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Dec 16, 2019

To Prevent Deadly Infections, F.D.A

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Approves the First Disposable €˜Scope €™- via The New York Times #perpetuallife

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/13/health/disposable-duodeno…tions.html

Reusable duodenoscopes infected patients in a series of notorious outbreaks. Now there €™s a disposable model to be used just once.

Dec 16, 2019

Intel’s latest acquisition is a $2 billion push into AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Intel just spent approximately $2 billion to acquire Israel-based AI firm Habana Labs. The partnership will “turbo-charge” Intel’s AI offerings for data centers, Intel said in a press release.

Dec 16, 2019

A fusion startup backed by Jeff Bezos just raised another $65 million, signaling that investors are still betting on this ‘Holy Grail’ technology

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

General Fusion, a startup backed by Jeff Bezos, just closed a $65 million round. It’s among several fusion startups that investors are betting on.

Dec 16, 2019

Android 10 rolling out to Samsung Galaxy S10 series (Update: US, Canada, and more)

Posted by in category: mobile phones

Samsung has been testing Android 10 on its Galaxy S10 series extensively, with one beta update chasing the other over the last few weeks. The company is apparently finally satisfied with the software, as it has just started rolling out the stable release with version 2.0 of One UI in tow. It looks like it’s only coming to some people in Germany, but it can’t take too long until it arrives at more customers.

Dec 16, 2019

‘Cosmos’ with Neil deGrasse Tyson returns in March 2020

Posted by in category: space

National Geographic has announced that the much eagerly awaited science and space series ‘Cosmos’ will premiere in its network March 9th, 2020 with Neil DeGrasse Tyson reprising the role of the presenter, a series which has already seen huge success with its earlier versions.

Dec 16, 2019

Flat tires could soon be a thing of the past. The industry may be rolling into an airless future

Posted by in category: futurism

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Dec 16, 2019

Future tech: 3 inventions bigger than the internet that will change our world

Posted by in categories: food, internet, mobile phones, robotics/AI

From lab grown meat to object-manipulating robots, the tech that will transform our future is bound to be much bigger than the internet or smart phone.

Dec 16, 2019

5 areas of focus when adopting AI in your organization

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Too many corporate AI pilot programs fail. Here are the five areas you should focus on to get your company’s AI initiatives soaring.

Dec 16, 2019

ESA satellite set for launch to measure sizes of exoplanets

Posted by in category: satellites

A compact exoplanet observatory built in Europe to help astronomers determine the sizes of distant worlds around other stars is scheduled for launch Tuesday from French Guiana aboard a Soyuz rocket.

Designed to build upon discoveries made by previous pioneering exoplanet telescopes — like NASA’s Kepler mission — the European Space Agency’s Characterizing Exoplanet Satellite, or CHEOPS, mission will orbit some 435 miles (700 kilometers) above Earth with a small but ultra-sensitive telescope looking at faraway stars.

CHEOPS will be capable of registering tiny changes in the brightness of stars as planets block their light from reaching the telescope. This way of observing exoplanets is called the transit method, and it’s been used by Kepler, NASA’s TESS observatory, and the French space agency’s CoRoT mission to discover planets around other stars.

Dec 16, 2019

Study shows how mitochondria can shield cancer cells from chemotherapy

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Chemotherapy is a powerful weapon in the fight against cancer, but the complex nature of the disease means that it doesn’t always produce the desired result. Scientists at the Salk Institute have been researching some of the cellular processes behind these evasive abilities, uncovering a new mechanism that could pave the way for new treatments that see chemotherapy maintain the upper hand.

The work was carried out at the Salk Institute’s Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory, where medical scientists led by Gerry Shadel set out to investigate the role mitochondria might play in the effectiveness of chemotherapy.

Mitochondria is best known as the power generator of the vast majority of cells, but the scientists have found that it can also act as an early warning sign when something’s not quite right. While most of the DNA we carry is packed inside the nucleus of the cell, mitochondria packs its own small set of DNA, called mtDNA.