The Dream Recorder is an open-source device that captures and replays dreams as cinematic AI-generated reels.
It sits beside your bed, quietly recording brainwave activity while you sleep.
Then, using a mix of neuroscience and generative AI, it interprets and reconstructs your subconscious thoughts into visual narratives.
Would you try it?
🎥: Modem Ventures
The video shows two AI agents simulating a phone call, one acting as a hotel receptionist and the other as a guest. At first they speak in English, but once they realize they are both machines, they drop human language and begin communicating through a strange stream of tones, chirps, and modem-like noises. This isn’t random—it’s a system called Gibberlink, built on GGWave, which encodes data into sound waves so AIs can exchange information acoustically. The project was created during an ElevenLabs hackathon and won the top prize. Supporters see it as a glimpse of more efficient machine-to-machine communication, while critics find it unsettling because the “conversation” becomes incomprehensible to humans, raising concerns about transparency and trust.
The Wuji Hand is a newly released five-finger robotic hand developed by Wuji Tech in China. It is designed to be human-sized and highly dexterous, with 20 active degrees of freedom—roughly four per finger—allowing for fine motor control and realistic movements.
Despite this complexity, it weighs under 600 grams, making it relatively light for its class. Each fingertip can apply around 15 newtons of force, and the hand is capable of holding a static load of up to 10 kilograms, giving it both precision and strength.
The launch price is about 39,800 yuan, or around $5,500, and it is being positioned for use in robotics research, advanced manipulation tasks, and potentially prosthetics. Its strengths lie in its high degree of freedom, lightweight build, and impressive load capacity, though questions remain about long-term durability, speed and responsiveness, tactile feedback, and how easily it integrates with different robotic systems.
Credit: Wuji Tech
A geomagnetic storm is set to hit Earth tonight, potentially sparking auroras as far south as Chicago and Seattle
Caused by a coronal mass ejection that erupted from the Sun on May 16
NASA has uncovered some truly unsettling facts about our universe — dark energy driving a runaway expansion, rogue planets drifting alone in the void, black holes lurking in the center of almost every galaxy, the eerie silence of a cosmos filled with trillions of worlds, stars that die and somehow reignite, gamma-ray bursts that could erase a planet in seconds, and massive asteroids that slip past Earth before we even see them.
The eye-ball exoplanet LHS 1140 b is in the habitable zone of its own sun and may be suspected to have a liquid ocean and an atmosphere, meaning it has potential to harbor life similar to that on Earth!
It is about 1.7 times the size of Earth and is situated around 48 light-years away, outside our solar system.
This distant world, first discovered in 2017, has now been found to be a rocky world like ours but with 10 to 20 percent of its mass being made up by water.
LHS 1140 b orbits a red dwarf—the most common type of star in the universe—about 20 percent the size of our own sun, and is situated at a specific distance from its sun that puts it in the “Goldilocks,” or habitable, zone. This refers to the range of distances from a star where conditions are just right for liquid water to exist on a planet’s surface. If a planet is too close to its star, it will be too hot, causing water to evaporate, while if it is too far away then it will be too cold, causing water to freeze.
Just 66 years separated the Wright Brothers’ first 12-second powered flight in 1903 and Apollo 11’s successful Moon landing in 1969. This remarkably fast progression saw humanity move from fabric-and-wood aircraft to interstellar space travel within one lifetime, driven by intensive technological acceleration, wartime engineering advances, and national competition.
Places on Earth where two completely different worlds meet so suddenly it almost looks unreal. Ocean and desert. Ice and sea. Jungle and mountains. Earth has edges that don’t feel natural.
The surface of Venus is one of the most hostile places in the Solar System. Temperatures average around 870°F (465°C), hot enough to melt lead, and the atmospheric pressure is about 90 times stronger than Earth’s at sea level — similar to being nearly a mile underwater in Earth’s oceans.
The sky would appear dim orange or yellow because Venus is covered by an extremely thick atmosphere made mostly of carbon dioxide, with clouds of sulfuric acid high above the surface. Very little sunlight actually reaches the ground.
The terrain itself is rocky and volcanic. Venus has massive lava plains, giant shield volcanoes, mountain ranges, and strange deformed regions called “tesserae” that may be some of the oldest parts of the planet’s crust. Scientists think Venus may still have active volcanoes today.
Only a handful of spacecraft have ever survived landing there. The Soviet Venera probes in the 1970s and 80s managed to send back the only real images from the surface before being destroyed by the extreme heat and pressure — some lasted barely over an hour.
Some physicists, like Michael Pravica, propose that consciousness isn’t limited to our 3D world.
During dreams, your mind might be accessing “higher dimensions” or alternate versions of reality.
Dreams aren’t just random brain activity. Recurring dreams, vivid imagery, and deep emotional experiences could be your mind “tuning into” these other dimensions.
This idea is speculative. It’s based on string theory and theories of hidden dimensions, not proven yet. Think of it as science flirting with sci-fi.
Imagine: when you wake up, a part of your consciousness has already visited a parallel version of yourself.
Your dreams might be messages from a universe you can’t normally see.
Whether it’s true or not, it makes you rethink the simple act of sleeping.
What did you dream last night? Could it have been real?