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Apr 25, 2020

‘You’re basically right next to the nuclear reactor.’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones, neuroscience, nuclear energy

I’ve been shocked sometimes when I walk in and see the patients. Most of the ones I’ve intubated are young — 30s, 40s, 50s. These are people who walked into the ER because they were coughing a day or two ago, or sometimes hours ago. By the time I come into the room, they are in severe respiratory distress. Their oxygen level might be 70 or 80 percent instead of 100, which is alarming. They are taking 40 breaths a minute when they should be taking 12 or 14. They have no oxygen reserves. They are pale and exhausted. It puts them in a mental fog, and sometimes they don’t hear me when I introduce myself. Some are panicky and gasping. Others are mumbling or incoherent. Last week, one patient was crying and asking to use my phone so they could call family and say goodbye, but their oxygen levels were dropping, and we didn’t have time, and I couldn’t risk bringing my phone in and contaminating it with virus, and the whole thing was impossible. I kept apologizing. I just —. I don’t know. I have to find a way to hold it together in order to do this job. I tear up sometimes, and if I do, it can fog up my face shield.


“It’s a powerless feeling, watching someone die”: An anesthesiologist on the frontline of coronavirus outbreak.

Apr 25, 2020

Cannabis Product Reviewer Wanted: Smoke Weed and Get Paid Up to $36,000 a Year

Posted by in category: futurism

I want to apologise to all of you that responded that didn’t get a direct response back. It would have been physically impossible to respond to each message. Thanks for taking the time to apply – it’s appreciated.

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    Apr 25, 2020

    Lockheed Martin wins DARPA contract to integrate Blackjack satellites

    Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, satellites

    WASHINGTON — The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded Lockheed Martin a $5.8 million contract for satellite integration work for the Blackjack program, the company announced April 24.

    Blackjack is a project to deploy a constellation of 20 satellites in low Earth orbit by 2022 and demonstrate that a LEO system can provide global high-speed communications.

    Lockheed Martin will define and manage interfaces between Blackjack’s satellite buses, payloads and the so-called Pit Boss autonomous data processor. The work will be performed at the company’s satellite manufacturing plant in Sunnyvale, California.

    Apr 25, 2020

    Saudi Arabia to abolish flogging

    Posted by in category: law

    Saudi Arabia is to abolish flogging as a form of punishment, according to a legal document seen by media outlets.

    The directive from the Gulf kingdom’s Supreme Court says flogging will be replaced by imprisonment or fines.

    It says this is an extension of human rights reforms brought by King Salman and his son, the country’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

    Apr 25, 2020

    The Open Source Hunt for Syria’s Favourite Sarin Bomb

    Posted by in categories: government, military

    O,.,o.


    Throughout Syria’s lengthy conflict, Bellingcat has worked to investigate a large number of chemical attacks, including the nature of the weapons deployed in those attacks, using open source evidence. From modified chlorine cylinders to locally made surface to surface rockets filled with Sarin, Bellingcat has revealed the nature, and origin, of these chemical weapons, confirming the Syrian government’s involvement in a range of chemical attacks.

    Continue reading “The Open Source Hunt for Syria’s Favourite Sarin Bomb” »

    Apr 25, 2020

    New Theory of Everything Unites Quantum Mechanics with Relativity … and Much More

    Posted by in category: quantum physics

    Stephen Wolfram, a controversial physicist and computer scientist, has united relativity, quantum mechanics and computational complexity in a single theory of everything. But will other physicists be convinced?

    Apr 25, 2020

    Size Estimations of Missiles Displayed in Recent North Korean Military Parade

    Posted by in categories: existential risks, military

    Appropriate references can help observers determine the size of North Korean rockets with modest confidence. Using this method, the author has previously identified the unique North Korean SCUD-ER ballistic missile by establishing its body diameter at almost exact 1 meter instead of the common SCUD’s 0.88m width[1].

    Images from recent parades and test firing of North Korean rockets have offered more opportunities for relatively accurate estimation of the rockets’ dimensions. In this analysis, the author will present findings on the dimension of the missiles/ mock-ups exhibited in the April 15, 2017 parade in North Korea. The findings would in turn shed light on the technological sophistication of these weapon systems.

    The “new HS-10” .

    Apr 25, 2020

    WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute first in the world to open hippocampal blood brain barrier in Alzheimer’s patients

    Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

    If you found this article informative please like and follow our Facebook page for the latest in neuroscience news: https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=572929550002060&id=383136302314720


    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – The West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute today announced a new study published in partnership with Weill Cornell Medical Center that demonstrates the successful opening of the blood brain barrier in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex using focused ultrasound to treat six patients with early onset Alzheimer’s disease.

    This first-in-the-world study has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal. The effort is part of a Phase II clinical trial, sponsored by INSIGHTEC, which developed the technology and manufactures the focused ultrasound device, Exablate Neuro.

    Continue reading “WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute first in the world to open hippocampal blood brain barrier in Alzheimer’s patients” »

    Apr 25, 2020

    Babies get their intestinal viruses in stages

    Posted by in category: biotech/medical

    Results indicate that, early after birth, pioneer bacteria colonize the infant gut and by one month prophages induced from these bacteria provide the predominant population of virus-like particles. By four months of life, identifiable viruses that replicate in human cells become more prominent. Multiple human viruses were more abundant in stool samples from babies who were exclusively fed on formula milk compared with those fed partially or fully on breast milk, paralleling reports that breast milk can be protective against viral infections. Bacteriophage populations also differed depending on whether or not the infant was breastfed. We show that the colonization of the infant gut is stepwise, first mainly by temperate bacteriophages induced from pioneer bacteria, and later by viruses that replicate in human cells; this second phase is modulated by breastfeeding.

    Initially most of the viruses are bacteriophages, but as the abstract indicates, as time passes more and more of the viral community is made up of viruses that inhabit the human gut cells.

    The discussion focuses upon the finding that breastfeeding reduces the level of pathogenic viruses in the infants. That finding replicates other work based on different approaches. One of the infant cohorts included in this study was from Botswana, and the findings there are more pronounced than in their U.S. (Philadelphia)-based cohorts.

    Continue reading “Babies get their intestinal viruses in stages” »

    Apr 25, 2020

    NASA Has Designed a Mass-Producible Ventilator For a Second Wave of COVID-19

    Posted by in category: biotech/medical

    NASA engineers have designed a mass-producible ventilator tailored to coronavirus patients, and it could get emergency approval from the Food and Drug Administration by the weekend.