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Aug 9, 2017

This VR device will have you actually wanting to workout

Posted by in category: virtual reality

Aug 9, 2017

One gram of DNA can store up to 1000 YEARS of HDTV content

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

This is the future.

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Aug 9, 2017

Robert Lang is a physicist who worked at NASA studying lasers and has 46 patents on optoelectronics to his name

Posted by in category: engineering

However, that’s not what he’s best known for now: he’s a legend in the world of origami. His intricate designs are second to none, and they actually have applications back in engineering.

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Aug 9, 2017

This beehive allows beekeepers to access honey without taking bees out of their hive

Posted by in category: futurism

Aug 9, 2017

This spray makes things almost indestructible

Posted by in category: futurism

Click on photo to start video.

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Aug 9, 2017

Restoring Youthful Plasticity in the Brains of Old Mice

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

As we age the brain loses its flexibility, this in turn affects our ability to learn, to remember things and adapt to new situations. The classic theme is of an older person who is stuck in a rut and unable to change how they think.

This is also a common concern people raise when any discussion of healthy longer lives are mentioned. The concern is that we would have a world of people living more decades and becoming so set in their ways that society would stagnate.

However, many proponents of rejuvenation biotechnology refute this and suggest that mental plasticity could be rejuvenated just the same as cells and tissues could be. The new study we will discuss today offers us a hint of what might be possible, although the focus here is specifically on the visual cortex[1].

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Aug 9, 2017

Biocomputers Made From Cells Can Now Handle More Complex Logic

Posted by in category: computing

Researchers have developed much more advanced RNA biocomputers that can handle more computations and complex logic. Ribocomputing is coming of age.

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Aug 9, 2017

Gold Prices Spike As People Freak Out About Nuclear War

Posted by in categories: existential risks, finance, government, military

Gold climbed to the highest since mid-June, pushing up mining-company shares amid military tensions between the U.S. and North Korea.

Equities slid and the Swiss franc and some developed-market government bonds advanced as President Donald Trump threatened North Korea with “fire and fury” following a series of missile tests by the communist regime, boosting demand for haven assets. Gold also climbed after Indian imports of the metal were said to have doubled.

The U.S. North-Korea tensions add to investor angst that has helped push up gold more than 10 percent this year, even with equities hitting records and the Federal Reserve keen to shrink its balance sheet. Should geopolitical tensions intensify, gold is likely to be in demand as a safe-haven, according to analysts at Commerzbank AG.

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Aug 9, 2017

Meet Zoltan Istvan, a transhumanist who believes “overcoming death is a priority” and wants to use technology to lengthen his lifespan

Posted by in category: transhumanism

Aug 9, 2017

Researchers develop technology to make aged cells younger

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Aging. We all face it. Nobody’s immune and we’ve long tried to reverse it, stop it or just even slow it down. While advances have been made, true age-reversal at a cellular level remains difficult to achieve. By taking a different approach, however, researchers at Houston Methodist made a surprising discovery leading to the development of technology with the ability to rejuvenate human cells. And that couldn’t be more important for the small population of children who are aging too quickly — children with progeria.

John P. Cooke, M.D., Ph.D., department chair of cardiovascular sciences at Houston Methodist Research Institute, and his colleagues, describe their findings in a Research Letter titled “Telomerase mRNA Reverses Senescence in Progeria Cells,” appearing online July 31 and in print Aug. 8 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, a leading medical journal in the field of cardiovascular disease.

Cooke studied cells from children with , a rare condition marked by rapid aging that usually robs them of the chance to live beyond their early teens. They focused on progeria, because the condition tells them a lot about aging in general that’s ultimately relevant to all of us.

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