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Feb 14, 2019
Tardigrade: The micro-animal scientists can’t kill
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: existential risks, life extension
They’re little battlers, the greatest survivors on the planet and you may have them in your garden, writes Lana Hart.
They’ve been boiled, frozen, put in vacuums, starved, and exposed to unbearable pressures and radiation — but scientists can’t kill this creature.
They are the only animal to have survived all five of earth’s mass extinctions. This incredible feat is due to their development of unique survival mechanisms not seen in other parts of the animal kingdom.
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Feb 14, 2019
11,000-year-old Deep Sea Animal Fascinates Scientists
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: futurism
Feb 14, 2019
Mobiles could soon bounce with a new elastic, but super-hard glass
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: futurism
Engineers at the University of California San Diego used a technique called spark-plasma sintering to create the new metallic glass.
They did this by placing powdered iron into a graphite mold and then raising the pressure it is under to 1,000 atmospheres.
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Feb 14, 2019
Immortal Jellyfish Rejuvenates Itself Like Benjamin Button
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: genetics, life extension
Multilateral efforts to decipher the rejuvenation phenomenon of Turritopsis jellyfish at the genetic level also have been initiated by several collaborating research scientists.
Feb 14, 2019
Are Whales Smarter Than We Are?
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biological, neuroscience
Circa 2008
“Truth uncompromisingly told will always have its ragged edges.” Herman Melville.
Call me Ishmael for making conjectures unflattering to humankind, but could Moby Dick have been smarter than captain Ahab? Melville certainly seemed to think so. Moby clipped off one of the captain’s legs and then, years later, in a brilliant move of cetacean jujitsu, drowned poor Ahab by towing him into the abyss by the harpoon rope tangled around Ahab’s remaining leg. “From Hell’s heart I stab at thee!” Gulp. We humans pride ourselves on our big brains. We never seem to tire of bragging about how our supreme intelligence empowers us to lord over all other animals on the planet. Yet the biological facts don’t quite square with Homo sapiens’ arrogance. The fact is, people do not have the largest brains on the planet, either in absolute size or in proportion to body size. Whales, not people, have the biggest brains of any animal on earth.
Feb 14, 2019
A Company Claims Its AI Has Prevented 16 School Shootings
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: education, robotics/AI
Feb 14, 2019
You know kilo, mega, and giga. Is the metric system ready for ronna and quecca?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Feb 14, 2019
A Trojan Horse Approach to Cancer
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, electronics
A research team led by Professor Johann de Bono at the Institute of Cancer Research, London has successfully tested a new drug that has infiltrated different forms of cancer in an ongoing human trial [1].
The drug is called tisotumab vedotin (TV) and works like a ‘Trojan Horse’ by hiding a cancer-killing payload inside an antibody, which allows it to infiltrate the tumor and attack it from the inside.
The antibody seeks out a surface receptor on tumor cells known as ‘tissue factor’ (TF). TF is expressed by many tumor cells and contributes to a variety of pathological processes, including thrombosis, metastasis, tumor growth, and tumor angiogenesis. Once the antibody has located the TF receptor, it binds to it, and the cancer-killing payload is able to enter the tumor cell and destroy it from the inside.
Feb 14, 2019
NASA to Advance Unique 3D Printed Sensor Technology
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, robotics/AI, space travel
A NASA technologist is taking miniaturization to the extreme.
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