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Jun 30, 2020
EVPassport wants to provide $39/mo unlimited charging on major EV charger networks
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: mobile phones
EVPassport is an upcoming app that promises $39/mo unlimited charging on major EV charge networks. The included networks are Electrify America, EVgo, Chargepoint, Hubject and Greenlots, along with some smaller regional networks on the US West Coast. The app plans to launch in “a few weeks” but is taking wait list signups now.
The app will start with support for iPhone and DC fast charging in the US at first, with initial support for 2,500 DC chargers. It will expand to Android later this year, along with European support (including IONITY). If all goes well, it plans to add Level 2 AC charging support next year.
Jun 30, 2020
U.S. government contributed research to a Gilead remdesivir patent — but didn’t get credit
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: biotech/medical, government, health
Two documents dating back to 2015 shed further light on the role the federal government played in discovering remdesivir and its use in treating coronaviruses — work that has taken on new meaning as the Gilead Sciences (GILD) drug has gained global attention and an emergency use authorization from federal regulators to treat patients with Covid-19.
Reporting from the frontiers of health and medicine.
Jun 30, 2020
Drug company to charge thousands for coronavirus treatment
Posted by Lon Anderson in categories: biotech/medical, government, health
The maker of a drug shown to shorten recovery time for severely ill COVID-19 patients says it will charge $2,340 for a typical treatment course for people covered by government health programs in the United States and other developed countries.
Gilead Sciences announced the price Monday for remdesivir, and said the price would be $3,120 for patients with private insurance. The amount that patients pay out of pocket depends on insurance, income and other factors.
“We’re in uncharted territory with pricing a new medicine, a novel medicine, in a pandemic,” Gilead’s chief executive, Dan O’Day, told The Associated Press.
Jun 29, 2020
Biohydrogel: Saving irrigation water and protecting crops from droughts
Posted by Fyodor Rouge in categories: chemistry, food
This can make a huge difference in some parts.
Biohydrogel is more than just a water absorption and storage material that helps plants survive drought periods. It also functions as a soil conditioner that traps – and thereby reduces the loss of – agrochemicals like fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides. This means Biohydrogel not only decreases agricultural costs but also helps prevent environmental pollution.
Continue reading “Biohydrogel: Saving irrigation water and protecting crops from droughts” »
Jun 29, 2020
The cost of training machines is becoming a problem
Posted by Derick Lee in category: robotics/AI
For many comparatively simple ai applications, that means that the cost of training a computer is falling, says Christopher Manning, an associate director of the Institute for Human-Centered AI at the University of Stanford. But that is not true everywhere. A combination of ballooning complexity and competition means costs at the cutting edge are rising sharply.
Increased complexity and competition are part of it.
Technology Quarterly Jun 11th 2020 edition.
Continue reading “The cost of training machines is becoming a problem” »
Jun 29, 2020
Elon Musk says he sympathizes with ‘anti-globalization people’ because the online world is too interconnected and could lead to a ‘mind virus’
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biotech/medical, Elon Musk
He uses a code word for racist, because he is alt right.
Elon Musk said we need “some kind of mind viral immunity” to protect against the interconnected meme sphere.
Jun 29, 2020
New method for mapping brain areas
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: mapping, neuroscience
In a new study researchers at Karolinska Institutet and KTH Royal Institute of Technology have developed a new kind of brain atlas based on an innovative method of mapping brain tissue into areas according to their molecular profile. The study is published in Science Advances.
Jun 29, 2020
A snapshot shows off super-material only two atoms thick
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: materials, particle physics
High-powered microscope allows scientists to visualize an exotic structure called a superlattice.
Jun 29, 2020
Two Mathematicians Just Solved a Century-Old Geometry Problem
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: mathematics
In 1911, German mathematician Otto Toeplitz first posed the inscribed square problem, in which he predicted that “any closed curve contains four points that can be connected to form a square,” according to Quanta. For more than a century, it’s remained unsolved.