Menu

Blog

Page 1845

Jun 23, 2023

Tesla Supercharger network could be worth $100 billion, analyst says

Posted by in category: futurism

Analysts are trying to estimate the value of Tesla’s Supercharger network as the NACS connector becomes the North American standard and could widen Tesla’s charging lead.

One of the top Tesla analysts believes it could be worth more than $100 billion.

The Supercharger network is the only global EV fast-charging network, and in North America, it is by far the most extensive and reliable.

Jun 23, 2023

The Comprehensive Map of Medicine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education

Visit https://brilliant.org/dos/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.
And grab your posters here: https://store.dftba.com/collections/domain-of-science.
This is the Map of Medicine showing you all of the different areas of medical practice, the principles of medicine, diagnostic methods, the surrounding sciences that support the field of medicine and a description of the placebo effect and clinical trials.
#medicine #domainofscience.

Check out Rohin @MedlifeCrisis placebo video: https://youtu.be/tefIopDJQBQ

Continue reading “The Comprehensive Map of Medicine” »

Jun 23, 2023

New ‘atlas’ maps bacteria and metabolites associated with elevated risk of cardiovascular disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food

A Cleveland Clinic research team has published an “atlas” of metabolites associated with cardiovascular disease in the European Heart Journal. The novel findings provide key details about the routes and potential branching paths taken by bacteria and metabolic by-products, metabolites.

The study mapped out the multiple by-products of bacteria-processing associated with and then compared that to patient data to assess disease risk in two large cohorts—one in the US and another in Europe.

Bacteria in and on our bodies produce metabolites through processing certain molecules, referred to as precursors. Precursors can come in components of our diet, like protein, or as other metabolized substances. Probiotics (living organisms) and prebiotics (fiber, starch) have increasingly been introduced in foods or supplements as possible clinical interventions.

Jun 23, 2023

AI and Crypto Are Becoming Regulatory Frenemies

Posted by in categories: cryptocurrencies, robotics/AI

The competition between digital currencies and artificial intelligence for the hearts and minds of tech innovators — and the wallets of venture capitalists — reflects a more general dichotomy.

Jun 23, 2023

AI could solve the engineering brain drain, a new study says

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

AI tools can improve engineering productivity so that a team of five operates with the productivity of 20, the CEO of manufacturing firm Fictiv said.

Jun 23, 2023

Study reveals how immune system of astronauts breaks down

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) — Evidence is growing about the many ways that traveling in the microgravity environment of space tampers with the human body, with new research showing how it dials down the activity of genes in white blood cells crucial to the immune system.

A study involving 14 astronauts who spent 4−1÷2 to 6−1÷2 months aboard the International Space Station found that gene expression in these cells, also called leukocytes, quickly decreased when they reached space and then returned to normal not long after returning to Earth, researchers said on Thursday.

The findings offer insight into why astronauts are more susceptible to infections during flights, showing how the body’s system for fighting off pathogens is weakened in space.

Jun 23, 2023

Researchers solve temperature problem for source-gated transistors

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, nanotechnology

Low-cost, flexible displays that use very little energy could be a step closer, thanks to an innovation from the University of Surrey that solves a problem that has plagued source-gated transistors (SGT). The study has been published by IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices.

Dr. Radu Sporea, project lead from the University of Surrey, said, We used a rapidly emerging semiconductor material called IGZO or indium-gallium-zinc oxide to create the next generation of source-gated transistors. Through nanoscale contact engineering, we obtained transistors that are much more stable with temperature than previous attempts. Device simulations allowed us to understand this effect.

This new design adds to SGTs and retains usual benefits like using low power, producing high signal amplification, and being more reliable under different conditions. While source-gated transistors are not mainstream because of a handful of performance limitations, we are steadily chipping away at their shortcomings.

Jun 23, 2023

Even a modest reduction in kidney function increases health risks in young adults, finds study

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

A study of more than 8 million adults in Ontario, Canada suggests that even a modest loss of kidney function is associated with increased health risks. The study, published in The BMJ, could lead to better approaches to prevent chronic kidney disease and related conditions, particularly in younger adults.

“The dogma is that healthy, young adults don’t need to worry about unless it drops to around 50% of the normal level, but our research suggests that even a more modest 20–30% drop may have consequences and we may want to have earlier conversations about prevention and monitoring,” said senior author Dr. Manish Sood, senior scientist, nephrologist and Jindal Research Chair for the Prevention of Kidney Disease at The Ottawa Hospital and professor at the University of Ottawa.

The research team examined ICES health record data from 2008 to 2021 for every Ontario adult aged 18–65 who had at least one for kidney function, but no history of kidney disease. They found that 18% of those in the 18–39 age group had kidney function that was modestly below , but not low enough to be diagnosed with . Individuals in this “gray zone” faced a modestly increased risk of kidney failure, death and cardiovascular events such as heart attack.

Jun 23, 2023

Hacker Discovers Hidden “Elon Mode” That Makes Teslas Way More Dangerous

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

The secret mode, which the hacker nicknamed “Elon Mode,” allows for completely hands-free driving during Full Self-Driving mode.

Jun 23, 2023

Research says your ability to ‘bulls—’ may be a sign of intelligence

Posted by in category: futurism

“If someone is a good bulls—er, they are likely quite smart,” says Martin Turpin, a graduate student at the Reasoning and Decision Making Lab at the Unversity of Waterloo and co-lead on the study recently published in the scientific journal Evolutionary Psychology.

Turpin and his colleagues found that people who are better at producing believable explanations for concepts, even when those explanations aren’t based on fact, typically score better on intelligence tests than those who struggle to “bulls—,” as the study puts it.” However, it is not the case that those who are not good bulls—ers are less intelligent,” Turpin says.