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Sep 9, 2021
License CRISPR patents for free to share gene editing globally
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, education
Wageningen is one of a clutch of research institutions globally that hold patents on CRISPR, a technique that enables precise changes to be made to genomes, at specific locations. Other institutions — including the Broad Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the University of California, Berkeley, which have some of the largest portfolios of patents on the subject — also provide CRISPR tools and some intellectual property (IP) for free for non-profit use. But universities could do better to facilitate access to CRISPR technologies for research.
Universities hold the majority of CRISPR patents. They are in a strong position to ensure that the technology is widely shared for education and research.
Sep 9, 2021
Why coders love the AI that could put them out of a job
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
Probably funny, til it takes your job.
Artificial intelligence is getting better at penning code but still a long way from working alone.
Sep 9, 2021
A Kings of Leon NFT will launch soon on SpaceX’s private Inspiration4 spaceflight
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, space travel
The NFTs will be auctioned off to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
SpaceX’s Inspiration4 spaceflight will launch a Kings of Leon song and 50 other digital art NFTs to orbit next week.
Sep 9, 2021
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope: Updated launch date, mission goals, deployment
Posted by Atanas Atanasov in category: alien life
The James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled for launch December 18. It will help scientists hunt for alien life on exoplanets and look to the beginning of time.
Sep 9, 2021
The Big Bang and the genetic code
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: chemistry, cosmology, genetics, humor, particle physics
Circa 2000
A 1940 paper by Gamow and Mario Schoenberg was the first in a subject we now call particle astrophysics. The two authors presciently speculated that neutrinos could play a role in the cooling of massive collapsing stars. They named the neutrino reaction the Urca process, after a well known Rio de Janeiro casino. This name might seem a strange choice, but not to Gamow, a legendary prankster who once submitted a paper to Nature in which he suggested that the Coriolis force might account for his observation that cows chewed clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
In the 1940s Gamow began to attack, with his colleague Ralph Alpher, the problem of the origin of the chemical elements. Their first paper on the subject appeared in a 1948 issue of the Physical Review. At the last minute Gamow, liking the sound of ‘alpha, beta, gamma’, added his old friend Hans Bethe as middle author in absentia (Bethe went along with the joke, but the editors did not). Gamow and Alpher, with Robert Herman, then pursued the idea of an extremely hot neutron-dominated environment. They envisioned the neutrons decaying into protons, electrons and anti-neutrinos and, when the universe had cooled sufficiently, the neutrons and protons assembling heavier nuclei. They even estimated the photon background that would be necessary to account for nuclear abundances, suggesting a residual five-degree background radiation.
Sep 9, 2021
The Pentagon’s Robot Warship Just Fired Its First Missile
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: military, robotics/AI
One of the U.S. Defense Department’s two prototype robot warships just fired its first missile.
The military on Friday hailed the test-launch of an SM-6 missile from the Unmanned Surface Vessel Ranger, sailing off the California coast, as “game-changing.”
It’s one thing for an unmanned vessel to launch a missile, however. It’s quite another for the same vessel autonomously to find and fix targets.
Sep 9, 2021
Could artificial neurons mimic the human brain?
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
The objective of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem research is to create a deep-learning artificial infrastructure that will act like a human brain.
Sep 9, 2021
World’s largest plant capturing carbon from air starts in Iceland
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: transportation
COPENHAGEN, Sept 8 (Reuters) — The world’s largest plant that sucks carbon dioxide directly from the air and deposits it underground is due to start operating on Wednesday, the company behind the nascent green technology said.
Swiss start-up Climeworks AG, which specialises in capturing carbon dioxide directly from the air, has partnered with Icelandic carbon storage firm Carbfix to develop a plant that sucks out up to 4,000 tons of CO2 per year.
That’s the equivalent of the annual emissions from about 790 cars. Last year, global CO2-emissions totalled 31.5 billion tonnes, according to the International Energy Agency.
Sep 9, 2021
Entergy Restores Power To Half A Million Customers But Large Parts Of Southeast Louisiana Are Still Dark
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: energy
Entergy has restored power to more than half a million of its customers, Louisiana’s largest utility said Tuesday morning.
But there are still roughly 370,000 customers without power across the state, with about 50,000 of them in New Orleans. Entergy expects 90% of its customers in the city to have power back Wednesday.
Some neighborhoods such as Venetian Isles will likely take longer due to more damage in those areas. Details of power restoration timelines for specific neighborhoods in New Orleans can be found here.