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Jan 23, 2019

Peat Bogs Are Freakishly Good at Preserving Human Remains

Posted by in category: futurism

What makes these spongy, waterlogged areas of decaying plant matter so perfect at preservation? In a word: science.

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Jan 23, 2019

‘Great Wave’ depicted in Hokusai’s masterpiece recreated by scientists

Posted by in category: innovation

For nearly 200 years, Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic woodblock print The Great Wave off Kanagawa has inspired wonder partly because the event it depicts, a towering freak wave, has defied scientific explanation.

Now, a team at Oxford and Edinburgh universities claim to have laid the mystery to rest by successfully creating one for themselves — and it looks remarkably similar.

The achievement is being hailed as a significant breakthrough because, so far, meteorologists and sailors have had no means of predicting the likelihood of violent waves that are unexpectedly large compared to their surroundings.

Continue reading “‘Great Wave’ depicted in Hokusai’s masterpiece recreated by scientists” »

Jan 23, 2019

It’s the End of the Gene As We Know It

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

We’ve all seen the stark headlines: “Being Rich and Successful Is in Your DNA” (Guardian, July 12); “A New Genetic Test Could Help Determine Children’s Success” (Newsweek, July 10); “Our Fortunetelling Genes” make us (Wall Street Journal, Nov. 16); and so on.

The problem is, many of these headlines are not discussing real genes at all, but a crude statistical model of them, involving dozens of unlikely assumptions. Now, slowly but surely, that whole conceptual model of the gene is being challenged.

We have reached peak gene, and passed it.

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Jan 23, 2019

From fruit flies to Boy Scouts: A brief history of science in space

Posted by in categories: science, space

The formal handover of the Chinese payload to NanoRacks at the Space Life Sciences Lab in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Photo credit: NanoRacks.

Small effort, big gains

Clearly, a lot of progress has been made toward making the space lab more analogous to the Earth lab in the past few years, and NanoRacks has played no small part in those improvements. Despite the challenges that still remain for microgravity research, some truly significant work has been accomplished. With just a little more investment, Carruthers believes, much larger gains can be made.

Continue reading “From fruit flies to Boy Scouts: A brief history of science in space” »

Jan 23, 2019

Amazon has made its own autonomous six-wheeled delivery robot

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Amazon enters the robot delivery fray.

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Jan 23, 2019

In surprising reversal, scientists find a cellular process that stops cancer before it starts

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Just as plastic tips protect the ends of shoelaces and keep them from fraying when we tie them, molecular tips called telomeres protect the ends of chromosomes and keep them from fusing when cells continually divide and duplicate their DNA. But while losing the plastic tips may lead to messy laces, telomere loss may lead to cancer.

Salk Institute scientists studying the relationship of telomeres to cancer made a surprising discovery: a cellular recycling process called autophagy—generally thought of as a —actually promotes the death of cells, thereby preventing cancer initiation.

The work, which appeared in the journal Nature on January 23, 2019, reveals autophagy to be a completely novel tumor-suppressing pathway and suggests that treatments to block the process in an effort to curb cancer may unintentionally promote it very early on.

Continue reading “In surprising reversal, scientists find a cellular process that stops cancer before it starts” »

Jan 23, 2019

Ingestible Nanobots To Start Delivering Drugs Into Blood Vessels

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

A newly designed set of nanorobots could be the key to implementing a new global structure of administering medication using nanobots.

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Jan 23, 2019

A Cooler Cloud: A Clever Conduit Cuts Data Centers’ Cooling Needs

Posted by in categories: computing, physics

The energy use of data centers is a major drag on resources, but they also use a lot of water. Any technology that increases their efficiency while reducing resource waste is a good thing.

“Now, Forced Physics, a company based in Scottsdale, Ariz., has developed a low-power system that it says could slash a data center’s energy requirements for cooling by 90 percent. The company’s JouleForce conductor is a passive system that uses ambient, filtered, nonrefrigerated air to whisk heat away from computer chips.”


The company that created it, Forced Physics, plans to install the technology in a pilot plant in February.

Continue reading “A Cooler Cloud: A Clever Conduit Cuts Data Centers’ Cooling Needs” »

Jan 23, 2019

Don’t Bring Extinct Creatures Back to Life

Posted by in categories: biological, existential risks

What if woolly mammoths could walk the planet once again? De-extinction – or the process of creating an organism which is a member of, or closely resembles, an extinct species – was once a sci-fi fantasy only imaginable in films like “Jurassic Park.” But recent biological and technological breakthroughs indicate that reviving extinct creatures could become a reality. Even if advancements get us there, should we do it?

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Jan 23, 2019

Aether and UCL Researchers Democratizing 3D Printed Nanotech at 2% of Competitor Cost

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, nanotechnology

Aether collaborating with University College London and Loughborough University to develop 3D printing nanotechnology at a revolutionary low cost.

Erin Abbott [email protected]

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