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Mar 14, 2017
What Happened When I Gave Up Gluten, Sugar, Dairy, And Coffee — By Stephanie Pizza | Fast Company
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: food, fun, health, human trajectories, life extension, science
Mar 14, 2017
Our Dystopian Future as Immortals
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: biotech/medical, geopolitics, life extension, Ray Kurzweil
I thought this interesting enough to share:
Zoltan Istvan was my favorite presidential candidate in 2016. He toured the country in a bus modeled to look like a coffin, with the message that death is a curable disease.
Mar 14, 2017
Solar Experiment Lets Neighbors Trade Energy Among Themselves
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: business, energy, habitats
Dozens of homes and businesses in Brooklyn have been wired into a microgrid, which allows members to exchange excess-electricity credits.
Mar 14, 2017
Robots will create jobs for creative people, says company that tries to predict the future
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: employment, robotics/AI
Robots will not replace every worker and their use in the workplace will lead to more jobs for people who are creative, according to a company that aims to predict the future.
Artificial intelligence (AI) will operate alongside humans to “take away the grind” from work, enabling people to be more imaginative and productive, experts from The Future Laboratory told a Microsoft Surface event.
“Robots will actually create jobs because humans have unique thinking,” Steve Tooze, Special Projects Editor at The Future Laboratory, said. “They will take away the grind that we don’t want to do. This will free us up to the imaginative stuff, the creative stuff.”
Mar 14, 2017
Gene Therapy to Treat the Diseases of Aging on NRK TV’s Trygdekontoret
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
A lil round table with Liz Parrish.
Liz Parrish, CEO of BioViva, speaks on Norwegian TV about helping people to live longer, healthier lives by using gene and cell therapies.
Mar 14, 2017
Chemical Dye Doubles Roundworm Lifespan, Could Extend Human Longevity
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
—In a statement, co-author Monica Driscoll of Rutgers University said that “the real goal of aging research should not be longevity at all, but rather a person’s health span — how long they can maintain an active, disease free, high quality of life.”–
NO. The real goal is extending lifespan. The lifespan of the organism was doubled, that is why people will like this when I share it.
Most of us try to avoid artificial coloring, but a dye that is used to detect plaques in Alzheimer’s brains is being tested for its seeming ability to counteract the effects of aging.
Continue reading “Chemical Dye Doubles Roundworm Lifespan, Could Extend Human Longevity” »
Take a look at the future of the world through the eyes of renowned futurologists and Kaspersky Lab experts.
Mar 13, 2017
Pain in the Neck: Using CRISPR to Prevent Tissue Damage and Neck Pain
Posted by Nancie Hunter in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
Bowles says. “We’re not changing what is in your genetic code. We’re altering what is expressed. Normally, cells do this themselves, but we are taking engineering control over these cells to tell them what to turn on and turn off.”
Now that researchers know they can do this, doctors will be able to modify the genes via an injection directly to the affected area and delay the degeneration of tissue. In the case of back pain, a patient may get a discectomy to remove part of a herniated disc to relieve the pain, but tissue near the spinal cord may continue to breakdown, leading to future pain. This method could stave off additional surgeries by stopping the tissue damage.
So far, the team has developed a virus that can deliver the gene therapy and has filed a patent on the system. They hope to proceed to human trials after collecting initial data, but Bowles believes it could be about 10 years before this method is used in patients.
Continue reading “Pain in the Neck: Using CRISPR to Prevent Tissue Damage and Neck Pain” »
Mar 13, 2017
Scientists Made the Perfect Underwater Glue
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: futurism
Even the strongest artificial glues are completely useless when you try to apply them underwater, but somehow shellfish are able to hold fast to rocks to deter predators from trying to carry them away. Clearly, nature has already figured out how to make glues that work underwater, and now researchers may have discovered the secret.