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Jun 30, 2021

Your chips will be in short supply this July 4

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, employment, government, military, sustainability

Fortunately, automakers, suppliers and government leaders are examining things like electric vehicles and where batteries and other parts come from as they push for North American production. The Department of Energy has released a National Blueprint for Lithium Batteries, and a plan to support the domestic battery production to meet growing needs as people go back to work and school in the fall.

It is tempting to see the chip storage problem as just a technology story. But it also has real-world implications for our national security as so much of defense relies on computers and communications in the era of modern warfare.

As Americans celebrate our independence, we have to re-commit to being independent when it comes to reliance on others for goods and services that fuel our lives. We can’t make everything at home, but we can make more and ensure that disruptions abroad don’t reverberate, negatively, at home. As Congress continues to debate infrastructure and other major legislation, and the COVID-19 pandemic retreats, we will need to work together to ensure that we are prepared for whatever 2022 might bring.

Jun 30, 2021

David Rolnick

Posted by in categories: climatology, robotics/AI, sustainability

He’s employing artificial intelligence in the fight against climate change.

Jun 30, 2021

Kiriform tech allows flat objects to be twisted into 3D shapes

Posted by in category: materials

Ordinarily, if you’re building something, you don’t want the materials to buckle under pressure. In a new Harvard University-designed system, however, that buckling action allows flat-packed objects to be twisted into useful three-dimensional forms.

Most existing “buckling-induced deployable structures” consist of linked straight pieces that are popped into shape via straight linear motion, which often requires a fair bit of force to be applied by the user. Folding chairs are one frequently frustrating example.

Seeking an easier alternative, Harvard researchers instead set about building items made up of linked curved pieces. Generally speaking, curved objects (such as beams) are less mechanically stable than their straight counterparts. In most scenarios, this is an undesirable quality. In the case of pop-up devices, though, it means that they’re easier to buckle into the desired form.

Jun 30, 2021

Black holes eat neutron stars for breakfast — and burp out gravitational waves

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

“In physics, we often say that exceptional discoveries require exceptionally strong evidence.”


Within the space of ten days, LIGO detected gravitational waves that prove black holes can form binaries with neutron stars.

Jun 30, 2021

Mendel’s Law Of Independent Assortment

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

#mendelslawofindependentassortment #Genetics #genes #molecularbiology #biology #biotech #recombinants #Genetic


This video explains the mendel’s law of independent assortment.

Continue reading “Mendel’s Law Of Independent Assortment” »

Jun 30, 2021

Big oil and gas kept a dirty secret for decades. Now they may pay the price

Posted by in category: climatology

Almost all the lawsuits draw on the oil industry’s own records as the foundation for claims that it covered up the growing threat to life caused by its products.

Shell, like other oil companies, had decades to prepare for those consequences after it was forewarned by its own research. In 1958, one of its executives, Charles Jones, presented a paper to the industry’s trade group, the American Petroleum Institute (API), warning about increased carbon emissions from car exhaust. Other research followed through the 1960s, leading a White House advisory committee to express concern at measurable and perhaps marked changes in climate by 2000.


With an unprecedented wave of lawsuits, America’s petroleum giants face a reckoning for the environmental devastation caused by fossil fuels – and covering up what they knew along the way.

Continue reading “Big oil and gas kept a dirty secret for decades. Now they may pay the price” »

Jun 30, 2021

Experimental device could treat ear infections using jets of plasma

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Bacterial infections of the middle ear are quite common, particularly in children, yet they can be difficult to treat. An experimental new device has been designed to help, by zapping the bacteria with plasma.

Usually, such infections are treated with topically applied antibiotics. According to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, however, such an approach is ineffective in over 30 percent of acute infections. This is because the antibiotics have trouble penetrating the bacterial biofilm that has formed on the surface of the inner ear tissue.

Additionally, the greater the amount of antibiotics that are used, the greater the chances that the bacteria will develop a tolerance to them over time. With these limitations in mind, U Illinois scientists set out to develop an alternative treatment, or at least one that would allow smaller amounts of antibiotics to be more effective.

Jun 30, 2021

CI Annual General Meeting 2021

Posted by in categories: cryonics, life extension

Sun, Sep 12 at 12 PM PDT.


This is an invitation to the Annual General Meeting of the Cryonics Institute & the Immortalist Society.

The Cryonics Institute, Annual General Meeting (AGM) will be held at 3:00pm to 6:30pm on Sunday, September 12th, 2021 at the Infinity Hall 16650 E. 14 Mile Rd, Fraser, MI 48026 (USA) for more information visit www.infinityhallsidebar.com or call 586−879−6157. Tours at the CI facility will be from 1:00pm to 2:30pm 24355 Sorrentino Court, Clinton Township, (Michigan) 48035 (USA).

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Jun 30, 2021

Virgin Orbit launches 7 satellites on third-ever space mission

Posted by in category: satellites

Virgin Orbit launched seven satellites today (June 30), taking a big step toward regular and reliable commercial launch service.

Jun 30, 2021

Mouse and human germline cells appear to reset their biological age

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

Not sure how interesting this will be to people who know a lot on aging/longevity research.


A team of researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School have found evidence of mouse and human germline cells resetting their biological age. In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes their study of the aging process in germline cells and what they found by doing so.

As animals grow older, all of the cells in their body replicate themselves repeatedly. As the process continues, errors in replicating and other external factors (such as exposure to pollutants) lead to gradual decay in cell quality, which is all part of the natural aging process. In this new effort, the researchers have found evidence showing that have a mechanism for resetting this process, allowing offspring to reset their aging clocks.

Continue reading “Mouse and human germline cells appear to reset their biological age” »