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Jun 28, 2020
Human Trials of Plasma Exchange
Posted by John Davies in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Animal experiments demonstrating the anti-aging effects of exchanging young blood plasma for old have been prominent in the last two months. Several groups are saying it’s time to translate their findings into human trials. But I’ve recently learned that others have been doing this for several years. What can we learn from their results to guide the next steps in experimentation?
I had never heard of Grifols, the Spanish pharmaceutical company that is the world’s largest supplier of albumin. Since 2005, Grifols has been quietly funding world leaders in plasma exchange research in humans. Albutein ® is their brand-name solution of human albumin.
Last month, the first results of the Grifol’s AMBAR trial were released. (AMBAR stands for A lzheimer’s M odulation B y A lbumin R eplacement). It was a much larger-scale phase 2.5 trial, with 496 subjects recruited from sites in Spain and USA, and treated for 14 months. A single treatment consisted of removing 2.5 to 3 litres of blood (more than half the body’s inventory) and replacing it with Albutein. Patients began with 6 weekly treatments, and thereafter there were 12 monthly smaller plasma replacements (0.7 litres), again with Albutein.
Jun 28, 2020
Your Personal Data Is Worth Money. Andrew Yang Wants to Get You Paid
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: cybercrime/malcode, economics, robotics/AI
Last year’s Netflix movie The Great Hack detailed the dark side of data collection, centered around the 2016 Cambridge Analytica scandal. The movie describes how “psychometric profiles” exist for you, me, and all of our friends. The data collected from our use of digital services can be packaged in a way that gives companies insight into our habits, preferences, and even our personalities. With this information, they can do anything from show us an ad for a pair of shoes we’ll probably like to try to change our minds about which candidate to vote for in an election.
With so much of our data already out there, plus the fact that most of us will likely keep using the free apps we’ve enjoyed for years, could it be too late to try to fundamentally change the way this model works?
Continue reading “Your Personal Data Is Worth Money. Andrew Yang Wants to Get You Paid” »
Jun 28, 2020
Coronavirus death toll surpasses 500,000 worldwide
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biotech/medical
More than 500,000 people throughout the world have died of the new coronavirus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The staggering milestone comes as virus cases have surged in the U.S. in recent weeks, and as South America has emerged as a virus hotspot.
More than a quarter of the world’s reported coronavirus deaths have occurred in the U.S., where 31 states have seen a jump in cases compared to two weeks ago. The number of new confirmed coronavirus cases nationwide hit a record high of 45,300 on Friday — a more than 5,000-case spike from the day before.
In Texas and Florida, governors are now rolling back reopening measures in an effort to stem the virus’ spread. The intensive care units in some Texas hospitals are now 100% full, after the state broke hospitalization records for 15 days in a row.
Jun 28, 2020
Goldschmidt2020: Abstract Details
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: chemistry
Goldschmidt is the foremost annual, international conference on geochemistry and related subjects, organised by the European Association of Geochemistry and the Geochemical Society.
Jun 28, 2020
Ohio Supercomputer Center Researchers Analyse Twitter Posts Revealing Polarization in Congress on COVID-19
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biotech/medical, government, robotics/AI, supercomputing
June 25, 2020 — The rapid politicization of the COVID-19 pandemic can be seen in messages members of the U.S. Congress sent about the issue on the social media site Twitter, a new analysis found.
Using artificial intelligence and resources from the Ohio Supercomputer Center, researchers conducted an analysis that covered all 30,887 tweets that members sent about COVID-19 from the first one on Jan. 17 through March 31.
Jun 28, 2020
World’s fastest supercomputer fights coronavirus
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biotech/medical, supercomputing
The newly crowned Fugaku system is analysing droplet spread in offices and public transport.
Jun 28, 2020
Nvidia confirms AMD-powered supercomputer now part of 5-exaflops giant
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: supercomputing
Jun 28, 2020
This is Intel’s not-so-secret weapon against AMD, but will it be too late?
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: nanotechnology
Nanowire/nanoribbon is the way to go, Intel head says.
Jun 28, 2020
Check out this Crew Dragon Photo Snapped During a Spacewalk
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy on Saturday tweeted a cool shot showing SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft docked with the International Space Station (ISS). The capsule, seen to the right of the picture, looks tiny alongside the enormous space station, but its interior is actually large enough for a human to perform something close to a somersault.
Cassidy captured the image during Friday’s spacewalk with fellow astronaut Bob Behnken. The outing involved ongoing work to upgrade power systems on the space station, swapping old nickel-hydrogen batteries for new lithium-ion batteries. The batteries store power gathered from the station’s main solar arrays and the new ones will provide an improved and more efficient power capacity for the orbiting outpost.
Cassidy later tweeted a couple of other shots from the spacewalk, one a “space selfie” and another taken shortly after the pair returned to the inside of the ISS.