Menu

Blog

Page 7031

May 3, 2020

Tesla applies to become UK electricity provider

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability, transportation

The US firm, known for its electric vehicles, also has operations in battery energy storage and solar panel manufacturing.

May 3, 2020

Can Genetic Engineering Bring Back the American Chestnut?

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics

The tree helped build industrial America before disease wiped out an estimated three billion or more of them. To revive their lost glory, we may need to embrace tinkering with nature.

An American chestnut near Rockport, Maine. Credit… John Chiara for The New York Times.

May 3, 2020

The Electric Vehicle Revolution Is Finally Hitting the U.S. Army

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, sustainability, transportation

The JLTV is the successor to the Humvee, and the Army plans to buy at least 50,000 in the coming decades.
The Army, concerned that civilian adoption of electric vehicles could leave it vulnerable, is looking into making the JLTV itself an EV.
An electric JLTV would reduce the need for diesel fuel at remote outposts, with power provided by solar or nuclear energy.

#USArmy
#USmilitary
#MilitaryNews

May 3, 2020

Help NYC artist Maria Alekseev

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, employment, finance, food, genetics, health, neuroscience

Maria became the very first COVID-19 patient to use Stem Cell Neurotherapy for COVID-19. In about 5 days, she will began to feel the healing effects of generating new lung cells which will eliminate her breathing problems.

We repurposed some tools from the Stem Cell Therapy for Cancer/Brain Tumor. Those tools are T-Cells, B-Cells, and Natural Killer Cells. Instead of programming those cancer killing cells to attack cancer cells, we have programmed them to seek out, identify, attack, and destroy all the Coronavirus cells in the entire body.

Stem Cell Neurotherapy sends therapeutic messages, e.g., “your stem cells are transforming into new cells for the lungs, liver, and kidneys” to the DNA inside the nucleus of stem cells. Inside the nucleus, the DNA receives the message and transmits it to the RNA, which translates the message into genetic code.

Continue reading “Help NYC artist Maria Alekseev” »

May 3, 2020

Cell therapy weekly: Phase I clinical trial for corona-related respiratory distress proposed

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Final edition of stem cell neurotherapy for COVID-19.

We have just finished the Final Edition of Stem Cell Neurotherapy for COVID-19. We repurposed some tools from the Stem Cell Therapy for Cancer/Brain Tumor. Those tools are T-Cells, B-Cells, and Natural Killer Cells. Instead of programming those cancer killing cells to attack cancer cells, we have programmed them to seek out, identify, attack, and destroy all the Coronavirus cells in the entire body.

We still program the stem cells to transform themselves into new cells for the lungs, liver, and kidneys to replace those cells infected by the Coronavirus.

Continue reading “Cell therapy weekly: Phase I clinical trial for corona-related respiratory distress proposed” »

May 3, 2020

Coronavirus did not jump from Wuhan’s seafood market: Here’s the evidence

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

I will try to leave this up for discussion.


Is the SARS-CoV-2 a ‘chimera virus’ made in the lab? A virologist’s warning.

May 2, 2020

Robots could complete ‘all human tasks’ by 2050 claims transhumanist writer

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transhumanism

THERE’S a 50 percent chance robots will be capable of completing “all human tasks” by 2050, allowing humans to move to a post-compulsory work society, according to a leading transhumanist thinker.

May 2, 2020

Smart chips for space

Posted by in categories: computing, space

Tiny integrated circuits destined for space missions, etched onto a single wafer of silicon, examined under a magnifier.

To save money on the high cost of fabrication, various chips designed by different companies and destined for multiple ESA projects are crammed onto the same silicon wafers, etched into place at specialised semiconductor manufacturing plants or ‘fabs’.

Once manufactured, the chips, still on the wafer, are tested. The wafers are then chopped up. They become ready for use when placed inside protective packages – just like standard terrestrial microprocessors – and undergo final quality tests.

May 2, 2020

Bat coronavirus phylogeography in the Western Indian Ocean

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Scientific Reports volume 10, Article number: 6873 (2020) Cite this article.

May 2, 2020

U.S. Health Insurers Benefit as Elective Care Cuts Offset Coronavirus Costs

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

NEW YORK — As Americans delay elective surgeries and avoid doctors and hospitals during the coronavirus pandemic, healthcare spending declines have more than offset the added costs of COVID-19 care, insurance executives and experts say, boosting U.S. health insurer profits.