Daily Mail on MSN
Police use Morse code to reach man trapped in his home
After being trapped for four days, the man was located inside his home and taken to a hospital following communication through Morse code.
Thanks to Samuel F.B. Morse, communication changed rapidly, and has been changing ever faster since. He invented the electric telegraph in 1832. It took six more years for him to standardize a code ...
A new study shows that when we listen to music, our eye blinks synchronize to the beat. This finding shows that our eye ...
Features; Li-Fi wireless communication is driving industry innovation by extending wireless capacity, improving security, and ...
The Takeout on MSN
The Old-School Supermarket Chain Where The First Barcode Was Scanned
Discover the old-school supermarket chain where the first barcode was scanned -- and how that single moment revolutionized ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Invisible bacterial patterns hide messages until triggered with correct biochemical
Scientists have developed messages that only appear under specific biochemical triggers, using living bacteria.
GCHQ’s chief puzzler, known only as Colin, added: “This year’s Christmas challenge features seven puzzles designed to test ...
Guessing Headlights on MSN
15 of the Top Inventors of All Time
Imagine what life would be like without your phone, the internet, or even something as simple as electricity. It’s hard to ...
For decades, Arieh Warshel, USC Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and a 2013 Nobel laureate, has used computer simulations to understand how enzymes—fundamental to nearly every biological process ...
Bacterial patterns invisible to the eye reveal hidden information only with correct biochemical triggers, creating ...
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