Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 171
Jun 11, 2018
This Innovative Technology Harvests Water from Cooling Towers
Posted by Bill Kemp in category: innovation
Water-scarce cities could get a new source of the precious resource through a simple and cost-effective technology.
Jun 10, 2018
Breakthrough in search for Martian life as Curiosity finds organic matter and seasonal methane
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: innovation, space
What did they find out?
NASA’s Curiosity rover has uncovered the best evidence yet that life may have once existed on Mars.
Jun 10, 2018
Heart disease stem cell therapy can shrink deadly scar tissue
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
A breakthrough stem cell treatment that promises the first effective cure for heart disease will be offered to British patients this year, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal.
Hundreds of thousands stand to benefit after regulators approved a major trial of the regenerative drug capable of shrinking fatal scar tissue which follows a heart attack.
The “off-the-shelf” therapy, which can be harvested for thousands of recipients from one healthy donor, will begin being administered to patients at London’s Royal Brompton Hospital in November.
Continue reading “Heart disease stem cell therapy can shrink deadly scar tissue” »
Jun 5, 2018
Can You Actually Hack Your DNA to Slow Down Aging? — Bioquark Inc. — Ira Pastor
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: aging, biotech/medical, DNA, genetics, health, innovation, life extension, neuroscience, science, transhumanism
http://www.thepathmag.com/can-you-actually-hack-your-dna-to-slow-down-aging/
Many technologies / interventions progressing down the development pathways in the coming years — but there are a lot of free, common sense adjustments you can make today:
Tags: anti-aging, bioquark, biotech, health, immortality, lifespan, longevity, wellness
Jun 2, 2018
Prostate cancer breakthrough as new drug keeps men with previously ‘untreatable’ cases alive
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
M en with previously “untreatable” prostate cancer are being kept alive by a new drug in what experts believe may be a breakthrough for patients with the worst form of the disease.
A British trial has for the first time shown that state-of-the art immunotherapy can be used to target prostate tumours.
The study at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London found more than a third of men who had run out of existing options were still alive and one in ten had not seen their tumours grow after a year of taking Pembrolizumab, which targets a gateway helps the immune system to attack cancer cells.
Jun 1, 2018
Europe’s science spending set for another big boost
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: innovation, science
Next week’s proposals are unlikely to contain major surprises, because the commission has unveiled its main ideas over the past months, in particular its overall 7-year budget plan, issued on 2 May. Although Horizon Europe will keep Horizon 2020’s main features, the commission has laid the groundwork for several novelties, including a new agency to tackle the continent’s perennial innovation problem and a big, separate push on collaborative defense research. But contentious negotiations lie ahead. The United Kingdom is negotiating the terms of its impending exit from the European Union, and some member states want to tighten budgets. Meanwhile, research advocates want more generous spending, noting the low application success rates in Horizon 2020—a frustrating 11.9% so far.
Commission seeks €97.6 billion for “Horizon Europe”.
May 31, 2018
Pig brains kept alive without a body
Posted by Narenda Har in categories: innovation, neuroscience
A new wonderful breakthrough of our time.
Scientists raise ethical concerns as the brain cells of decapitated pigs are kept alive for 36 hours.
May 20, 2018
Urban Aero moves forward with innovative VTOL aircraft
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: innovation, transportation
The development of Israel-based Urban Aeronautics’ Cormorant prototype is well underway, with hopes of launching a full-scale development of the aircraft in the near future.
May 15, 2018
DeepMind’s AI taught itself to navigate like a mammal
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: innovation, robotics/AI
DeepMind’s latest breakthrough could change our understanding of both AI and the way mammal’s brains work. A spontaneous development in the company’s neural network could solve neuron-based mystery.