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Jan 3, 2024

Algae as a Surprising Meat Alternative and Source of Environmentally Friendly Protein

Posted by in categories: food, sustainability

With more of us looking for alternatives to eating animals, new research has found a surprising environmentally friendly source of protein – algae.

The University of Exeter study has been published in The Journal of Nutrition and is the first of its kind to demonstrate that the ingestion of two of the most commercially available algal species are rich in protein which supports muscle remodeling in young healthy adults. Their findings suggest that algae may be an interesting and sustainable alternative to animal-derived protein with respect to maintaining and building muscle.

Researcher Ino Van Der Heijden from the University of Exeter said: “Our work has shown algae could become part of a secure and sustainable food future. With more and more people trying to eat less meat because of ethical and environmental reasons, there is growing interest in nonanimal-derived and sustainably produced protein. We believe it’s important and necessary to start looking into these alternatives and we’ve identified algae as a promising novel protein source.”

Jan 3, 2024

Cholesterol: Animal study tests vaccine to lower LDL cholesterol

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

In a recent study in mice, researchers have experimented with a potential vaccine that might help lower levels of bad cholesterol.

Jan 3, 2024

Researchers create first functional semiconductor made from graphene

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics

Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have created the world’s first functional semiconductor made from graphene, a single sheet of carbon atoms held together by the strongest bonds known. Semiconductors, which are materials that conduct electricity under specific conditions, are foundational components of electronic devices. The team’s breakthrough throws open the door to a new way of doing electronics.

Their discovery comes at a time when , the material from which nearly all modern electronics are made, is reaching its limit in the face of increasingly faster computing and smaller electronic devices.

Continue reading “Researchers create first functional semiconductor made from graphene” »

Jan 3, 2024

There are certain ancient Egyptian texts from long before Set of Avaris and his later monotheist avatars (Aten, Jehovah, Allah) known as Resurrection texts‘

Posted by in category: futurism

This track by multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, Prof Steve Nichols, is inspired by Utterance 437 from the Old Kingdom Egyptian Pyramid Texts.\

http://vevo.ly/jBYYkg

Jan 3, 2024

Elon Musk’s Starlink Launches First-Ever Cell Service Satellites—Here’s What To Know And What Mobile Phone Carrier Gets It First

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, mobile phones, satellites

Starlink will test its Direct to Cell service in the U.S.

Jan 3, 2024

Samsung unveils its first robot vacuum-mop that uses AI to detect stains and can steam clean floors

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Samsung is planning to release what might be the most advanced cleaning robot yet: a robot vacuum and mopper that will steam clean floors and use AI to detect stains.

The upcoming “Bespoke Jet Bot Combo” cleaner will have a charging base that will auto wash, clean, and dry the robot’s mop pads.

The device will also use AI to detect floor types, objects, and spot stains. When the robot detects a stain, “it goes back to the clean station to heat the mop pads with high-temperature steam and water and then returns to the area,” says a press release on Samsung’s website.

Jan 3, 2024

Consciousness is a Big Suitcase

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

“[People] like themselves just as they are,” says Marvin Minsky. “Perhaps they are not selfish enough, or imaginative, or ambitious. Myself, I don’t much like how people are now. We’re too shallow, slow, and ignorant. I hope that our future will lead us to ideas that we can use to improve ourselves.”

Marvin believes that it is important that we “understand how our minds are built, and how they support the modes of thought that we like to call emotions. Then we’ll be better able to decide what we like about them, and what we don’t—and bit by bit we’ll rebuild ourselves.”

Marvin Minsky is the leading light of AI—artificial intelligence, that is. He sees the brain as a myriad of structures. Scientists who, like Minsky, take the strong AI view believe that a computer model of the brain will be able to explain what we know of the brain’s cognitive abilities. Minsky identifies consciousness with high-level, abstract thought, and believes that in principle machines can do everything a conscious human being can do.

Jan 3, 2024

AI Researcher Salary: Eye-watering pay of top tech job revealed

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The incredible salary an AI Researcher can command as they enter the job market has been revealed in a new report.

Jan 3, 2024

AI Is Nothing Without Elemental Humanity

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Artificial Intelligence.

AI is nothing without elemental humanity.

It’s not AI; it’s HI.

Jan 3, 2024

Novel switch turns genes on/off on cue, a promising step toward safer gene therapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Just like a doctor adjusts the dose of a medication to the patient’s needs, the expression of therapeutic genes, those modified in a person to treat or cure a disease via gene therapy, also needs to be maintained within a therapeutic window. Staying within the therapeutic window is important as too much of the protein could be toxic, and too little could result in a small or no therapeutic effect.

Although the principle of has been known for a long time, there has been no strategy to implement it safely, limiting the potential applications of gene therapy in the clinic.

In their current study published in the journal Nature Biotechnology, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine report on a technology to effectively regulate gene expression, a promising solution to fill this gap in gene therapy clinical applications. A Research Briefing on the breakthrough has been published in the same journal issue.