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Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 43

Jan 4, 2024

Xerox will axe thousands of jobs in its ‘reinvention’ plan

Posted by in categories: employment, innovation

Xerox was once a synonym for copying. But those halcyon days are long gone for the office equipment company founded in 1906.

Now the company plans to cut 15% of its workforce in the first three months of this year as part of its “reinvention” plans.

Xerox has about 23,000 staff, according to its annual report, meaning thousands will be let go.

Jan 3, 2024

In 2024 AI will make it almost impossible to know the truth

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

All these previous innovations pale in the face of tools like MidJourney, DALL-E, and Adobe Firefly.

These generative AI image systems, the kind that easily spits out this image below of a flooded downtown Manhattan, are dream weavers that make the literal out of the imagined.

When Midjourney builds an image, there are no easily identifiable sources, mediums, or artists. Every pixel can look as imaginary or real as you want and when they leave the digital factory, these images (and video) travel fleetfooted around the world, leaving truth waiting somewhere in the wilderness.

Jan 3, 2024

What a Fusion Energy Breakthrough Means for Green Power

Posted by in categories: innovation, nuclear energy

Four times now, researchers have produced a fleeting burst of fusion energy, an encouraging sign for making this zero-carbon energy source a reality.

Jan 3, 2024

Novel switch turns genes on/off on cue, a promising step toward safer gene therapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Just like a doctor adjusts the dose of a medication to the patient’s needs, the expression of therapeutic genes, those modified in a person to treat or cure a disease via gene therapy, also needs to be maintained within a therapeutic window. Staying within the therapeutic window is important as too much of the protein could be toxic, and too little could result in a small or no therapeutic effect.

Although the principle of has been known for a long time, there has been no strategy to implement it safely, limiting the potential applications of gene therapy in the clinic.

In their current study published in the journal Nature Biotechnology, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine report on a technology to effectively regulate gene expression, a promising solution to fill this gap in gene therapy clinical applications. A Research Briefing on the breakthrough has been published in the same journal issue.

Jan 2, 2024

Gene on/off? New tech lets scientists control genes like a light switch

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Unlike older methods that use things foreign to our bodies, this one doesn’t trigger our immune system and employs small molecules to interact with RNA.


Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine have developed a breakthrough technology to regulate gene expression in gene therapy, addressing the crucial issue of maintaining therapeutic gene levels within a safe range.

This is important because having too much or too little of a gene’s activity within a therapeutic window can cause problems. Their method uses tiny substances in amounts approved by the FDA to control the genes.

Continue reading “Gene on/off? New tech lets scientists control genes like a light switch” »

Dec 31, 2023

China Baidu ERNIE Bot Now Ranking As The #1 Chinese AI Chatbot

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

There has been a lot of publicity on generative AI “chat bot” innovations across North America; OpenAI’s ChatGPT4, Google’s Bard, and most recently AmazonQ are all at the competitive generative AI trough.


This blog highlights China’s ERNIE Bot, and other leading chat bots and provides insights on the generative AI chat bot market.

Dec 29, 2023

Oncology/Cancer: 2023 Advancements and Breakthroughs

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

From mRNA technology to T cell engagers, there were a number of advancements in cancer research in 2023.

Dec 27, 2023

Bill Gates predicts a ‘massive technology boom’ from AI coming soon

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

The use of artificial intelligence by the general population in developed countries such as the US to a “significant” degree will start to take place in the next 18 to 24 months, according to Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates in his year-end letter released last week.

The impact on things such as productivity and innovation could be unprecedented, says Gates.

“Artificial intelligence is about to accelerate the rate of new discoveries at a pace we’ve never seen before,” wrote Gates on his blog.

Dec 27, 2023

Breaking temporal barriers: Zman-seq’s journey into cellular dynamics

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Scientists introduce Zman-seq, a method revolutionizing our understanding of dynamic cellular changes in the human body over time. Read more about this groundbreaking study.


In a recent study published in Cell, scientists led by Prof. Ido Amit at the Weizmann Institute of Science have introduced Zman-seq. This revolutionary method breaks through the temporal barriers of cellular analysis.

Continue reading “Breaking temporal barriers: Zman-seq’s journey into cellular dynamics” »

Dec 27, 2023

We Just Got a Major Step Closer to Teleporting Images Using Only Light

Posted by in categories: innovation, quantum physics

Teleportation of quantum states promises to play a central role in securing the information superhighway of tomorrow.

In spite of the headway that’s been made, the process remains slow and kind of clunky. That could change, with scientists using a new process that could efficiently teleport states of light to form an image using a single pair of entangled photons.

The team, from South Africa, Germany, and Spain, is hopeful that the innovation may help build the secure networks of the future: if the key data isn’t transmitted, then it can’t be stolen.

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