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Mar 14, 2019

Deep-Sea Explorers Discover Wreck of WWII Aircraft Carrier USS Wasp

Posted by in category: military

More than 70 years after it was torpedoed and sunk during the World War II Battle of Guadalcanal, the aircraft carrier USS Wasp has been discovered in the Coral Sea.

Wasp was spotted on the seabed, in 14,000 feet of water, by the research vessel (RV) Petrel, part of a research organization established by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, in January.

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Mar 14, 2019

Aging Analytics Agency Photo 3

Posted by in category: life extension

And Vetek Association’s Mindmap of the 160 companies and 180 investors operating in the Israeli Longevity Industry Landscape.

Link to the Report: https://www.aginganalytics.com/longevity-in-israel

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Mar 14, 2019

This robot gripper looks like a wilted flower, but it can lift 100 times its own weight

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Weird-looking robots are the best robots.

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Mar 14, 2019

Do You Want to Live Forever?

Posted by in category: life extension

Click on photo to start video.

Exploring the appeal of immortality: would you want to live forever?

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Mar 14, 2019

Gas heating ban for new homes from 2025

Posted by in categories: climatology, habitats, sustainability

Climate change: fossil fuel burning will become a thing of the past for new homes.

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Mar 14, 2019

Why Fermilab is Making A Neutrino Detector 800 Miles Long

Posted by in category: particle physics

Researchers hope an underground experiment will reveal an elusive particle.

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Mar 14, 2019

Scientists Have “Reversed Time” Inside A Quantum Computer, And The Implications Are Huge

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Time: it’s constantly running out and we never have enough of it. Some say it’s an illusion, some say it flies like an arrow. Well, this arrow of time is a big headache in physics. Why does time have a particular direction? And can such a direction be reversed?

A new study, published in Scientific Reports, is providing an important point of discussion on the subject. An international team of researchers has constructed a time-reversal program on a quantum computer, in an experiment that has huge implications for our understanding of quantum computing. Their approach also revealed something rather important: the time-reversal operation is so complex that it is extremely improbable, maybe impossible, for it to happen spontaneously in nature.

As far as laws of physics go, in many cases, there’s nothing to stop us going forward and backward in time. In certain quantum systems it is possible to create a time-reversal operation. Here, the team crafted a thought experiment based on a realistic scenario.

Continue reading “Scientists Have ‘Reversed Time’ Inside A Quantum Computer, And The Implications Are Huge” »

Mar 14, 2019

Mammoth Biosciences adds the final piece of the CRISPR diagnostics puzzle to its toolkit

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

With the announcement today that Mammoth Biosciences has received the exclusive license from the University of California, Berkeley to the new CRISPR protein Cas14, the company now has the last piece of its diagnostics toolkit in place.

Cas14 is a newly discovered protein from the lab of Jennifer Doudna, a pioneer in gene-editing research and a member of the first research team to identify and unlock the power of CRISPR technology.

Doudna and Mammoth Biosciences co-founder Lucas Harrington were part of the team of researchers to identify the new Cas14 protein, which can identify single-stranded DNA. The journal Science published their findings in October 2018.

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Mar 14, 2019

33 blood-cancer patients have dramatic clinical remission with new T-cell therapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Image of a group of killer T cells (green and red) surrounding a cancer cell (blue, center) (credit: NIH)

Chinese doctors have reported success with a new type of immunotherapy for multiple myeloma, a blood cancer: 33 out of 35 patients in a clinical trial had clinical remission within two months.

The researchers used a type of T cell called “chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T.” In a phase I clinical trial in China, the patient’s own T cells were collected, genetically reprogrammed in a lab, and injected back into the patient. The reprogramming involved inserting an artificially designed gene into the T-cell genome, which helped the genetically reprogrammed cells find and destroy cancer cells throughout the body.

Continue reading “33 blood-cancer patients have dramatic clinical remission with new T-cell therapy” »

Mar 14, 2019

Firefighters are warning that lives could be at risk in New York’s $25 billion megadevelopment

Posted by in category: futurism

  • New York City firefighters are worried they don’t have enough capacity to serve Hudson Yards, a $25 billion, 18-million-square-foot megadevelopment that opens Friday.
  • By 2024, when the development is scheduled to be complete, it could have more than 125,000 daily residents, visitors, and office workers.
  • Unless the city builds a new fire station in the neighborhood, these lives could be at stake, the president of New York’s firefighters union told Business Insider.

New York’s largest private real-estate development, the 18-million-square-foot Hudson Yards, can expect a flood of locals, tourists, and office workers at its grand opening on Friday.

For the first time, members of the public will be able to climb aboard Vessel, a 150-foot-tall honeycomb-shaped art installation in the public square; dine at the complex’s high-end restaurants, including Momofuku and D&D London; and browse its luxury retail stores.

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