Najmoos Sakib
Bio
Welcome to my writing sanctuary
I'm an article writer who enjoys telling compelling stories, sharing knowledge, and starting significant dialogues. Join me as we dig into the enormous reaches of human experience and the artistry of words.
Stories (50/0)
Humanity Will Receive An Alien Message From Mars
The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope at the Green Bank Observatory, the Allen Telescope Array operated by the SETI Institute, and the Medicina Radio Astronomical Station observatory run by the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics are three top-notch radio telescopes ready to pick up the signal. The data will be hosted and shared via the initiative A Sign In Space.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Interview
Officially, Rayyanah Barnawi Is The 600th Person To Orbit The Planet
Peggy Whitson, a former NASA astronaut, will lead Axiom-2 along with pilot John Shoffner and Ali AlQarni, a Saudi Space Commission employee, who will serve as the first mission specialist. In sequence, Shoffner and AlQarni are the 598th and 599th persons to orbit Earth as they are both taking their first trips. Being the second mission expert, Barnawi receives an even number.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
Jupiter's Bolts Of Lightning Are Similar To Earth's, (Only Longer)
Voyager 1's discovery of lightning on Jupiter was made decades ago, yet little is still known about it. The Juno mission's enhanced temporal resolution, however, has been utilized in a research published in Nature Communications to examine the processes underlying Jupiter's electric discharges and contrast them with those on Earth.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
A Video Game Study Reveals What People Do When The World Comes To An End
If you try while the world isn't ending, you'll probably receive a false impression, because the world isn't actually ending. People won't be interested in the results if you attempt when the world is truly ending, given their "other concerns" at the moment. When an asteroid is about to wipe off humanity, it will be tough to convince people to read your preprint.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
People, Asimov's Robotics Laws Are Not Actual Laws
The subject is not fresh: Some have tried to come up with solutions to block robots from looking for the final vestiges of mankind lurking in a large field of skulls ever since people first began to envisage robots. The most well-known fictional example of how to limit technology so that it doesn't obliterate humans is probably Isaac Asimov's Laws of Robotics.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
AI and Sandvik Have Joined Forces With History's Greatest Artists To Create The Impossible Statue
AI is used widely. Predictive text, digital voice assistants, and face recognition technologies are all available on your phone alone. This technology has advanced significantly over the last several years, and the possibilities for its use are seemingly endless. In fact, AI might one day stand in for individuals in court. Additionally, AI is sweeping the art industry. The art created by AI has been included in several exhibits and won contests, with its works exploding with color and surreal features. Computer-generated pictures have largely comprised AI-generated art up to this point, but one business is looking into the prospect of AI-generated sculptures.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
An Engineer Once Took Off In A Jet By Mistake But Had No Experience Flying It
Holden, a mechanical engineer by trade, joined the cadets in 1943 to attend university and earn a degree in mechanical engineering. During training, he flew a biplane and subsequently a propeller aircraft called the DHC-1 Chipmunk, gaining scant expertise in tiny, single-engine aircraft. While Holden earned his pilot wings, he continued to study engineering and rose to head of the Royal Air Force's (RAF) No. 33 Maintenance Unit at RAF Lyneham by 1966. As a result, his sole expertise was in small, sluggish, and unsophisticated aircraft, none of which equipped him to fly one of the generation's fastest jet fighters.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Journal
The Only AI Trained On The Dark Web, Meet DarkBERT
A portion of the Internet known as the "Dark Web" is inaccessible using a regular web browser and is not indexed by search engines like Google. Specialized overlay network software like Tor (The Onion Router) (Dingledine et al., 2004) are necessary to access the Dark Web. In addition, Tor provides "hidden services" (also known as "onion services"), which are web services that conceal the IP addresses of both the client and the server (Biryukov et al., 2013).
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
How Uranium Fuels Nuclear Power Plants and Bombs
Why is uranium such a potent material? The history of uranium is intriguing and has a huge impact on many industries. Uranium was called after the planet Uranus, which had only recently been discovered, after it was found in 1789 by German chemist Martin Klaproth.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Education
WinRAR is going away as Windows finally adds this much-needed feature
You've probably used a RAR file at some point if you've been downloading files from the internet. Data can be compressed using RAR files while maintaining excellent quality, resulting in a good format for packaging it up to be downloaded later. Users have been installing third-party software to perform this for them for years because Windows hasn't natively supported this format.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Journal