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Mar 30, 2020

The Teens Who Hacked Microsoft’s Videogame Empire—And Went Too Far

Posted by in category: futurism

Among those involved in David Pokora’s so-called Xbox Underground, one would become an informant, one would become a fugitive, and one would end up dead.

Mar 30, 2020

Israeli company uses placenta cells to treat critical COVID-19 patients

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Pluristem Therapeutics, a Haifa-based regenerative-medicine company, has treated its first three coronavirus patients in Israel with its placenta-based cell-therapy product.

“In this time of emergency, we are honored to be taking part in the global effort to support patients and healthcare systems,” Pluristem president and CEO Yaky Yanay said. Pluristem said its PLX cells are “allogeneic mesenchymal-like cells that have immunomodulatory properties,” meaning they induce the immune system’s natural regulatory T cells and M2 macrophages. The result could be the reversal of dangerous overactivation of the immune system. This would likely reduce the fatal symptoms of pneumonia and pneumonitis (general inflammation of lung tissue).


The company dosed three patients in two different hospitals in Israel under a compassionate-use program for the treatment of COVID-19. It was approved by the Health Ministry.

Continue reading “Israeli company uses placenta cells to treat critical COVID-19 patients” »

Mar 30, 2020

MUSC team releases plans for 3D printed masks

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical

This is really cool. In times of adversity. Intelligence often offers innovation. If you have a 3D printer get to making some masks.


A team at the Medical University of South Carolina came up with an idea for anyone with a 3D printer to make a protective mask.

Mar 30, 2020

The Birth of the Magnetic Battery

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, nuclear energy

Circa 2009 could used for a new fusion reactor using only a magnet.


Physicist Stewart E. Barnes and his collaborators at the Universities of Tokyo and Tohoku, Japan, have created a device that can store energy in nanomagnets.

Mar 30, 2020

Skyrmion ‘whirls’ show promise for low-energy computer circuitry

Posted by in categories: computing, nanotechnology

UNSW material scientists have shed new light on a promising new way to store and process information in computers and electronic devices that could significantly cut down the energy required to maintain our digital lifestyles.

Skyrmions, which can be described as ‘whirl’ shaped magnetic textures at the nano-level, have in recent years been flagged as contenders for a more efficient way to store and process information. One of their advantages is that they possess a kind of built-in enhanced stability over time, making stored information non-volatile and ‘live’ longer. Up until now, information in computers is processed through dynamic memory, which is less stable and therefore requires more energy to maintain.

According to researchers from UNSW Science, who also collaborated with researchers from Brookhaven National Laboratory in the US and the University of Auckland, the potential of what they call “ lattice manipulation” to lower energy consumption in electronics is an attractive alternative.

Mar 30, 2020

Medical fetish site donates entire stock of scrubs after being contacted by ‘Desperate’ Health Officials

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

MedFetUK said it was “scandalous” that it was “being sought out as last-resort supplier” for Britain’s health service during the coronavirus crisis.

Mar 30, 2020

Vincent van Gogh painting stolen from Netherlands museum

Posted by in category: futurism

Museum directors ‘shocked and incredibly pissed off’.

Mar 30, 2020

4 ways COVID-19 could change how we educate future generations

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education

The coronavirus crisis has pushed schooling on to remote platforms. It’s an opportunity to rethink how education should work.

Mar 30, 2020

Scientists develop AI that can turn brain activity into text

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, neuroscience, robotics/AI

“We are not there yet but we think this could be the basis of a speech prosthesis,” said Dr Joseph Makin, co-author of the research from the University of California, San Francisco.

Writing in the journal Nature Neuroscience, Makin and colleagues reveal how they developed their system by recruiting four participants who had electrode arrays implanted in their brain to monitor epileptic seizures.

These participants were asked to read aloud from 50 set sentences multiple times, including “Tina Turner is a pop singer”, and “Those thieves stole 30 jewels”. The team tracked their neural activity while they were speaking.

Mar 30, 2020

Astronomers Observe Blasting Supermassive Black Hole Jets From The Early Universe

Posted by in category: cosmology

O,.,o.


In the far reaches of the Universe, astronomers have managed to capture a rare interaction. As a supermassive black hole ravenously slurps down matter around it, it’s sending out jets of plasma — pushing into and heating the gas in the galaxy around it.

This is difficult to capture at the best of times, but this case was a particularly impressive feat. The galaxy in question is a whopping 11 billion light-years away — when the Universe was less than 3 billion years old.

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