Page 8885
Apr 1, 2019
‘Jumping genes’ drive many cancers
Posted by Xavier Rosseel in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Wang and his colleagues found that many cancers that get switched into overdrive and boost tumor growth have jumping genes that function as a kind of stealthy “on switch.” These cryptic switches can force a gene to be turned on all the time, even though it should be off.
Mistakes in DNA are known to drive cancer growth. But a new study, from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, heavily implicates a genetic phenomenon commonly known as “jumping genes” in the growth of tumors.
The study is published March 29 in the journal Nature Genetics.
Apr 1, 2019
‘The Matrix’ 20 Years Later: The Artificial Intelligence Lives in Us (Column)
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: alien life, drones, robotics/AI
But in “The Matrix,” the landmark of liquid-action sci-fi released 20 years ago today, the artificial intelligence comes at us in a uniquely teasing, forward-tilting, who’s-that-in-the-mirror way. The movie is about a computer-company office drone, played with pinpoint charisma by Keanu Reeves, who gets tugged out of his existence by a rebel underground that unplugs him from the Matrix.
The term “artificial intelligence” was coined in 1956, but one way or another it has been the subject of just about every great science-fiction movie, from “Metropolis” to “Frankenstein,” from the paranoid fables of the ’50s (about brainy robots and aliens with giant noggins who were like “advanced” versions of ourselves) to “2001: A Space Odyssey,” in which HAL, the computer who talks like a wounded therapy patient, displays the anger and ego of a jilted human being. And by the late ’70s and early ’80s, the Machines Who Could Think were really taking over. “Alien” featured a technologically evolved monster with the metallic jaws, the helmet head, and the relentlessness of a demonic thresher, the most sympathetic character in “Blade Runner” was a replicant, and “The Terminator” gave us a dystopia ruled by the machines, featuring a weaponized badass who was the ultimate programmed destroyer.
Apr 1, 2019
After 3 days packed with exciting talks on how to bring aging under full medical control, over 40 awesome speakers, lots of positive and extremely motivating energy, an amazing Undoing Aging 2019 ended with a big party!
Posted by Michael Greve in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
After being sold out this year with nearly 500 participants, we will be back in 2020!
Already missing us? Subscribe to the Undoing Aging YouTube channel to get notified when the UA2019 speaker presentations are released: youtube.com/c/UndoingAging
Mar 31, 2019
World’s Largest Atom Smasher May Have Just Found Evidence for Why Our Universe Exists
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: particle physics
Physicists have observed a difference in the decay of particles containing the charm quark and its antiparticle, perhaps helping to explain why matter exists at all.
Mar 31, 2019
Liquid crystals could help deflect laser pointer attacks on aircraft
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: transportation
Aiming a laser beam at an aircraft isn’t a harmless prank: The sudden flash of bright light can incapacitate the pilot, risking the lives of passengers and crew. But because attacks can happen with different colored lasers, such as red, green or even blue, scientists have had a difficult time developing a single method to impede all wavelengths of laser light. Today, researchers report liquid crystals that could someday be incorporated into aircraft windshields to block any color of bright, focused light.
Mar 31, 2019
These stunning drone photos put humanity in its place
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: drones
It may be a cliché, but drone photography really does offer a new perspective on the world.
Winners of the 2018 Aerial Photo and Video Contest from SkyPixel (an online photo-sharing community owned by Chinese drone maker DJI) show how. The pictures and videos put architecture, nature, and humanity on display from unexpected heights and angles. The resulting imagery is stunning, and might make you rethink your place in the world.
Just consider it for a second. Where are you standing or sitting right now? What would it look like if you could see yourself from a distance? What surrounds you?
Continue reading “These stunning drone photos put humanity in its place” »
Mar 31, 2019
Alita: Battle Angel And Open Bionics Team Up For Tilly
Posted by Tracy R. Atkins in categories: cyborgs, transhumanism
Mar 31, 2019
Would You Allow Your Children To Be Alone With a Robot?
Posted by B.J. Murphy in category: robotics/AI
Mar 31, 2019
No AI in humor: R2-D2 walks into a bar, doesn’t get the joke
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: humor, robotics/AI
“Artificial intelligence will never get jokes like humans do.”
WASHINGTON (AP) — A robot walks into a bar. It goes CLANG.
Alexa and Siri can tell jokes mined from a humor database, but they just don’t get them.
Continue reading “No AI in humor: R2-D2 walks into a bar, doesn’t get the joke” »