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Bitcoin newlyweds: Couple will live first 90 days of married life on virtual currency

A newlywed couple are challenging themselves to live the first 90 days of marriage life using only Bitcoin - a cult digital currency. For three months, Austin Craig and Beccy Bingham will attempt to pay rent, buy groceries, eat at restaurants and even go on a road trip using the currency, ditching their credit cards and cash. The experiment will begin when the Provo, Utah, pair return from their honeymoon on July 27. 'I'm always up for an adventure, and we're starting off our lives together (so) why not start out doing something different and unique?' Bingham, a graphic designer, said of the project called Life on Bitcoin. Bitcoin: For three months, Austin Craig, right, and Beccy Bingham, left, will attempt to pay rent, buy groceries, eat at restaurants using Bitcoin

The world's thinnest watch made from a single piece of flexible steel - and it's got a battery that lasts 15 YEARS

The world's thinnest watch - just 0.8mm thick - has been designed using a single piece of bendy stainless steel. The CST-01 watch is thinner than a credit card and shows the time on an electronic ink display. This E ink design uses the same technology as the screen on the Kindle e-reader. It has a 0.5mm flexible electronic component built-in and a Thinergy Micro-Energy Cell battery that can be charged in 10 minutes and has a lifetime of 15 years. Scroll down for video The CST-01 watch, made by the Chicago-based firm Central Standard Timing. It is 0.8mm thick - thinner than a credit card - and shows the time on an electronic ink display. It is made from a single piece of bendy stainless steel and is fitted with a flexible electronic circuit There are four models of the CST-01 in black and white, pictured, rose gold and black with black coated stainless steel. Each comes in small, medium or large. It uses a Thinergy Micro-Energy Cell battery that can be charged in 10 minute

Stanford University physicists use X-rays to uncover long-lost notes of historic 1797 opera blacked out by its composer

Opera connoisseurs now will be able to enjoy Luigi Cherubini's 18th century masterpiece Medee in its entirety for the first time in over 200 years thanks to scientists who used modern technology to uncover the music notes concealed by a layer of carbon smudges. Experts working at Stanford University's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory were able to reveal the original score of the once-truncated aria ‘Du trouble affreux qui me dévore' (The terrible disorder that consumes me) with the help of a device called the synchrotron lightsource, which blasted the 200-year-old manuscript with X-rays.   Cherubini wrote his musical opus in 1797, but it received tepid reception from contemporary critics, who complained that the three-hour opera was far too long. Act of defiance: Legend has it that 18th century composer Luigi Cherubini blacked out the end of his opera Medee after critics complained that it was too long Masterpiece revealed: Experts at Stanford University'

Hands-free devices are NO safer than using a phone at the wheel because they still distract us and slow our reactions

They are sold as safe alternative to texting and emailing at the wheel. But hands-free kits can cause an 'extensive risk' to drivers and pedestrians - and may be no safer than using a phone. New research has found that dangerous mental distractions exist even when drivers keep their hands on the wheel and their eyes on the road. The findings, from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety in the U.S., show that as mental workload and distractions increase, reaction times get slower and brain function is compromised. Russ Martin, right, from the AAA Foundation is fitted with an electroencephalographic (EEG)-configured skull cap by Joel Cooper, research assistant professor of psychology at Utah University, left. The caps were fitted to drivers to measure their brainwaves and determine the risk posed by voice-activated technology THE RISE AND RISKS OF 'EYES-FREE' TECHNOLOGY The AAA Foundation's results confirm the recent findings from the Texas Transportation Instit

No more furry peaches: The fruit bowl that warns you BEFORE your food goes mouldy

Picking what you think is a ripe, juicy peach from your fruit bowl - only to discover its mouldy and furry underneath - may soon be a thing of the past. Scientists have developed a fruit bowl fitted with a sensor that monitors the levels of a chemical released during the fruit's ripening process. When these levels of the chemical (called ethylene) increase, it acts as a trigger that the fruit is beginning to rot and the system lights up to alert the owner that the fruit must be eaten soon. Jagjit Chodha designed the fruit bowl that can reduce food waste by alerting users their produce is beginning to rot. It was inspired by statistics that show 440,000 tonnes of fruit is wasted each year from homes in the UK Chodha's fruit bowl has a sensor attached, pictured, that monitors ethylene levels released during fruit's ripening process. When these levels increase it acts as a trigger that the fruit is beginning to rot and the system lights up to alert the user MADE

Facebook launches new policy allowing mastectomy photos after breast cancer patient's 20,000-strong petition

Facebook has announced that it will not be deleting any more mastectomy photos from the site. The social network has continually come under fire for removing post-surgery images of breast cancer survivors, but now it acknowledges how sharing these can 'help raise awareness'. The long-awaited policy update comes after 21,362 people signed a Change.org petition simply titled: 'Facebook: Stop censoring photos of men and women who have undergone mastectomies.' Victory: Facebook has announced that it will not be deleting any more mastectomy photos from the site It was launched by Scorchy Barrington, 53, from New York who is currently battling Stage IV breast cancer. She hailed the news as a 'victory' adding that 'from now on, these powerful visual testaments to the real impact of breast cancer. . . will be welcomed on Facebook, as they should be.'    More... Kathy Ireland, the world's wealthiest model, is set to get even richer as she launches

Lego characters are getting angrier - and could be harming children's development

Next time you settle down for a spot of Lego with your children, take a proper look at the faces on the figures. Because while you may remember life in Legoland as being perfectly content, these day things are a little more fraught. A study has revealed that the faces of Lego characters are getting angrier. In the past, they all had a standard enigmatic smile. But this has changed as more sets are designed to tie in with films, often featuring battles between good and evil. Lego characters are slowly getting angrier, say researchers who found that since the product launched in 1975, the proportion of angry faces has been rising. For the first 11 years after Lego was introduced, all characters were happy 'Lego themes have been increasingly based on conflicts [such as Pirates or Harry Potter]. Often a good force is struggling with a bad one,' say the researchers Christopher Bartneck, of New Zealand's University of Canterbury, has published research showing that

Harsh winter hits honey bees: Number of colonies who did not survive up by a third

A third of honeybee colonies did not survive the winter following last year’s wash-out summer, a survey of beekeepers has revealed. The level of colony losses across England is more than double what it was last year, up to 34% from 16% in 2012, the British Beekeepers Association (BBKA) said. The results reflect poor weather last summer, which frequently prevented honeybees from foraging and gathering pollen, and reduced the amount of food available from flowering plants, as nectar production is temperature dependent. A third of honeybee colonies did not survive the winter following last year¿s wash-out summer As a result there was inadequate nutrition for bees, especially during late summer when the specialised bees which take the colony through winter are born.  The poor weather also hit mating for new virgin queens, causing their colonies to die out.   More... The stars that follow day and night: Scientists discover new class of 'pulsating' constellation that gets li

Mobile apps that mimic birdsong are threatening the nesting habits of rare migratory species, experts warn

Mobile phones have become an unexpected threat to a rare breed of bird. A number of mobile apps mimicking the song of the elusive nightjar are diverting the birds from the  nesting. Now, Dorset Wildlife Trust is launching an online campaign to raise awareness after several incidents were reported of visitors to Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour using the mobile apps. A number of mobile apps mimicking the song of the elusive nightjar (pictured) are diverting the birds from the nesting Visitors to the nature reserve have used apps imitating the unusual 'churring' call of the nightjar to attract the elusive birds so they can be photographed more easily. The app mimics the distinctive call of the male nightjar, and is usually the only way to know if the birds are about. THE ELUSIVE NIGHTJAR Nightjars are usually 28cm long Average wingspan: 60cm Average weight: 83g Can live up to 11 years Protected in the UK  Migrate annually  to UK from Africa in April-May Found in Englan

The stars that follow day and night: Scientists discover new class of 'pulsating' constellation that gets lighter and darker over regular time period

A previously unclassified type of star that gets lighter and darker over a fixed time period has been discovered. Scientists have long known of 'pulsating' stars that vary in luminosity but these new heavenly bodies get lighter and darker at periods of between two and 20 hours. They were found in a stellar cluster - NGC 3766, in the constellation of Centaurus - located 7,000 light years from Earth by the European Southern Observatory using the La Silla Observatory in Chile. A seven-year study found 36 of the 3,000 stars displayed the tiny variations in brightness. The 20-million-year-old stars, hotter and brighter than our sun, do not fit into any known category of pulsating star and are as yet unnamed. Stars hide your fires: A new type of variable star in the Centaurus constellation has been discovered by a group of European Space Observatory astronomers at La Silla Observatory, Chile How the brightness of these stars changes depends in complex ways on the properties