Bees are not supposed to read code. Yet a new wave of experiments suggests that honeybees can track dot‑and‑dash style light ...
Often the Morse Code centered projects that we feature are to help you practice transmitting messages. This one takes a tack and builds an automatic decoder. We think [Nicola Cimmino’s] project is ...
B umblebees can separate dot-like and dash-like flashes in a way that resembles Morse code. Researchers at Queen Mary ...
Cubesat flashes should be observable by the unaided eye or with small binoculars. The robotic Japanese cargo vessel now en route to the International Space Station is loaded with food, clothes, ...
“Calling all. This is our last cry before our eternal silence.” With that, in January 1997, the French coast guard transmitted its final message in Morse code. Ships in distress had radioed out dits ...
Much has been made about the Red Sox seeking to strip the name Yawkey from the street just outside the ballpark. Red Sox owner John Henry has reportedly said he's "haunted" by the racist past of the ...
Inventor Samuel F. B. Morse spent summers at his Locust Grove Estate in New York's Hudson Valley. The 14,000-square-foot Italianate villa, built in 1852, has 45 rooms over six floors. It was purchased ...
When the first radios and telegraph lines were put into service, essentially the only way to communicate was to use Morse code. The first transmitters had extremely inefficient designs by today’s ...
Morse code is a communication system developed by Samuel Morse, an American inventor, in the late 1830s. The code uses a combination of short and long pulses – dots and dashes, respectively – that ...