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Dec 4, 2018

One remote for all your devices

Posted by in category: futurism

Click on photo to start video.

This may soon turn the many unsightly remotes in our living room obsolete.

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Dec 4, 2018

The FDA just approved a drug that targets cancers based on DNA, rather than where the tumor is in your body

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

  • The FDA on Monday approved a new cancer treatment in an unconventional way: not by tumor type, but rather by the genetic mutation the drug targets.
  • The drug, Vitrakvi, was developed by Loxo Oncology in partnership with pharma giant Bayer.
  • It’s only the second time the FDA has approved a cancer drug’s use based on a certain mutation rather than a particular tumor type.

The Food and Drug Administration on Monday took an unconventional approach to approving a new cancer drug.

The drug, Vitrakvi, was developed by Loxo Oncology. It’s the company’s first drug to get approved.

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Dec 4, 2018

CRISPR creates new species with single giant chromosome

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical

For at least the last 10 million years every yeast cell of the sort used to make beer or bread has had 16 chromosomes. But now—thanks to CRISPR technology and some DNA tinkerers in China—there are living yeast with just one.

Genome organizer: We humans have our genes arranged on 46 chromosomes, yeast use 16, and there’s even a fern plant with 1260 of them. That’s just the way it is. And no one is quite sure why.

The big one: Do we really need so many chromosomes? That’s what Zhogjun Qin and colleagues at the Key Laboratory of Synthetic Biology in Shanghai wanted to know.

Continue reading “CRISPR creates new species with single giant chromosome” »

Dec 4, 2018

ANYbotics Autonomous Robot Can Inspect Offshore Converters

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This four-legged robot can run, climb stairs, and apparently inspect offshore converters.

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Dec 4, 2018

Camera Can Record At 10 Trillion Frames Per Second

Posted by in category: electronics

This camera can capture photons of light in slow motion 📷.

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Dec 4, 2018

Nvidia AI Can Render Complete Urban Environments in Unreal Engine 4

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Interest in artificial neural networks has skyrocketed over the years as companies like Google and Facebook have invested heavily in machines that can think like humans. Today, an AI can recognize objects in photos or help generate realistic computer speech, but Nvidia has successfully built a neural network that can create an entire virtual world with the help of a game engine. The researchers speculate this “hybrid” approach could one day make AI-generated games a reality.

The system build by Nvidia engineers uses many of the same parts as other AI experiments, but they’re arranged in a slightly different way. To goal of the project was to create a simple driving simulator, but without using any humans to design the environment.

Continue reading “Nvidia AI Can Render Complete Urban Environments in Unreal Engine 4” »

Dec 4, 2018

SpaceX delay may mean 36,000 wormy passengers are too old for their planned experiments

Posted by in category: space travel

Thousands of microscopic worms will be launched into space — wriggling around in SpaceX’s next cargo shipment to the International Space Station aboard the SpaceX Dragon.

But the launch, which was planned for today (Dec. 4), has been postponed to tomorrow, and scientists are now worried that the worms will be a day “too old” for some of the planned experiments, according to the BBC.

If all goes well in spite of the delay, these tiny but mighty creatures with muscle structures very similar to that of humans, might help us understand why and how astronauts lose muscle mass in space. [Photos: The First Space Tourists].

Continue reading “SpaceX delay may mean 36,000 wormy passengers are too old for their planned experiments” »

Dec 4, 2018

Natural selection in the womb can explain health problems in adulthood

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Conditions encountered in the womb — when the embryo consists of only about 100 cells — can have life-long impact on health. Scientists previously assumed that this is because embryos respond to adverse conditions by programming their gene expression. Now an international team of researchers at the Leiden University Medical Center, Wageningen University and Research, Lund University, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in New York propose a radically different alternative. Rather than being programmed by the environment, random differences in gene expression may provide some embryos with a survival advantage, in particular when conditions are harsh. By studying DNA methylation, an important mechanism to control gene activity, the researchers found that a specific part of the DNA methylation pattern was missing among famine-exposed individuals. The findings are published in the journal Cell Reports.

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Dec 4, 2018

Automation key to unravelling mysteries of the universe at CERN

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

How CERN is using enterprise asset management from Infor and ramping up the automation of its IT services to plumb the depths of the universe.

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Dec 4, 2018

ESA team blasts Intel’s new AI chip with radiation at CERN

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

An ESA-led team subjected Intel’s new Myriad 2 artificial intelligence chip to one of the most energetic radiation beams available on Earth. This test of its suitability to fly in space took place at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. The AI chip is related in turn to an ESA-fostered family of integrated circuits.

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