Sunday, December 4, 2011

Today on New Scientist: 1 December 2011

Teeny lizards reveal how vertebrates grow

A glimpse inside a lizard egg reveals an anole in the making in these macroscopic photos

Paint-on power, the saviour of solar

A new generation of thermoelectric materials promises solar power without the panels. James Mitchell Crow reaches for his brush

Christmas gifts for the rationally curious

CultureLab's pick of whimsical gifts inspired by science

Welcome to Robotville, Population: 20

A convention of cutting-edge European robots demonstrates the ways they may help us better understand ourselves

Zoologger: Chill out with the world's coldest insect

While cold-shy mammals flee north, the larvae of the Antarctic midge stick it out through the depths of the polar winter

Durban summit must accept degrees of responsibility

A two-degree increase in global temperatures seems almost inevitable. So is it time to rethink the target?

Intelligence agency recruits spies with online code

A mysterious puzzle on an unmarked website turns out to be a GCHQ recruitment campaign

Warmer world is the challenge of a generation

As the latest round of climate talks begin, it seems clear that the world will warm by at least 2??C. But that's no reason to give up the fight

Qbo robot sees and recognises itself in the mirror

Watch a robot recognise its reflection in a mirror

We can win the AIDS war with drugs and vaccines

If we can bail out the banks, surely we can keep up the pressure on HIV

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