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Jul 29, 2018
Study finds evidence that leopard geckos can make new brain cells
Posted by Marcos Than Esponda in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience
Published in Scientific Reports, this study is the first to provide evidence of new neuron formation—and the presence of stem cells—in the leopard gecko brain.
University of Guelph researchers have discovered the type of stem cell allowing geckos to create new brain cells, providing evidence that the lizards may also be able to regenerate parts of the brain after injury.
This finding could help in replacing human brain cells lost or damaged due to injury, aging or disease.
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Jul 29, 2018
These Worms Unfrozen After More Than 30,000 Years Are Now The Oldest Living Animals On Earth
Posted by Amberley Levine in category: futurism
The worms were the only two ressurected out of the 300 worms analyzed. They’re alive for the first time since the Pleistocene age.
Jul 29, 2018
SpaceX Killer — The Great Rocket Race | MUST WATCH
Posted by Montie Adkins in category: space travel
A very nice summary on everyone in the new space race.
Just a few months ago, SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy created History by not only sending a car to Outer Space but also landing the Boosters with Pin point accuracy. It may seem that the Future of Space Race will be dominated by SpaceX, or is it?
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Jul 29, 2018
A 7th-Grader Built an Underwater Rover to Save Oceans From Microplastics
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: engineering
The energetic pre-teen has the full support of Ann Fornof, Ph.D., a polymer scientist with Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, who is her assigned mentor and is advising Du over the summer on her ROV.
“What makes mentoring Anna so exciting is that she has all of the qualities — all of those essential ingredients — to be a great scientist,” Fornof explains to Inverse. “She is passionate about science and its potential to have a positive impact on society; she is curious about how things work and how she can utilize science to better our environment; and she works hard to make creative advancements and solve any problems that she encounters.”
Du, who loves the ocean and marine animals, is set on helping the natural world through her engineering. With her infrared ROV, says Fornoff, Du is “looking with a different lens at a substantial challenge that many scientists and engineers would like to address.”
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Jul 29, 2018
Why China’s premier used hit movie ‘Dying to Survive’ to push for cheaper cancer drugs
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, entertainment
Billed as the Chinese answer to Dallas Buyers Club, the tear-jerking film Dying to Survive last week became Premier Li Keqiang’s new rallying cry for speeding up price cuts for cancer medications. It is an issue of such complexity that he has held two cabinet meetings about it in the past three months.
Li Keqiang has been trying to speed up price cuts for life-saving medication for months, and it’s a boon that the box-office hit has generated widespread awareness.
Norway is charging ahead of the U.S., on track to phase out all diesel and gas cars by 2025. What’s holding America back? #WeCanSolveThis #YEARSproject
Jul 28, 2018
Putin’s robo-nauts ‘to be in space by 2019’
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, space
Russia is planning to blast two robot astronauts into space to work on the international space station.
Scientists have developed the advanced machines, named FEDOR, to conduct rescues — even though they have recently been recently trained to use firearms.
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Jul 28, 2018
Robots Can’t Hold Stuff Very Well, But You Can Help
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: employment, government, habitats, robotics/AI
Humanoid Robot torsos, legs, and arms are about where they need to be. But the robot hands are not quite where they need to be yet if we really want them to take all the jobs. The government is dumping a lot of money into robotic hand’s for amputees, which i’m sure they plan to eventually put on the humanoid robots, but it should be pushed along faster.
Imagine, for a moment, the simple act of picking up a playing card from a table. You have a couple of options: Maybe you jam your fingernail under it for leverage, or drag it over the edge of the table.
Now imagine a robot trying to do the same thing. Tricky: Most robots don’t have fingernails, or friction-facilitating fingerpads that perfectly mimic ours. So many of these delicate manipulations continue to escape robotic control. But engineers are making steady progress in getting the machines to manipulate our world. And now, you can help them from the comfort of your own home.
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Jul 28, 2018
Disrupting death: Tech’s next big thing is immortality
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: life extension, robotics/AI
Can technology help us achieve near-everlasting life?
Entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley and beyond are attempting to disrupt what has long been seen as one of the only inevitabilities of life: death.
Computer scientists and artificial intelligence specialists are developing programs that allow people to theoretically avoid death, opening the door to near-everlasting life as well as a myriad of ethical and philosophical questions.
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