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Feb 14, 2020

Biotech’s Wizard Of Wall Street : Fred Frank At The Forefront of Investment

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution, life extension

Wall Street’s Biotech Investment Wizard — On this most recent ideaXme (http://radioideaxme.com/) episode, I was honored to be joined by my friend, and biotech / pharma / healthcare investment banker extraordinaire, Frederick Frank, to talk about his 50-year career history behind the industry’s mega-deals — #Ideaxme #Biopharma #Biotech #WallStreet #Mergers #Acquisitions #VentureCapital #Genentech #Roche #BristolMyersSquibb #PrivateEquity #Health #Wellness #Longevity #Regeneration #LifeExtension #Aging #IraPastor #Bioquark #Regenerage


Ira Pastor, ideaXme exponential health ambassador, interviews Fred Frank, Founder and Chair of Evolution Life Science Partners, an investment bank focused on the needs of life sciences and healthcare companies.

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Feb 14, 2020

Engineered Probiotic Bacteria Deliver Anticancer Nanobodies to Regress Tumors in Mice

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Researchers suggest probiotic SLIC system could be adapted to generate and deliver a wide variety and combination of immunotherapeutics against different tumor types.

Feb 14, 2020

‘Rosetta stone’ for urban scaling makes sense of how cities change across time and space

Posted by in categories: economics, education

Cities change as they grow — not only by adding area or population but also in a variety of other ways, from the length and width of their roads to economic growth to the distribution of elementary schools. Social scientists often clash over the best way to measure change as a city swells. Traditionally, they’ve taken a cross-sectional approach, which means collecting data on a large number of cities of diverse sizes at the same moment in time. More recently, some researcher…


New work reconciles divergent methods used to analyze the scaling behavior of cities.

Feb 14, 2020

Maps of a now-submerged land help reconstruct the lives of ancient Europeans

Posted by in categories: innovation, mapping

A region beneath the rough waters of the North Sea, known as Doggerland, holds archaeological clues to the past. Watch how researchers are using advances in mapping and leads from dredging sites to piece together the history of this vanished landscape.

Read the story: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/01/relics-washed-beache…-north-sea

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Feb 14, 2020

The World’s First 3D-Printed Heart Model

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical

This is the first-ever 3D-printed human heart model using human cells #ValentinesDay

Feb 14, 2020

The fastest way to heat certain materials may be to cool them first

Posted by in category: materials

A theoretical study reveals that, in certain situations, some materials might heat up more quickly after first being cooled.

Feb 14, 2020

Biologists Are Already Printing the Deadly COVID-19 Virus

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, terrorism

Still, the fact that many labs worldwide are capable of printing viruses is worrisome.

A few years ago, for instance, Canadian researchers alarmed the scientific community when they assembled synthetic horsepox in a lab — a virus closely related to smallpox, which killed hundreds of millions before researchers developed a vaccine.

The same technique, the researchers said at the time, could be be used to bring back smallpox, giving terrorists tools to set off a deadly pandemic.

Feb 14, 2020

Tesla driver’s Autopilot often swerved toward the same barrier. One day, it killed him

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Grim details emerge.

Feb 14, 2020

Iran Unveils Its Most Advanced Humanoid Robot Yet

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Meet Surena IV, an adult-size humanoid built by University of Tehran roboticists.


A little over a decade ago, researchers at the University of Tehran introduced a rudimentary humanoid robot called Surena. An improved model capable of walking, Surena II, was announced not long after, followed by the more capable Surena III in 2015.

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Feb 14, 2020

Light Sails and Supernovae Can Help Us Reach the Speed of Light

Posted by in category: cosmology

When Betelgeuse explodes, there’s nothing stopping another civilization from surfing the supernova with a light sail.

By Brad Bergan