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Science

Cheating in China: state propaganda?

Cheaters never prosper? Try telling that to students in China.

In the ultracompetitive college entrance exams this month, students raised the practice of cheating to a high-tech art form with microscopic earphones and wireless networks. But in the process, according to the China Daily newspaper, some ended up being hospitalized when the homemade devices went awry in their aural canals.

Some bloggers doubted the veracity of these injury reports, attributing them to propaganda by Chinese officials seeking to curb the widespread cheating. But so pervasive has the practice become that universities had announced plans to block mobile-phone signals earlier this … Read more

The power of puzzles and learning

We at Blogma have long been suspicious of conventional learning principles, especially when we got lousy grades. So we welcome ideas such as those from The Creativity Packet, which offers unconventional approaches to education, often non-verbal. Its latest concepts focus on the power of puzzles.

Video shows meteoroid hitting moon

Meteoroids and other "lunar impacts" apparently hit the moon all the time, but rarely are they caught in the act on video. This clip, posted on NASA's site, shows a meteroid hitting the moon as recorded with a 10-inch telescope. The May 2 collision may not seem like much on the screen, but NASA says it carried the impact of four tons of TNT.

Originally posted at News Blog

By Mike Yamamoto

Yellow chairs for free Wi-Fi

A pair of designer/artists in San Jose, Calif., are trying an experiment in community technology: If they can find a couple of households to volunteer their Wi-Fi networks, they'd like to set up yellow chairs within range for the public to use for free wireless Net access. The idea is modeled after projects in some parts of Europe where yellow bicycles are available for community use.

High-tech shoes double as stun guns

A couple of months ago, we read that shoes were being manufactured for prostitutes with such safety features as GPS receivers and alarm buttons. But the "Electric Cinderella" shoes take the concept of self-defense footwear a step further, with a built-in stun gun for one-time use only.

A guitar with Y-shaped strings

It's not too often that a new musical instrument is invented, let alone presented before a bunch of experts. Yet that's precisely what Sophie Leger did with her creation a few days ago at the 151st meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in Providence, R.I. Introducing the Tritare, "an electric, guitar-like instrument which uses six 'Y'-shaped networks instead of six simple strings."

How to upgrade your wireless router

Call us cynical, but we doubt that cities will be blanketing the country with high-bandwidth Wi-Fi networks anytime soon. In the meantime, we'll be left to our own devices--literally, as well as figuratively. So we're thankful that the ever-useful Lifehacker has posted this article, which gives instructions on how to "turn your $60 router into a $600 router."