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Jan 4, 2025

Microsoft and Partners Shape Quantum Computing Practicality

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

This article examines Microsoft and Atom Computing in driving quantum computing to logical practicality, focusing on applications.

Jan 4, 2025

The Sun Is X-Flaring And The Northern Lights Are Coming — Here’s Where And When

Posted by in category: futurism

Displays of aurora are being predicted once again after a string of powerful solar flares on the sun.

Jan 4, 2025

Revolutionizing AI: Peter Voss and the quest for Artificial General Intelligence

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

AUSTIN, Texas — An Austin entrepreneur is making waves in the world of Artificial Intelligence (AI) by setting his sights on Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). AGI is a type of AI that aims to create machines with human-like learning and reasoning abilities.

“In 2002, together with two other people, I coined the term Artificial General Intelligence.” Founder and CEO of Aigo.ai said.

Voss says that was always the original goal of AI to build thinking machines.

Jan 4, 2025

World’s oldest person, Japanese woman Tomiko Itooka, dies at 116

Posted by in category: futurism

Tomiko Itooka, a Japanese woman who was the world’s oldest person according to Guinness World Records, has died, an Ashiya city official said Saturday. She was 116.

Yoshitsugu Nagata, an official in charge of elderly policies, said Itooka died on December 29 at a care home in Ashiya, Hyogo Prefecture, central Japan.

Itooka, who loved bananas and a yogurt-flavored Japanese drink called Calpis, was born on May 23, 1908. She became the oldest person last year following the death of 117-year-old Maria Branyas, according to the Gerontology Research Group.

Jan 4, 2025

Timely TGFβ signalling inhibition induces notochord

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

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The work, published today in Nature, marks a significant step forward in our ability to study how the human body takes shape during early development.

The notochord, a rod-shaped tissue, is a crucial part of the scaffold of the developing body. It is a defining feature of all animals with backbones and plays a critical role in organising the tissue in the developing embryo.

Continue reading “Timely TGFβ signalling inhibition induces notochord” »

Jan 4, 2025

Dark Energy May Not Exist: Something Stranger Might Explain The Universe

Posted by in category: cosmology

There might not be a mysterious ‘dark’ force accelerating the expansion of the Universe after all. The truth could be much stranger – bubbles of space where time passes at drastically different rates.

The passage of time isn’t as constant as our experience with it suggests. Areas of higher gravity experience a slower pace of time compared with areas where gravity is weaker, a fact that could have some pretty major implications on how we compare rates of cosmic expansion according to a recently developed model called timescape cosmology.

Discrepancies in how fast time passes in different regions of the Universe could add up to billions of years, giving some places more time to expand than others. When we look at distant objects through these time-warping bubbles, it could create the illusion that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating.

Jan 4, 2025

Study Reveals Key Alzheimer’s Pathway — And Blocking It Reverses Symptoms in Mice

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

A sequence of stress signals among specialized clean-up cells in the brain could at last reveal why some immune responses can cause significant nerve degeneration that results in the loss of memory, judgement, and awareness behind Alzheimer’s disease.

Blocking this pathway in mouse brains modeled on Alzheimer’s prevented damage to their synapse connections and reduced the buildup of potentially toxic tau proteins – both hallmarks of the condition.

The researchers, led by a team from the City University of New York (CUNY), believe this pathway – called the integrated stress response (ISR) – causes brain immune cells called microglia to go ‘dark’ and start damaging rather than benefiting the brain.

Jan 4, 2025

Scientists develop vaccine test that predicts how long immunity lasts

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Read the full story at the link below 👇


A blood test that can predict how long vaccine immunity will last so people can get a booster jab earlier, is being developed by scientists.

Researchers have previously been unable to predict why some vaccines produce antibodies to fight infections that last for decades while in others immunity only lasts a few months.

Continue reading “Scientists develop vaccine test that predicts how long immunity lasts” »

Jan 4, 2025

Lizards, Mammals, Machine Minds and Beyond: A Psycho-Phenomenological Atlas of Interstellar Politics

Posted by in category: space travel

Excavating the cosmic battlefield of ideologies, ecologies, and evolutionary destinies.

Jan 4, 2025

Light-Switching Nanocrystals Ignite the Future of AI and Computing

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

Researchers have discovered nanocrystals that toggle between luminescent states swiftly, offering a promising advancement toward optical computing.

This technology could revolutionize data processing and artificial intelligence, making devices faster and more energy-efficient while expanding capabilities in telecommunications and medical imaging.

Breakthrough in Nanocrystal Technology.

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