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Aug 1, 2021

Sergey Young: breaking the barrier of maximum lifespan

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

The news we like: “In five to 10 years time from now, we’ll have a new, special kind of drugs: longevity drugs. And unlike today’s medication, which always focused on one disease, this kind of drug will will give us an opportunity to influence aging as a whole and a very fatalistic way, working on healthspan, not only on lifespan… it’s very likely that this new drug will be developed with the help of artificial intelligence, which will compress drug development cycle by two or three times from what they are today.”


Ahead of the launch of his new book Growing Young, Sergey Young joins us for a video interview to discuss longevity horizons, personal health strategies and disruptive tech – and how we are moving towards radically extending our lifespan and healthspan.

Sergey Young, the longevity investor and founder of the Longevity Vision Fund is on a mission to extend healthy lifespans of at least one billion people. His new book, Growing Young, is released on 24th August and is already rising up the Amazon charts.

Continue reading “Sergey Young: breaking the barrier of maximum lifespan” »

Aug 1, 2021

The Future of Deep Learning Is Photonic

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Over the years, deep learning has required an ever-growing number of these multiply-and-accumulate operations. Consider LeNet, a pioneering deep neural network, designed to do image classification. In 1998 it was shown to outperform other machine techniques for recognizing handwritten letters and numerals. But by 2012 AlexNet, a neural network that crunched through about 1600 times as many multiply-and-accumulate operations as LeNet, was able to recognize thousands of different types of objects in images.

Advancing from LeNet’s initial success to AlexNet required almost 11 doublings of computing performance. During the 14 years that took, Moore’s law provided much of that increase. The challenge has been to keep this trend going now that Moore’s law is running out of steam. The usual solution is simply to throw more computing resources—along with time, money, and energy—at the problem.

As a result, training today’s large neural networks often has a significant environmental footprint. One 2019 study found, for example, that training a certain deep neural network for natural-language processing produced five times the CO2 emissions typically associated with driving an automobile over its lifetime.

Aug 1, 2021

This Miniature Particle Accelerator Powers a Tiny Laser With Huge Promise

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

Particle accelerators are hugely important in the study of the matter of the Universe, but the ones we think of tend to be gigantic instruments – surrounding cities in some cases. Now scientists have made a much smaller version to power an advanced laser, a setup that could be just as useful as its larger counterparts.

The particle accelerator in question is a plasma wakefield accelerator, which generates short and intense bursts of electrons, and the laser it’s powering is what’s known as a free-electron laser (FEL), which uses its light to analyze atoms, molecules, and condensed matter in incredibly high resolutions.

While this scenario has been tried before, the resulting laser light hasn’t been intense enough to be useful at smaller scales. Here, the researchers were able to keep the setup enclosed in few normal-sized rooms while amplifying the final electron beam produced by the laser, increasing the intensity by 100 times in the last step of the process.

Aug 1, 2021

Women allege that NSO spyware was used to steal and leak their private photos

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, mobile phones, surveillance

“I am used to being harassed online. But this was different,” she added. “It was as if someone had entered my home, my bedroom, my bathroom. I felt so unsafe and traumatized.”

Oueiss is one of several high-profile female journalists and activists who have allegedly been targeted and harassed by authoritarian regimes in the Middle East through hack-and-leak attacks using the Pegasus spyware, created by Israeli surveillance technology company NSO Group. The spyware transforms a phone into a surveillance device, activating microphones and cameras and exporting files without a user knowing.

Jul 31, 2021

New delta variant studies show the pandemic is far from over

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

#canada.

#pandemic


The coronavirus’s delta variant is different from earlier strains of the virus in worrying ways, health officials are discovering.

Continue reading “New delta variant studies show the pandemic is far from over” »

Jul 31, 2021

238 Year-Old Technology Could Give The Best View of Space Ever

Posted by in categories: business, satellites

Up, up, and away.

Launching satellites is an expensive business — at least for now. But satellites are necessary in astronomy for one major reason — they get telescopes above the atmosphere.

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Jul 31, 2021

Zeus Temple’s entrance found in western Turkey’s Aizanoi

Posted by in category: futurism

The monumental entrance gate of the Zeus Temple’s sanctuary in the ancient city of Aizanoi, located in the Çavdarhisar district of western Kütahya province, Turkey, was unearthed during recent excavations.

Excavations are being carried out by the Kütahya Museum Directorate in the ancient city, which was included in the UNESCO World Heritage Tentative List in 2012 and is 50 kilometers (31 miles) away from the city center. The excavation coordinator, the head of Dumlupınar University (DPU) archeology department professor Gökhan Coşkun, told Anadolu Agency (AA) that the ancient city’s history dates back to about 5000 years.

Jul 31, 2021

Why Retirement Will Soon Be a Thing of the Past

Posted by in categories: business, economics

Rising life expectancy and falling birth rates mean the world’s average person is getting older. It also means they will be working a lot longer. How people cope with this reality will be vital to the global economy, and perhaps an historic opportunity to rethink the future of work.

Presented by Intuit.

Continue reading “Why Retirement Will Soon Be a Thing of the Past” »

Jul 31, 2021

Scientist Grow Artificial Brains In Space That ‘Think’

Posted by in category: space

NASA flies mini brains to the International Space Station to test the effects of zero gravity.


Artificially made brain organoids are developing in ways scientists didn’t think was possible. NASA flies the mini brains to the International Space Station to test the effects of zero gravity. #StemCells #Organoids #DiscoveryNews.

Jul 31, 2021

China nuclear reactor shutdown may be ‘a sign of caution over new design’

Posted by in categories: chemistry, nuclear energy

“I suspect the French side is wondering whether the fuel rod damage is caused by something that they can directly address by modifying the equipment design, the water chemistry around the fuel, the plant operating procedures, or maybe even the fuel fabrication process to ensure that this doesn’t happen in other plants that are based on the Taishan design,” Fishman said.


Developer could be trying to find source of fuel rod damage to alter design in the future, analyst says.