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Sep 23, 2019

Scientists Were Wrong About DNA – It Is Actually Held Together

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, disprove the prevailing theory of how DNA binds itself. It is not, as is generally believed, hydrogen bonds which bind together the two sides of the DNA structure. Instead, water is the key. The discovery opens doors for new understanding in research in medicine and life sciences. The researchers’ findings are presented in the journal PNAS.

DNA is constructed of two strands, consisting of sugar molecules and phosphate groups. Between these two strands are nitrogen bases, the compounds which make up organisms’ genes, with hydrogen bonds between them. Until now, it was commonly thought that those hydrogen bonds were what held the two strands together.

But now, researchers from Chalmers University of Technology show that the secret to DNA’s helical structure may be that the molecules have a hydrophobic interior, in an environment consisting mainly of water. The environment is therefore hydrophilic, while the DNA molecules’ nitrogen bases are hydrophobic, pushing away the surrounding water. When hydrophobic units are in a hydrophilic environment, they group together, to minimize their exposure to the water.

Sep 23, 2019

A Child’s Puzzle Has Helped Unlock the Secrets of Magnetism

Posted by in category: physics

People have known about magnets since ancient times, but the physics of ferromagnetism remains a mystery. Now a familiar puzzle is getting physicists closer to the answer.

Sep 23, 2019

Roboethics: The Human Ethics Applied to Robots

Posted by in categories: ethics, robotics/AI

Roboethics wants to answer the question of who or what is going to be held responsible for the actions of the robotic creations of engineers and designers until robots become moral actors, if that ever happens.

Sep 23, 2019

Paging Dr. Robot

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

D. T. Max on a pathbreaking surgeon who prefers to do his cutting by remote control.

Sep 23, 2019

Man given his eyesight back through stem cell treatment 25 years after acid attack left him blind

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Now 44, he has become the first patient to undergo a new life-changing eye surgery on the NHS, with doctors using stem cells from his healthy left eye to grow tissue in a lab and restore his sight.

Mr O’Brien said: “Being able to see through both eyes after all these years means the world to me.”

Sep 23, 2019

In Iceland, takeaways are now delivered by drones

Posted by in categories: drones, food

Giving a new meaning to fast food.

🔎 Learn more about drone delivery: https://wef.ch/2qeKHag

Sep 23, 2019

Apple’s AR Kit Visualizes What Sounds Look Like In Space

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, space

What if you could see sounds? Apple’s AR Kit visualizes them in space: http://trib.al/sNus2a5

Sep 23, 2019

World’s richest man cuts health benefits for 1,900 Whole Foods workers

Posted by in categories: food, health

Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man, is cutting health benefits for part-time workers at Whole Foods. The move will leave 1,900 people without health insurance.

The cuts don’t affect full-time employees, but will hurt those who work around 20 hours a week.

“I am in shock,” said one employee, according to Salon. “I’ve worked here 15 years. This is why I keep the job — because of my benefits.”

Sep 23, 2019

The Context S01E14 Thinking With X

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Thinking With X ~ David Orban


We are convinced, through the collective narrative leveraging our scientific understanding, that we think with our brains. While that is true, there is much more: some of us think with our stomach, an sculptor will think with her hands, a ballet dancer with her entire body. Our proprioception extends feedback loops outside of the body, extending what we are, how we think and decide, to to tips of an airplane we are piloting. As we are going to be more and more thinking with AI systems, that will support us in interpreting and acting on the world, the responsibility of user interaction designers is huge. They are shaping the systems that are going to shape what we are.

Sep 23, 2019

Space-tech startups in India are gaining ground

Posted by in categories: government, space

India’s space programme has thus far been a government-backed effort. But now that is changing, with the emergence of a clutch of space technology startups. From propulsion and rocket technology ventures such as Bellatrix, to satellite makers such as Dhruva Space and Team Indus that aspire to bid for entire programmes rather than supply piece-meal components, there are now about two dozen startups in this field compared to only a handful three years ago.


India’s space programme has, so far, been a government backed effort with Isro. With new technology and falling costs, a clutch of space technology startups are garnering domestic and global clients.