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Nov 23, 2018

UK radar satellite returns first images

Posted by in categories: mapping, transportation

Sydney Harbour and the Egyptian pyramids feature in the debut images from the first all-UK radar spacecraft.

NovaSAR was developed jointly by Surrey Satellite Technology Limited of Guildford and Airbus in Portsmouth, and launched to orbit in September.

Its pictures are now being assessed for use in diverse applications, including crop analysis, flood and forestry mapping, and maritime surveillance.

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Nov 23, 2018

New blood test can detect ovarian cancer in its early stages

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Ovarian cancer is rarely detected in its early stages, which makes treatment less effective. A new blood test, however, may become a game-changer.

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Nov 23, 2018

A Break in the Quest for the Quantum Speed Limit

Posted by in category: quantum physics

When you see that, you know you’re touching on something very, very deep and fundamental.

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Nov 23, 2018

Parkinson’s Disease Patient in World First Stem Cell Therapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience

In a world first, a patient with Parkinson’s disease has undergone transplant therapy, which uses reprogrammed stem cells to replace neurons destroyed by the disease.

Stem cell therapy is part of the toolkit

The stem cell field is an area of science that is relatively well funded and, out of all the branches of medical science relevant to aging, is probably the most understood by the public. In the last decade or so, progress in stem cell research has been rapid, and scientists now have a wide range of cell types they can create on demand via cellular programming.

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Nov 23, 2018

Space Station Crew Message for Thanksgiving

Posted by in category: space

Join crew members Alexander Gerst and Serena Auñón-Chancellor as they get ready for #Thanksgiving aboard the International Space Station with poundcake and candied yams. Watch: https://go.nasa.gov/2qZt4LY

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Nov 23, 2018

Scientists may have found a way to treat cancer without chemotherapy

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

As advanced as medicine is today, the incidence of cancer diagnoses continues to rise.

Scientists at the International Agency for Cancer Research estimate that, this year, around 18 million people will be diagnosed with cancer, and around 10 million people will die of tumours— while these are the highest figures to date, researchers all over the world are looking for new therapeutic options.

Scientists from Northwestern University in the US recently discovered a kind of genetic “kill code” in cells that could theoretically be used to treat cancer without chemotherapy.

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Nov 23, 2018

Poorest dying nearly ten years younger than the rich in “deeply worrying” trend

Posted by in category: life extension

On the growing life expectancy gap between the rich and the poor in England, a new study. I noticed that tendency years ago between whole nations and minority or social groups. I proposed that we concentrate on scientific research for indefinite lifespans so that a few years difference would not matter (Lens-Pechakova, Rejuvenation Res. 2014 Apr;17:239–42), but still life extension is not on the agenda.


The gap between the life expectancy of the richest and poorest sectors of society in England is increasing.

This is the finding of new research from Imperial College London.

Continue reading “Poorest dying nearly ten years younger than the rich in ‘deeply worrying’ trend” »

Nov 23, 2018

Eurosymposium on Healthy Ageing – Dr. Marco Demaria

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

At the Eurosymposium on Healthy Ageing, we had the privilege of interviewing Dr. Marco Demaria of the European Research Institute for the Biology of Ageing.

In this interview with Elena Milova, Dr. Demaria primarily talks about senescent cells, their role in age-related diseases, and methods of controlling them. Among the ways of controlling them include blocking the inflammatory signals they secrete, destroying them with senolytic drugs, and boosting the immune system to remove them naturally.

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Nov 23, 2018

An Evening with Aubrey de Grey in Monaco

Posted by in category: life extension

Come and spend an evening in the company of Dr. Aubrey de Grey when he visits Monaco on November 29th.

World-renowned biogerontologist Dr. Aubrey de Grey was the first person to awaken me to the idea that aging could be seen as something repairable, not just to be accepted as inevitable, and that such an approach would inevitably lead to much longer healthy lifespans, with more time to fulfill our dreams and potential, more time to learn, more time to give something to the world and just more time to enjoy being alive.

I first met Aubrey in 2009 when I helped to interpret a talk for him in Narbonne, France, as I had recently moved to the south of France, and there I also met healthy longevity activist Didier Coeurnelle from Belgium, who was just founding his association, Heales, with Sven Bulterijs. Didier became a good friend and has since been almost as tireless as Aubrey in his efforts to promote healthy longevity.

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Nov 23, 2018

Alphabet Inc.-owned Google’s futuristic, canopied, tent-like new Mountain View campus takes shape in the North Bayshore (Video)

Posted by in category: futurism

The project rising in Mountain View is Google’s first built-from-scratch corporate campus. New aerial video shows how construction is coming along, a year-and-a-half after Google broke ground on the futuristic, canopied structures.

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