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Nov 16, 2021

How Designers Use Nature To Solve Problems | Answers With Joe

Posted by in categories: habitats, sustainability

A lot of our great technological achievements were copied from nature. And we are still copying.


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Humans have been designing and innovating for 100,000 years, but nature has been doing so for 4.5 billion years. Turns out we still have a lot to learn from nature, and biomimicry is the science of using nature to inform innovative design. Here are some great examples of this new and maybe world-changing design philosophy.

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Nov 16, 2021

Scientists report finding a second person ‘naturally’ cured of HIV

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

As the scientists reported Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine, they didn’t find any. Which means that the woman, who they are calling the “Esperanza Patient” to protect her privacy, appears to have eradicated the deadly virus from her body without the help of drugs or a bone marrow transplant — which would make her only the second person believed to have cured herself of HIV, without drugs or any other treatment.

“This gives us hope that the human immune system is powerful enough to control HIV and eliminate all the functional virus,” said Xu Yu, an immunologist at the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard and senior author on the new report. “Time will tell, but we believe she has reached a sterilizing cure.” The discovery, which was previously announced at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in March, could help identify possible treatments, researchers said.

Nov 16, 2021

The metaverse is investable — and it’s going to be big, says tech billionaire

Posted by in category: business

The so-called metaverse has a “big time” investment case, according to Puerto Rican billionaire businessman Orlando Bravo.

Bravo, co-founder and managing partner of private equity firm Thoma Bravo, told CNBC that he thinks “metaverse” is the big word of 2021.

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Nov 16, 2021

Will an Israeli vaccine be the solution to new variants?

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Several Covid-19 vaccines under development in Israel hold out promise for their ability to protect against variants of the virus that are challenging existing vaccines.

Back in May 2020, research groups across the world were racing to formulate vaccines against the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus.

Realizing it was not going to win that race, Israel purchased millions of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines from the United States and led the world in getting eligible citizens vaccinated.… See more.

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Nov 16, 2021

New approach provides potential vaccine and treatment for Alzheimer’s

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

LifeArc scientists, in collaboration with researchers in the UK and Germany, have developed a promising new approach to potentially treat Alzheimer’s disease – and also vaccinate against it.

Both the antibody-based treatment and the protein-based vaccine developed by the team reduced Alzheimer’s symptoms in mouse models of the disease. The research is published today in Molecular Psychiatry.


LifeArc and researchers in the UK & Germany have developed a promising new approach to potentially treat Alzheimer’s.

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Nov 16, 2021

Israel’s next-gen robots could replace ground troops on frontlines

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The machine will cost between $150,000 and $300,000 the company said, depending on configurations. The TOOK is ready to be deployed, Levy said, and is already being evaluated by some of its clients. Eventually, he believes there will be hundreds of thousands of ROOKs in the field.

What is next? Collaboration between air and land robots, he said, for example deploying an aerial and a land robot to photograph a certain area and then merging the pictures for a complete perspective.


Elbit Systems and Roboteam have released the ROOK UGV, which will support infantry in a number of frontline roles.

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Nov 16, 2021

Polymer discovery gives 3D-printed sand super strength

Posted by in category: 3D printing

Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory designed a novel polymer to bind and strengthen silica sand for binder jet additive manufacturing, a 3D-printing method used by industries for prototyping and part production.

The printable polymer enables structures with intricate geometries and exceptional strength—and is also water soluble.

The study, published in Nature Communications, demonstrates a 3D-printed sand bridge that at 6.5 centimeters can hold 300 times its own weight, a feat analogous to 12 Empire State Buildings sitting on the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nov 16, 2021

Competing quantum interactions enable single molecules to stand up

Posted by in categories: computing, nanotechnology, quantum physics

Nanoscale machinery has many uses, including drug delivery, single-atom transistor technology, or memory storage. However, the machinery must be assembled at the nanoscale, which is a considerable challenge for researchers.

For nanotechnology engineers the ultimate goal is to be able to assemble functional machinery part-by-part at the nanoscale. In the macroscopic world, we can simply grab items to assemble them. It is not impossible to “grab” single anymore, but their quantum nature makes their response to manipulation unpredictable, limiting the ability to assemble molecules one by one. This prospect is now a step closer to reality, thanks to an international effort led by the Research Centre Jülich of the Helmholtz society in Germany, including researchers from the Department of Chemistry at the University of Warwick.

In the paper, “The stabilization potential of a standing molecule,” published today, 10 November 2021 in the journal Science Advances, an international team of researchers has been able to reveal the generic stabilization mechanism of a single standing molecule, which can be used in the rational and of three-dimensional at surfaces.

Nov 15, 2021

Ford and Purdue University Created a Cable That Fully Charges an EV in 5 Minutes

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

The new cable would be able to output four times more current than today’s best option.

Nov 15, 2021

Genetic-code-expanded cell-based therapy for treating diabetes in mice

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

The development of a genetic code expansion-based system enables fast protein expression in response to a noncanonical amino acid. The system was implanted into diabetic mice to rescue hyperglycemia with oral delivery of the amino acid.