SpaceX’s CEO Elon Musk aims for 10,000 Starship rocket units annually amid plans 2026’s awaited IPO for the commercial space flight giant.
As AI replaces traditional wage labor, individuals should prepare for an automated future by adapting their skills, investments, and lifestyle to focus on economic stability, personal growth, and self-directed living ## ## Questions to inspire discussion.
Capital Economy Participation.
A: Invest in dividend-producing ETFs for a hands-off approach to wealth building, as AI and robotics reduce labor demand and shift wealth distribution toward capital ownership rather than wages.
🏢 Q: What ownership structures should I explore beyond traditional employment?
A: Consider Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) to become a part-owner of companies, but approach Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs) cautiously due to their high-risk nature despite offering ownership opportunities.
⚠️ Q: Should I rely on Bitcoin for income generation?
Here is the key idea of the video in a single sentence: Humanoid robots are rapidly advancing in design, capabilities, and functionality, but despite their impressive developments, they still face significant challenges and limitations that hinder their practical application and widespread adoption.
## Questions to inspire discussion.
Manis Glove Technology.
🖐️ Q: How does the Manis glove achieve accurate hand tracking? A: The glove tracks 25 degrees of freedom using inverse kinematics based on 6DOF per fingertip (position and orientation), enabling accurate motion capture even when fingertips are obscured.
🔌 Q: What hardware enables the Manis glove’s position tracking? A: The system uses transmitters at the base and receivers in fingertips to determine precise fingertip position relative to the transmitter, with simple calibration allowing different hand sizes as long as sensors stay in place.
📳 Q: How does the Manis glove provide haptic feedback? A: Haptic feedback at the PIP joints vibrates upon contact, enabling virtual world interaction and realistic surface contact simulation for teleoperation and clinical evaluations.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 122 (51) e2518999122, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2518999122 (2025).
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Jian Hu & team use mouse models to show peroxisomes license myelin debris degradation in myeloid cells, which enables debris clearance and remyelination after myelin damage:
The figure shows TEM micrographs of phagocytes in which PEX5 loss (bottom panel) aggregates lipid droplets and crystal accumulation.
1Department of Cancer Biology, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
2University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Houston, Texas, USA.
3University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Tubular biomarkers linked to sodium avidity in heart failure—may give insights into causes of diuretic resistance. @UCSDCardiology
Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers have identified a new way to reprogram T cells, which are infection and tumor-fighting white blood cells, so that they have a superior memory, thereby making them more effective in killing cancer cells.
The finding, published January 12, 2026, in Nature Immunology, amplifies a known strategy of blocking the cellular activity of PARP, an enzyme that detects DNA abnormalities in cells and repairs them.
“This opens the door to a new area of research in understanding how our immune system works, and as importantly, it opens the way for the development of new strategies for the treatment of cancer,” says Samir N. Khleif, MD, director of The Center for Advanced Immunotherapy Research and the director of Loop Immuno-Oncology Research Laboratory at Georgetown’s Lombardi.
The devastating illness deteriorates your brain’s ability to think, remember things and can even alter your behaviour.
While some studies have discovered that engaging in a pretty gross habit or reaching a daily step count can reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD), for over a century, scientists have considered it an irreversible illness. This is why research has focused on preventing or slowing its progression, rather than recovery.
However, a new study challenges this long-held belief by testing whether brains already severely afflicted with advanced AD could recover.