Monthly Archives: February 2017

Nigerian Bankers Committee Plans to Legalize Bitcoin – The Merkle

Posted: February 19, 2017 at 10:53 am

Quite a few countries are contemplating how they should treat bitcoin moving forward. Cryptocurrency poses intriguing opportunities, yet it is difficult to regulate as there is no centralized entity controlling the ecosystem. Nigerian banks are contemplating to legalize bitcoin, which would give the popular cryptocurrency a significant boost, to say the least.

It is not the first time someone brings up the concept of Nigerian banks legalizing bitcoin. The same idea was proposedseveral months ago. Albert no one saw this as a hint of what the future could hold, it would appear various Nigerian banks are thinking along the same lines. This development caught quite a few people by surprise, even though it makes a lot of sense.

An article appeared in The Inquirer, which talks about how the Nigerian Bankers Committee is studying blockchain technology. That is anything but surprising, as nearly every bank around the world is well aware of what distributed ledgers bring to the table. However, there has not been any major product to come forth from this interest so far. Experts predict a few of these blockchain applications will see the light of day in 2017, albeit that remains to be seen for now.

What is more interesting, however, is how the Nigerian Bank Committee still feels bitcoin poses somewhat of a threat the national financial ecosystem. To be more precise, the group touched upon the concept of dubious virtual currencies flooding the country. It is not hard to see which projects they are talking about, as OneCoinhas become somewhat of a popular concept in Nigeria. Additionally, there is also the MMM Global scheme, which only accepts bitcoin deposits in Nigeria right now.

It is evident the Central bank of Nigeria wants to gain a better understanding of bitcoin and its blockchain technology. That open-minded approach can mean big things for cryptocurrency in the country moving forward. Moreover, it only appears to be a matter of time until Nigeria introduces bitcoin regulation, which could occur as soon as this year. Introducing such a regulation would effectively legalize bitcoin in Nigeria, even though the current is not issued by the countrys central bank.

Nigeria is not the only country in the world looking to regulate and legalize bitcoin. Japan will be doing the same later this year, which will bring a lot more legitimacy to cryptocurrency moving forward. Albeit no one can effectively regulate bitcoin itself, governments can impose specific guidelines for companies dealing with customer funds, either in the national currency or bitcoin. Then again, running a financial business will always be subject to specific regulation and bitcoin enterprises should not be exempt from those rules.

Bitcoin regulation does not have to be a bad thing by any means. Chinas central bank issued a few new regulatory measures over the past few weeks, which has only helped the bitcoin price stabilizes as time progressed. It is unclear what Nigeria will do exactly when it comes to blockchain and cryptocurrency, but it will be an intriguing situation to keep an eye on.

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Bitcoin Price Weekly Analysis BTC/USD Remains a Buy – newsBTC

Posted: at 10:53 am

Bitcoin price gained bids against the US Dollar to trade above a crucial hurdle ($1000). BTC/USD now has moved into the bullish zone with buy dips approach.

Bitcoin price gained bids against the US Dollar to trade above a crucial hurdle ($1000). BTC/USD now has moved into the bullish zone with buy dips approach.

It looks like Bitcoin price managed to recover well during the past week against the US Dollar, as it moved above $1000. There was a perfect structure formation for a recovery. The best part was a close above the $1000 level, and also above the 100 simple moving average (H4). The same 100 SMA may now act as a support on the downside near $1023 if the price moves down.

There are a few important support levels formed on the downside near $1020 and $1000. The 23.6% Fib retracement level of the last wave from the $916 low to $1056 high is positioned at $1023. It is perfectly aligned with the 100 SMA. It means there is a crucial support formation near $1023. Below $1023, there is a nice bullish trend line formed on the 4-hours chart (data feed from SimpleFX) of BTC/USD.

It can be considered as a buy zone, as the trend line is moving higher and might slowly align near $1020. Overall, the price remains supported on the downside near $1023 and the trend line. As long as there is no close below $1000, one may consider buying on dips.

Looking at the technical indicators:

4-hours MACD The MACD is in the bullish zone and suggesting positive signs.

4-hours RSI (Relative Strength Index) The RSI is moving down from the overbought levels, but remains well above the 50 level.

Major Support Level $1020

Major Resistance Level $1050

Charts courtesy SimpleFX

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Elon Musk’s SpaceX Launches Rocket Carrying Space Station Cargo – New York Times

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New York Times
Elon Musk's SpaceX Launches Rocket Carrying Space Station Cargo
New York Times
A Falcon 9 rocket from Elon Musk's Space Exploration Technologies Corporation SpaceX was launched, quickly disappearing into a low cloud deck, with 5,500 pounds of supplies, experiments and other cargo headed to the International Space Station.
SpaceX rocket to roar into orbit to space stationABC Action News
SpaceX launches supplies to space station Sunday morningLos Angeles Times
Why NASA is sending a superbug to the space stationwtvr.com
TIME -YouTube
all 409 news articles »

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Cabbage harvested aboard space station: NASA – The Indian Express

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By: PTI | Washington | Published:February 19, 2017 1:44 pm In this frame from NASA TV, the SpaceX Dragon capsule arrives at the International Space Station bearing supplies on Wednesday, July 20, 2016. (NASA TV via AP)

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) have harvested the first crop of Chinese cabbage after spending nearly a month tending to the leafy greens, according to NASA. While the space station crew will get to eat some of the Tokyo Bekana Chinese cabbage harvested by astronaut Peggy Whitson, the rest is being saved for scientific study back at NASAs Kennedy Space Centre.

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This is the fifth crop grown aboard the station, and the first Chinese cabbage. The crop was chosen after evaluating several leafy vegetables on a number of criteria, such as how well they grow and their nutritional value. The top four candidates were sent to NASAs Johnson Space Centers Space Food Systems team, where they brought in volunteer tasters to sample the choices.

The Tokyo Bekana turned out to be the most highly rated in all the taste categories, NASA said. Astronauts often report that their taste buds dull during spaceflight, and they frequently add hot sauce, honey or soy sauce to otherwise bland-tasting fare.

One explanation for this may be that, in a reduced gravity environment, the fluid in astronauts bodies shifts around equally, rather than being pulled down into their legs as were accustomed to on Earth. However, there is a backup plan to ensure the crews culinary delight.

If the fresh Chinese cabbage they grew does not awaken their taste buds on its own, packets of ranch dressing were also sent up to help them enjoy the fruits (or veggies) of their labour, NASA said.

This year, a second veggie system will be sent up to be seated next to the current one. It will provide side-by-side comparisons for future plant experiments and will hopefully make astronauts happy to have a bigger space garden. Aboard the next resupply mission to the space station will be an experiment involving Arabidopsis, a small flowering plant, and petri plates inside the veggie facility.

Arabidopsis is the genetic model of the plant world, making it a perfect sample organism for performing genetic studies. These experiments will provide a key piece of the puzzle of how plants adjust their physiology to meet the needs of growing in a place outside their evolutionary experience, said Dr Anna Lisa Paul, the principal Investigator, from University of Florida in the U.S. And the more complete our understanding, the more success we will have in future missions as we take plants with us off planet, Paul added.

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Six UFOs ‘creep past’ International Space Station before NASA ‘cuts live feed’ – Irish Independent

Posted: at 10:52 am

The 31-second video appears to focus on the outside of the American station and within seconds, 'six large' glowing orbs crept past the camera.

According to the Daily Mail the sighting was originally spotted by Youtube user Streetcap1, who then shared the clip online.

The video was shared with alien conspiracy website SecureTeam and Tyler from group told the website that he believed the items would be "fairly large".

"Much larger than NASA's typical excuse of ice particles, we must be looking at icebergs."

Tyler explained that suspiciously NASA cut the live feed and replaced it with feed from camera showing the inside of a briefing room.

Last month John Craddick, from Wolverhampton in the UK, claimed he spotted another UFO on the ISS live feed.

He told the Mirror: "I've been watching it [the live feed] for years but never seen any UFOs on it before.

"I was showing a friend how it worked at around 11.30pm when the feed cut out, and 35 seconds after it came back on, this object appeared.

"At first it was really small and then it grew bigger, lasting for about 25 seconds," he said.

Mr Craddick claims that it must be alien because "nothing human can fly that high"

Below shows a similar occurrence that happened in 2015.

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SpaceX delays rocket launch to International Space Station – CBC.ca

Posted: at 10:52 am

SpaceX will have to wait at least another day to launch from NASA's historic moon pad.Last-minute rocket trouble forced SpaceX to halt Saturday's countdown at Florida's Kennedy Space Center.

The unmanned Falcon rocket remains at Launch Complex 39A, waiting to soar on a space station delivery mission. It's the same pad where Americans flew to the moon almost a half-century ago, and where the shuttle program ended in 2011.

The problem concerned an issue with the steering system ofthe rocket's upper stage, SpaceX said.

This will be SpaceX's first Florida launch since a rocket explosion last summer.The next launch attempt could come as early as Sunday morning.

NASA leased the pad to Elon Musk's company in 2014.

"We are honoured to be allowed to use it," Musk said in a tweet noting its historic significance.

The nearby Cape Canaveral Air Force Station pad where SpaceX had been launching its Falcon 9 rockets was damaged during a fuelling accident in September. The company expects to return the pad to service later this year after repairs.

For its Kennedy Space Center debut, SpaceX will launch a Dragon cargo ship to the International Space Station for NASA, followed by several commercial satellite flights through the spring.

SpaceX has a backlog of more than 70 missions worth more than $10 billion.

Within about two years, the company expects to add human spaceflight to its launch services. The U.S. space agencyhas hired SpaceX and Boeing Co. to ferry astronauts to the space station, breaking a Russian monopoly in effect since the shuttles were retired.

For human spaceflight, SpaceX will need to build up 39A's launch tower and hang a new walkway so astronauts can access the Crew Dragon spaceship, said Stephen Payne, NASA's launch integration manager for the Commercial Crew program.

"It's kind of neat to go outside and look at the pad changing and see how what was once the future is becoming the present," Payne said in an interview.

The privately owned firm has not said how much it spent to refurbish the complex. Its transformation is the most visible of dozens of changes at Kennedy Space Center since the end of the shuttle program.

Boeing has taken over all three of the orbiter processing hangers, including one for its CST-100 Starliner commercial space taxi.

Just beyond the centre's gates, Jeff Bezo's space company Blue Origin is building a factory to manufacture its New Glenn rockets, which will fly satellites and eventually people from a new nearby launch pad.

NASA is keeping the second shuttle launch pad, 39B, and the massive Vehicle Assembly Building, for its own crewed Orion spaceships and heavy-lift Space Launch System rockets.

"In the entire history of human spaceflight, there have only been three countries that have ever flown in space, and here we're going to have four separate and distinct programs at the centre," said Kennedy Space Center planning director Tom Engler.

"It's just amazing when you think about it," he said.

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Air Force Academy cadet team designing a next generation space station – Colorado Springs Gazette

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Caption + In an Air Force Academy classroom last week, junior cadet Jake Luts, right, and sophomore cadet Alex Danchi ponder their design for a fture space station. They're part of an 11-cadet team that's up for a NASA design award. (Air Force photo/ John Van Winkle)

The race to design the next generation of space stations is underway and a team of Air Force Academy cadets may have an early lead.

Cadets came up with Odyssey, a space station that has advantages the existing International Space Station does not possess - like gravity. But while building the hulking international station took years, the cadet proposal could be ready for orbital use in as little as two launches.

The key is a reliance on existing technology and a creative re-use of some used space hardware.

"It's built to be modular like the International Space Station using parts already on the ISS," explained junior cadet Jake Lutz, who is leading an 11-cadet team in a NASA competition for space station design.

The academy team made the semifinals, putting the cadets against peers from top engineering schools, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The cadet's secret weapon may be gravity. Getting gravity into outer space involves some basic physics, creative design and a lot of math.

The cadets hope to link station modules together in a circle that will spin, causing centrifugal force that would equate to the gravity on Mars - a third of that on Earth.

That would give astronauts the ability to fall down and a big leg-up in the health department, Lutz said.

Without gravity, novice astronauts often experience something like sea-sickness.

"It can take 24-72 hours for them to adjust," he said.

And life without gravity means astronauts need to spend hours exercising to keep their bodies from shutting down.

"Your heart is not doing any work," Lutz said.

Because it will have the same gravity as the Red Planet, the spinning station would also better prepare astronauts of the future headed for Mars and help space scientists ready gear for the trip.

Now, the team is working to design a bearing that would allow the gravity-giving spin. That's a tough problem, Lutz said, because the bearing must hold an airtight seal and withstand the rigors of spaceflight.

Keeping astronauts supplied with air and other life-support functions on the station is a worry for sophomore cadet Alex Danchi.

The cadet plan would tie the station's spinning habitat to the existing Tranquility module of the International Space Station, which now provides life support to astronauts in orbit.

It's envisioned that the station will be retired by then and could be parted out for other uses. Danchi is doing the math and studying specifications to determine if used space station parts will be good enough to keep astronauts alive a decade from now.

"I think it is just really cool," Danchi said, "One of my far-off dreams is to go to space."

For Danchi and Lutz, the station is more than classwork. They and their teammates have been finding precious minutes in their packed academy days to ponder their future in the stars.

"It mostly comes out of my sleep," Lutz said.

But the dreaming could pay off for Lutz. He wants to be an Air Force engineer and has higher goals, too.

"I'm gunning to be one of the first people on Mars," he said.

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CU Boulder’s Ellison Onizuka remembered aboard space station … – Boulder Daily Camera

Posted: at 10:52 am

A soccer ball originally packed onto space shuttle Challenger in 1986 is now orbiting the Earth on board the International Space Station, 31 years later. The soccer ball was signed and presented to NASA astronaut Ellison Onizuka by soccer players including his daughter from Clear Lake High School, near NASA's Johnson Space Center. It was recovered following the space shuttle's fatal explosion. (NASA / Courtesty photo)

Lt. Col. Ellison Onizuka

More than 31 years after University of Colorado graduate Lt. Col. Ellison Onizuka lost his life on the space shuttle Challenger, his spirit is being remembered aboard the International Space Station, by way of a soccer ball from his daughter's former school.

It's a ball that, like Onizuka himself, had once been destined for space, before fate intervened.

According to NASA, when Onizuka and six other astronauts launched from the Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 28, 1986, he carried several items with him. One item on board was a soccer ball, which had been signed and presented to him by soccer players including his own daughter from Clear Lake High School in Houston, which his daughter attended and is located near NASA's Johnson Space Center.

Following the catastrophic explosion of the Challenger 73 seconds after launch, killing everyone on board, that soccer ball was recovered and returned to the high school. It has been displayed there for the past 30 years.

However, Clear Lake Principal Karen Engle recently learned of the story behind the ball, and soon after, ISS Expedition 50 Commander Shane Kimbrough whose son attends the same school offered to take a school memento to the space station. Engle suggested that the memento should be the soccer ball.

It's there now, and Kimbrough sent out a picture of it with this tweet from his account on Feb. 3: "This ball was on Challenger that fateful day. Flown by Ellison Onizuka for his daughter, a soccer player. @Clear_LakeHS. #NASARemembers."

Word of the ball in space has reached Onizuka's sister, Shirley Matsuoka, at her home in Captain Cook, Hawaii.

"I think that's great something that was recovered and, you know, went up into space again," Matsuoka said.

She still has great pride in what her brother accomplished in his 39 years.

"I remember him as one that really tried be on top, and would do anything to get ahead," she said. "We think he did great."

One of those connected with CU who remembers Onizuka best is Robert Culp, professor emeritus and former chair of the Ann and H. J. Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences department.

"I was his adviser for both his bachelor's and his master's degrees in that department and knew him very well at that time," Culp said. "He was one of those students who came in to see me several times a week. He liked to sit and talk about the aerospace industry. At that time, he was really more interested in airplanes than space."

Culp said Onizuka secured both degrees in the same year a rarity. A difficult feat.

"I can still remember when we got the phone call" about the loss of the Challenger, said Culp, who lives in Northglenn. "We were just trying to finish up something. I was going to run down to the television room where we had the launch on live, when I got a call from a colleague at the University of Texas and he told me what had happened. It was a shock, and it occupied us for quite some time. Lots of people liked to talk about Ellison."

Onizuka had some CU memorabilia with him on the Challenger such as a CU flag and football now on display in the CU Heritage Center as well as more important items with local connections. There were several CU payloads and experiments on the Challenger, including the Spartan Halley satellite, which was to be released from the shuttle to gather data on that comet, as well as a sophisticated camera system with which to capture images of the comet from inside the spacecraft.

Culp had not heard that the Clear Lake soccer ball had made it onto one NASA launch, much less a second, these many years later.

"He had never mentioned it when I was in touch with him," Culp said. "I guess he had a number of things he had taken up there, and that was just one that I had never heard about.

"I think it's very nice that they took it back up there. It helps to keep Ellison's name on people's minds. You don't want him to ever be forgotten. He was such a wonderful person."

Charlie Brennan: 303-473-1327, brennanc@dailycamera.com or twitter.com/chasbrennan

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SpaceX aborts a launch to International Space Station after technical glitch – Tech2

Posted: at 10:52 am

US space company SpaceX aborted at the last minute the lift-off of its Falcon rocket and Dragon capsule to the International Space Station on Saturday due to technical trouble. A SpaceX Falcon 9, carrying a Dragon cargo capsule loaded with nearly 5,500 pounds of supplies and equipment bound for the International Space Station (ISS), was supposed to blast off from the US space agency NASAs historic Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Centre for the first time, Xinhua news agency reported.

However, the launch was called off with just 13 seconds left in the countdown, NASA TV showed. The California-based company will have to wait at least another day to launch from NASAs historic moonshot pad. The next earliest launch opportunity is on Sunday. All systems go, except the movement trace of an upper stage engine steering hydraulic piston was slightly odd. Standing down to investigate, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk posted on Twitter a few minutes later.

According to Musk, if this is the only issue, flight would be fine, but need to make sure that it isnt symptomatic of a more significant upstream root cause. The delay comes after a small leak was spotted in the Falcon 9 upper stage on Friday. A software check was put into the terminal countdown and the leak apparently was within acceptable limits on Saturday.

The launch delay is not obviously related to the (very tiny) helium leak, but also not out of the question, Musk tweeted. This would be SpaceXs first launch from Florida since a Falcon 9 exploded on the launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on September 1, 2016. The accident during pre-launch testing heavily damaged that pad. SpaceX turned to the LC-39A. The historic launch pad at Cape Canaveral is best known as the launch site for the Apollo 11 mission, which sent the first humans to the surface of the moon, as well as numerous space shuttle missions.

IANS

Tags: Complex 39A, Elon Musk, Falcon, ISRO, ISS, Kennedy Space Centre, NASA, SpaceX, Tesla, Twitter

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New research facility opens at Greenwood Genetics Center – Greenville News

Posted: at 10:51 am

Self Regional Hall(Photo: Craig Mahaffey/Clemson University)

A new facility that will house the Clemson University Center for Human Genetics has opened at the Greenwood Genetic Center.

The $6 million 17,000-square-foot structure, named Self Regional Hall, will allowClemsons growing genetics program to collaborate closely withresearchers at the center and to focus on early diagnostic tools for autism, cognitive developmental disorders, cancer and rare metabolic disorders.

Opening Self Regional Hall means that we will be able to do even more to help children with genetic disordersand their families, and to educate graduate students who will go out into the world and make their own impact, said Clemson University President James P. Clements, who has a child with special needs.

As you all know," he added, "an early diagnosis can make a huge difference for a child and their family because the earlier you can figure out what a child needs the earlier you can intervene and begin treatment.

The building will house eight laboratories and several classrooms, conference rooms and offices for graduate students and faculty, officials said.

GCC director Dr. Steve Skinner said the facilityis the nextstep in a collaboration of more than 20 years.

"We look forward to our joint efforts with both Clemson and Self Regional Healthcare to advance the research and discoveries that will increase our understanding and treatment of human genetic disorders, he said.

For more information about GGC, go towww.ggc.org.

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