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Nov 7, 2017

Abstracts: Call for Poster Submissions will include poster sessions

Posted by in category: life extension

In addition, a small number of posters will be selected for oral presentation. Poster topics should lie within the scope of the conference: Research contributing to the eventual postponement of age-related decline in health, with an emphasis on measures that repair damage rather than slowing its creation. Poster submissions are due on January 15, 2018.

To submit your poster go to.


Undoing Aging will include poster sessions on the first two evenings. If you wish to present a poster, please submit the details on this page. A small number of posters will be selected for oral presentation; those selected should also prepare a poster.

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Nov 7, 2017

Can universal health care work?

Posted by in category: health

A right for all people and a service providing the highest standard of care — can universal health care do both or will politics stand in the way? CNBC’s Tom Chitty explains.

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Nov 7, 2017

Arizona Counter Terrorism Information Center (ACTIC), Arizona Fusion Center

Posted by in category: terrorism

Run Hide Fight

◾ How to survive an Active Shooter Situation according to the Arizona Counter Terrorism Information Center.

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Nov 6, 2017

Science fiction or real life? Space mining could be just a few decades away

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

Popular astrophysicist Professor Brian Cox believes we could be mining in space very soon.

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Nov 6, 2017

Lockheed gets Air Force contract to develop high-power airborne laser weapons

Posted by in categories: energy, military

Lockheed Martin has been awarded an Air Force Research Laboratory contract to develop and produce high-energy fiber laser weapons for tactical fighter aircraft.

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Nov 6, 2017

A new Jeff Bezos-backed warehouse farm will grow enough produce to feed over 180,000 people per year

Posted by in categories: food, sustainability

Following a $200 million investment this summer — the largest agriculture-tech funding round in history — vertical farming startup Plenty is expanding beyond its Bay Area roots.

The company is opening a second farm in the greater Seattle area, Plenty CEO Matt Barnard told Business Insider. Located in Kent, Washington, the 100,000-square-foot warehouse facility will grow 4.5 million pounds of greens annually, which is enough to feed around 183,600 Americans, according to the USDA.

The new farm will officially start production in spring 2018. Instead of growing outdoors, Plenty grows its crops on glowing, LED-lit 20-foot-tall towers inside a former electronics distribution center in South San Francisco. The towers do not require soil, pesticides, or even natural sunlight.

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Nov 6, 2017

How to live forever: Here are the ways Silicon Valley plans to conquer death

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, robotics/AI

Tech folks are a little antsy about the whole death thing. They’re putting money behind DNA ‘hacking,’ organ printing and tiny robots that might kill what ails you.

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Nov 6, 2017

Even more evidence points to alien life on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus

Posted by in category: alien life

Scientists suggest Enceladus’s porous core could keep its subsurface ocean liquid for billions of years.

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Nov 6, 2017

Scotland ‘on target’ for 100% renewable energy by 2020

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Citizens’ Assembly hears how Denmark became one of most efficient countries in world.

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Nov 6, 2017

Researchers develop wallpaper bio-solar panel

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, solar power, sustainability

A two-in-one solar bio-battery and solar panel has been created by researchers who printed living cyanobacteria and circuitry onto paper.

Cyanobacteria are photosynthetic micro-organisms that have been on Earth for billions of years. They are thought to be the primary reason why the Earth’s atmosphere is oxygen rich.

Now, a team has demonstrated that cyanobacteria could be used as an ink and printed from an in precise patterns onto electrically conductive carbon nanotubes, which were also inkjet-printed onto the piece of paper. The team showed that the cyanobacteria survived the printing process and were able to perform photosynthesis so that small amounts of electrical energy could be harvested over a period of 100 hours.

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