Menu

Blog

Page 8824

May 18, 2019

BioHiTech supplies food waste digesters to grocery chain

Posted by in category: food

Chestnut Ridge, New York-based company to install Sapling digesters at six locations.

Subscribe.

Read more

May 18, 2019

World’s food waste could feed 2 billion people

Posted by in category: food

As many as 2 billion people could be fed from the estimated 1.4 billion tons of food waste the world generates each year.

Read more

May 18, 2019

How Feynman Diagrams Revolutionized Physics

Posted by in category: particle physics

In the late 1940s, Richard Feynman invented a visual tool for simplifying particle calculations that forever changed theoretical physics.

Read more

May 17, 2019

Architect Designs a Minimalist Modern House Inside a Giant Ancient Rock

Posted by in category: futurism

Would you live here?

Read more

May 17, 2019

Citrus Farmers Facing Deadly Bacteria Turn to Antibiotics, Alarming Health Officials

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food, health

Deadly Germs, Lost Cures

In its decision to approve two drugs for orange and grapefruit trees, the E.P.A. largely ignored objections from the C.D.C. and the F.D.A., which fear that expanding their use in cash crops could fuel antibiotic resistance in humans.

An orange picker collecting oranges on a grove in Zolfo Springs, Fla. Credit Credit.

Continue reading “Citrus Farmers Facing Deadly Bacteria Turn to Antibiotics, Alarming Health Officials” »

May 17, 2019

A social perception scheme for behavior planning of autonomous cars

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

To navigate dynamic environments, autonomous vehicles (AVs) should be able to process all information available to them and use it to generate effective driving strategies. Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, have recently proposed a social perception scheme for planning the behavior of autonomous cars, which could help to develop AVs that are better equipped to deal with uncertainty in their surrounding environment.

“My research has focused on how to design human-like driving behaviors for autonomous cars,” Liting Sun, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told TechXplore. “Our goal is to build AVs that do not only understand , but also perform in a similar way in multiple aspects, including , reasoning and action.”

Sun and her colleagues observed that human drivers tend to treat other vehicles as dynamic obstacles, often inferring additional information from their behavior on the road. This information is generally occluded environment information or physically undetectable social information.

Continue reading “A social perception scheme for behavior planning of autonomous cars” »

May 17, 2019

NASA photographed the crash site of Israel’s failed moon lander, and it’s not pretty

Posted by in category: space

NASA found the Beresheet moon lander’s crash site via its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The agency posted images of the area on Wednesday.

Read more

May 17, 2019

Genetically engineered immune cells fight off deadly virus in mice

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics

Researchers may have demonstrated a novel way to protect us from some of the world’s deadliest viruses. By genetically engineering immune cells to make more effective antibodies, they have defended mice from a potentially lethal lung virus. The same strategy could work in humans against diseases for which there are no vaccines.

“It’s a huge breakthrough,” says immunologist James Voss of the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, California, who wasn’t connected to the study.

Vaccines typically contain a disabled microbial invader or shards of its molecules. They stimulate immune cells known as B cells to crank out antibodies that target the pathogen. Not everyone who receives a vaccine gains protection, however. Some patients’ antibodies aren’t up to snuff, for instance. And researchers haven’t been able to develop vaccines against some microbes, such as HIV and the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which causes lung infections mainly in children and people with impaired immune systems.

Continue reading “Genetically engineered immune cells fight off deadly virus in mice” »

May 17, 2019

Dr. Aubrey de Grey, Co-Founder and CSO of the SENS Research Foundation — ideaXme — Ira Pastor

Posted by in categories: aging, bioengineering, bioprinting, biotech/medical, business, cryonics, futurism, genetics, health, life extension

May 17, 2019

Lilium’s full-sized electric jet flies for the first time

Posted by in category: transportation

Lilium first emerged in 2016 as an aviation startup with some very lofty ambitions, revealing plans to develop a five-seat electric aircraft that can take off vertically, switch to horizontal flight in mid-air and cover some sizable distances on each charge. The company has now taken a significant step toward achieving this goal, completing a flight of a full-scale prototype of its Lilium Jet for the very first time.

Read more