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Nov 1, 2018

NAD+ Mouse New Stretch Goal Announced

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Yesterday, we announced the successful completion of the NAD+ Mouse Project after a great fundraiser, but it seems we are not done yet. The research team at Harvard has announced a new stretch goal for the last two days of the campaign.

A new $75,000 goal is to be the final step, and to support that, Dr. David Sinclair is offering to fund match the next $5000 in donations to the project to help it reach this final goal. So, for the next two days, all donations are worth double.

The final goal will be to add even more comprehensive testing, such as end-of-life pathology (frequency and specificity of neoplasms/tumors/cancer) and MRI diagnostics (body composition, lean-to-fat ratio). This would really allow the researchers to maximize the useful data they collect during the study and help assess any changes to cancer risk, why each animal died, and what age-related diseases were affected by the drug.

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Nov 1, 2018

Huge underwater volcano chain discovered off the coast of Tasmania

Posted by in category: futurism

The find offers a glimpse into a previously unknown marine ecosystem — and spotlights just how little we know about the seafloor.

Scientists uncovered a chain of volcanic seamounts off the coast of the Australian island of Tasmania.

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Nov 1, 2018

The Three Types of Ovarian Cancer You Should Know

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

They differ in some major ways.

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Nov 1, 2018

Google’s Doodle Is An Adorable Tribute To A Canadian Geologist

Posted by in category: futurism

Today’s Google doodle features a man standing among large dinosaur bones in the Alberta Badlands.

It’s in honour of Joseph Burr Tyrrell, who was born 160 years ago in Weston, Ont.

Tyrrell, who died in 1957 at the age of 98, was a Canadian geologist, cartographer and mining consultant.

Continue reading “Google’s Doodle Is An Adorable Tribute To A Canadian Geologist” »

Nov 1, 2018

Over half a million chunks of space trash could jeopardize space travel — but Europe has a plan to save it

Posted by in category: space travel

More than half a million chunks of space trash surround our planet and it poses a serious threat to space travel as we know it. But Europe has a plan.

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Nov 1, 2018

Should genealogy data be used to solve crimes?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

New research shows how police could use forensic DNA to track down a suspect’s relatives in genealogy databases that store a different kind of genetic data—and that were never intended for use in police investigations.

In other words, if your sibling leaves DNA at a crime scene, it could lead detectives to your door. That suggests new investigative possibilities for police—and also new concerns about genetic privacy and whether authorities who use forensic DNA in creative ways might be overstepping their bounds, says Noah Rosenberg, a professor of biology at Stanford University and senior author of a study, which appears in Cell.

“The potential to link people’s genotypes across databases has been developing for some time. It is both of interest and concerning, depending on one’s point of view,” says Rosenberg, who is also a member of Stanford Bio-X.

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Nov 1, 2018

Cyberattacks increasingly targeting enterprise IT networks in energy and utilities industry

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, energy

Increased attacks prove the importance of detecting threat behaviors early and monitoring network traffic, stopping cybercriminals in their tracks.

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Nov 1, 2018

Quantum on the edge: Light shines on new pathway for quantum technology

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Scientists in Australia have for the first time demonstrated the protection of correlated states between paired photons—packets of light energy—using the intriguing physical concept of topology. This experimental breakthrough opens a pathway to build a new type of quantum bit, the building blocks for quantum computers.

The research, developed in close collaboration with Israeli colleagues, is published today in the prestigious journal, Science, a recognition of the foundational importance of this work.

“We can now propose a pathway to build robust entangled states for logic gates using protected pairs of photons,” said lead author Dr. Andrea Blanco-Redondo at the University of Sydney Nano Institute.

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Nov 1, 2018

NoVAqua tech harvests nutrients from seafood-processing wastewater

Posted by in category: futurism

When fish are filleted in a seafood-processing plant, or when shrimp and shellfish are boiled, a lot of wastewater is generated. Currently, that water is simply discarded. An experimental new system, however, is able to draw much of the nutrients from it – and those nutrients could have a number of uses.

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Nov 1, 2018

Machine learning spots natural selection at work in human genome

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, robotics/AI

Scientists are using artificial intelligence to identify genetic sequences molded by evolutionary pressures.

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