existing Pier 54 will be restored to maintain a link with the past

‘We are deeply appreciative of the generosity of great New Yorkers like Mr. Diller and Ms. von Furstenberg without whom this visionary project would not have been possible,’ said NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio.

'I have always loved public spaces,' said Diller. 'It’s entirely my fault that this has become so ambitious. We will fail in our ambition, outsized or whatever it may be, if this doesn’t feel completely like a park and completely like a performance space.' 

'New York has always reminded me of Venice, so I am happy the time has come to properly honor its waterways,' added Von Furstenberg, 67. 

The park's three venues will host arts events and performances under the direction of a team headed by Oscar-winning producer Scott Rudin, whose screen credits include The Social Network and Moonrise Kingdom. Most entertainment events will be free or low cost.  

No city approval is needed for work to begin on the park and the Hudson River Park Trust will now undertake a 60-day public review and comment period.

The trust board is expected to green-light the plan in early 2015. Esplanade construction is to start in 2015 and on the pier in 2015, with completion in late 2018 or early 2019.

Mr. Diller and Ms. von Furstenberg are also the single largest private donor to the High Line, the elevated park that has spurred residential development and international interest in the meatpacking district. The couple have both also built architecturally distinctive corporate headquarters in the area. 

The 2.7-acre park will be built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the Hudson at West 14th Street, not far from the lower end of the highly popular High Line urban park

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The 2.7-acre park will be built on an undulating platform jutting about 180-feet into the Hudson at West 14th Street, not far from the lower end of the highly popular High Line urban park

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The park will replace the narrow and crumbling, flat-topped structure of Pier 54, left, which is where the steamship Carpathia brought survivors of the sunken Titanic 102 years ago, right