Menu

Blog

Page 1746

Aug 26, 2023

Researchers define the ‘speed limit’ of black holes, suggesting new laws of physics

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

When supermassive black holes barrel toward collision, they can reach speeds of up to 1/10th the speed of light, new research suggests.

Aug 26, 2023

New bionic hand allows amputees to effortlessly control fingers

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, transhumanism

New bionic hand with better move of fingers.


Successful testing of the bionic hand has already been conducted on a patient who lost his arm above the elbow.

In a world first, surgeons and engineers have developed a new bionic hand that allows users with arm amputations to effortlessly control each finger as though it was their own body.

Continue reading “New bionic hand allows amputees to effortlessly control fingers” »

Aug 26, 2023

How does it feel to live with a cerebral implant?

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

How looks life with na implant in brain.


Brain-computer interface technology is a fast-growing field but how does it feel to live with an implant inside of you?

In 2014, Ian Burkhart looked down at his hand and imagined closing it. To his astonishment, his hand did just that.

Continue reading “How does it feel to live with a cerebral implant?” »

Aug 26, 2023

Harvard scientists have identified a drug combo that may reverse aging in just one week: ‘A step towards affordable whole-body rejuvenation’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, life extension

The “chemical cocktail” helped reverse aging in mice, but some experts are skeptical about whether it will work in humans.

Aug 26, 2023

‘New’ ALS gene destabilizes neuron’s structure and chokes off its nucleus

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, neuroscience

The viral ALS Ice Bucket Challenge a few years ago raised major funding that resulted in the discovery of new genes connected to the disease. One of those genes is NEK1, in which mutations have been linked to as much as 2% of all ALS cases, making it one of the top-known causes of the disease.

But it wasn’t known how the mutated gene disrupts the function of the motor neuron and causes it to degenerate and die.

Northwestern Medicine scientists have discovered for the first time how this mutated gene leads to ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).

Aug 26, 2023

Can cells think? | Michael Levin

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution, neuroscience

We know that humans are an intelligent species. But this biologist breaks down the intelligence of each of our cells — and it will blow your mind.

❍ Subscribe to The Well on YouTube: https://bit.ly/welcometothewell.
❍ Up next: An evolutionary history of the human brain, in 7 minutes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGArM23mMNM

Continue reading “Can cells think? | Michael Levin” »

Aug 26, 2023

Enhanced Efficacy for Next-Gen Antibody Therapies

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The company achieved proof-of-concept with trastuzumab, an anti-HER2 antibody. Preclinical studies show Multilink increases cytotoxicity and improves tumor regression.

In mouse studies, tumor volume after 49 days was approximately half its original size with Trastuzumab Multilink (T-Multilink) with mertansine (DM1), but had grown four-fold when treated with the same compound without the linker. Comparable studies with T-Multilink-auristatin F showed complete tumor regression by about day 25, while treatment without the linker allowed the tumor to approximately triple in size.

“Multilink is a powerful technology to tackle cancers with low antigen expression,” Marx says. Debiopharm is using it to develop “novel, potent, stable, and safe ADCs for various antibodies.”

Aug 26, 2023

Replay! SpaceX’s Crew-7 launch to the International Space Station — Full Broadcast

Posted by in category: space travel

Four astronauts from four countries launched on SpaceX Dragon capsule to the International Space Station for a six-month mission. They lifted off from NASA’s…

Aug 26, 2023

Meet The Future Of AI. It’s Not ChatGPT, Bard AI, Or Code Whisperer. It’s A Texas A&M Second Year Undergraduate Named Hannah

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

These 120 people (91 pictured due to size restrictions) have dedicated their lives, their ideas and often a lot of capital to bring these amazing ideas to practice. Their language is passionate and the ideas they have can at one end be big and bold, and at the other end it can get extremely technical and nuanced. Imagine trying to take these vast ideas covering so many dimensions and the hundreds of thousands of words in these conversations and try and see patterns or signals. These interviews form the underbelly of the next book I am working on, titled Envisage, 100 ideas about the world of ten years from now.

Two years ago, maybe one year ago, this would have either been a very manual and forensic examination by a team of people with expertise in the areas or a building a database. Days, weeks and even months would go by with lot of revisions.

Aug 26, 2023

World-first software predicts geo-disasters to save lives

Posted by in categories: climatology, sustainability

It’s the first of its kind model and it can suggest countermeasures for dealing with natural disasters.

Global warming is causing more and more natural disasters which often lead to devastating consequences including loss of life. These take the shape of extreme weather events such as heavy rainfall, droughts, tsunamis, cyclones, landslides, avalanches, earthquakes and forest fires.

Now, civil engineers at Monash University have conceived of a first-of-its kind software called GeoXPM that can not only predict where a geo-disaster might occur but also assess the event’s impact on its surrounding environment in order to mitigate its consequences. This is because the model can make suggestions of next steps to take to avoid dire loss of life and save as much property as possible.