![]() ![]() “Broken Walls” is the latest release from alternative rock/rap artists, Ivar & The Horde (Stu Brootal [& Kieron Pepper [and draws inspiration from the war-themed arcade twin-stick shooter ‘Tiny Troopers: Global Ops’ which launched on 9th March. YOUTUBE LINKReleased on Black Razor Records. Each year Wired will distribute a select number of Black Cards to friends, community members and other lucky folk. In addition, Wired is giving away over $1,000 in prizes via the Wired Social channels, from Steam Decks to custom consoles and the introduction of the Wired Black Card - think a Nando's card but instead of free chicken for life it’s indie games. Our biggest sale is here!! That's right, it's our birthday ( 15 wonderful years of indie gaming!) so we've fired up our AI deal maker (we call him Mauro 2.0) to curate the very best offers we've ever dared to drop! More so, as it's our birthday, we've teamed up with PCGamesN to offer our community a chance to win a SteamDeck! Want to win? Enter HERE ! Please check out our lineup and hit follow to stay up to date on all Wired'd releases! Arcade Paradise Pinball DLC launch (May 18th) Tin Hearts Launch (May 16th for PC, PS4/5 and Xbox Series S|X) Xbox Publisher Sale (May 15th to May 29th) Tiny Troopers: Global Ops Free-to-Play Weekend (May 12th to 14th) Steam Publisher Sale (May 12th to 18th) The system will become more and more self-sustained so that astronauts on long-duration missions can reduce their dependency on costly supplies from Earth.The Wired Mega Birthday Schedule Includes: In this way MELiSSA’s recycling loop will be progressively tested in space to increase the degree of closure in the ecosystem. A series of experiments will fly Arthrospira bacteria and cultivate them in the Biolab facility in ESA’s Columbus laboratory to see how they adapt to weightlessness.įrom there, the system of bacteria could be enlarged to supply oxygen to a test subject while feeding on the exhaled carbon dioxide. This facility is the first step to a system that could support humans in space.Įxperiments are also planned on the International Space Station because nobody knows how some of the organisms in the MELiSSA system will grow in space. A pilot plant in Barcelona, Spain, aims to support a number of rats indefinitely in a comfortable habitat – a complete ecosystem shut off from our environment created with one purpose: to keep the rats healthy and happy. The same technology is being used to control the growth of the yeast that produces alcohol and carbon dioxide bubbles in your glass.ĮSA is testing closed-loop life-support systems on Earth and in space. A sensor developed by MELiSSA controls the fermentation and monitors biological processes. The bacterium is now being further investigated as a possible medicine.Īs a food, it turned out to be less interesting than algae, but the nifty bacterium does has another trick up its sleeve: it has proven its worth as a major part of the MELiSSA loop for organic waste and water recycling.Īnother spin-off is helping create sparkling wine. ![]() ![]() Looking for organisms that could be harvested for food, the MELiSSA team came across a bacterium that cut levels of LDL cholesterol – the ‘bad’ cholesterol. Using resources from biology, microbiology and chemistry, researchers have already booked many successes, and some of the spin-offs are more down-to-Earth than you might think. To create this closed-loop system, ESA turned to an ecosystem based on lakes. Aquatic inspiration Cholesterol-eating bacteria ![]()
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