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Jul 8, 2023

How to deep freeze an entire organ—and bring it back to life

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

The mesh has already proved successful on fruit fly larvae in Minnesota, and with two species of mushroom coral in Hawaii and Australia. In Florida, Hagedorn and colleagues were trying it on Diploria labyrinthiformis, a kind of brain coral whose larvae are more than 100 times bigger than those of mushroom coral. In the first few attempts, rewarmed larvae were falling apart. Each larval size, Hagedorn was learning, needs its own version of the treatment. “We’re struggling a little bit to get this to work,” she says.

WHILE SCIENTISTS such as Bischof and Hagedorn wrestle with vitrification, others are seeking an easier route by avoiding ultralow temperatures that require large infusions of cryoprotectant and make rewarming so challenging.

At Harvard University and MGH, scientists are taking cues from nature to push tissues below freezing while holding back the ice. The wood frog (Rana sylvatica) is a champion of this realm. Found in much of North America, including the frigid Canadian Arctic, it can spring to life after spending months with as much as two-thirds of its body frozen at temperatures as low as −16°C.

Jul 8, 2023

This AI-based gig will be ‘the biggest new side hustle,’ says expert—and it can pay $100 per hour

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

If you are looking for a side hustle and have a knack for tech and language, picking up a gig to help employers create content like LinkedIn posts, blog posts, podcast show notes and even social media posts for Twitter and Instagram using ChatGPT could prove effective. Here’s how to do it.


ChatGPT is all the rage, and it turns out businesses are hiring experts in the tool to help them create content. Here’s how to start the side hustle.

Jul 8, 2023

Playing the long game: An exciting discovery in telomere disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Each time our cells divide, the protective caps that keep our chromosomes from fraying, called telomeres, lose a bit of their DNA. Telomeres shorten steadily as we age, but in certain medical conditions like dyskeratosis congenita, the process is accelerated.

“Your telomeres determine your lifeline; how long they are determines how old your body is,” says Becca Hudson, who was diagnosed with at age 14. “My was below the first percentile for my age.”

Trying out for cheerleading, 14-year-old Becca was pulled when testing found something amiss with her blood work. She had very low counts of platelets, red cells, and white cells. Her doctor called later that day and said she should be admitted that night to Boston Children’s Hospital.

Jul 8, 2023

Fully Managed Mastodon Hosting

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A bit long 😪

Anyone can have a Mastodon server. People turned their backs on Tom, whose Myspace was the best space. Zuckerberg copied both Tom and the Twins. I rejoined Myspace after Facebook started harrassing my account because of the Virality Project because I questioned the popular vaccines, and told people how long it took to create an effective vaccine, and the effectiveness of the BCG vaccine I took as an infant. They silenced me.

In this group even before Musk paid for Twitter I posted about Mastodon, an open source Twitter option, and I still will pay for a blue tick. I won’t pay for anything Zuckerberg does what Mastodon already did, and people line up like sheep, yet… More.

Continue reading “Fully Managed Mastodon Hosting” »

Jul 8, 2023

China’s metal export restrictions: Implications for chipmaker companies

Posted by in categories: business, energy, finance

Harsh Kumar, Piper Sandler managing director, joins CNBC’s ‘Power Lunch’ to discuss why he believes not all chipmakers take a direct hit from China’s curb on the rare metals used in semiconductors and more. For access to live and exclusive video from CNBC subscribe to CNBC PRO: https://cnb.cx/2NGeIvi.

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Continue reading “China’s metal export restrictions: Implications for chipmaker companies” »

Jul 8, 2023

This AI system only needs a small amount of data to predict molecular properties

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

Discovering new materials and drugs typically involves a manual, trial-and-error process that can take decades and cost millions of dollars. To streamline this process, scientists often use machine learning to predict molecular properties and narrow down the molecules they need to synthesize and test in the lab.

Researchers from MIT and the MIT-Watson AI Lab have developed a new, unified framework that can simultaneously predict molecular properties and generate new much more efficiently than these popular deep-learning approaches.

To teach a to predict a molecule’s biological or , researchers must show it millions of labeled molecular structures—a process known as training. Due to the expense of discovering and the challenges of hand-labeling millions of structures, large training datasets are often hard to come by, which limits the effectiveness of machine-learning approaches.

Jul 8, 2023

Humans to Achieve Immortality by 2030, Google Engineer Claims

Posted by in categories: genetics, life extension, nanotechnology, Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI

Immortality has been a dream of human beings since the dawn of time. Mankind´s fascination with cheating death is reflected in scientific records, mythology, and folklore dating back at least to ancient Egypt.

Now, Ray Kurzweil, a former Google engineer, claims that humans will achieve immortality by 2030 – and 86 percent of his 147 predictions have been correct.

Continue reading “Humans to Achieve Immortality by 2030, Google Engineer Claims” »

Jul 8, 2023

Android phone hits 24GB of RAM, as much as a 13-inch MacBook Pro

Posted by in categories: computing, entertainment, mobile phones

Android manufacturers tend to love big spec sheets, even if those giant numbers won’t do much for day-to-day phone usage. In that vein, we’ve got the new high-water mark for ridiculous amounts of memory in a phone. The new Nubia RedMagic 8S Pro+ is an Android gaming phone with an option for 24GB of RAM.

The base model of the RedMagic 8S Pro+ starts with 16GB of RAM, but GSMArena has pictures and details of the upgraded 24GB SKU, which is the most amount of memory ever in an Android phone. Because we’re all about big numbers, it also comes with 1TB of storage. Keep in mind a 13-inch top-spec M2 MacBook Pro has 24GB of RAM and 2TB of storage, and that’s a desktop OS with real multitasking, so Nubia is really pushing it. This suped-up 24GB version of the phone appears to be a China-exclusive, with the price at CNY 7,499 (about $1,034), which is a lot for a phone in China.

You definitely want an adequate amount of RAM in an Android phone. All these apps are designed around cheap phones, though, and with Android’s aggressive background app management, there’s usually not much of a chance to use a ton of RAM. Theoretically, a phone like this would let you multitask better, since apps could stay in memory longer, and you wouldn’t have to start them back up when switching tasks. Most people aren’t quickly switching through that many apps, though, and some heavy apps, games especially, will just automatically turn off a few seconds once they’re in the background.

Jul 8, 2023

Toyota’s solid-state battery breakthrough will reduce costs and size by 50 percent

Posted by in categories: innovation, transportation

Chandler Cruttenden / Unsplash.

The largest automaker in the world said that by using its new solid-state battery architecture, it can produce batteries with a range of 745 miles (1,200 kilometers), which can also be fast-charged in about 10 minutes, as reported in the Financial Times.

Jul 8, 2023

Palm-Sized Powerhouse: RIKEN’s Handheld Terahertz Device to “X-Ray” Things Without Harmful Radiation

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, space

Using new palm-sized devices, RIKEN researchers may have finally harnessed the terahertz band of the electromagnetic spectrum to effectively ‘X-ray’ things without using harmful ionizing radiation.

Countless technologies—from smartphones and TVs to infrared instruments on the James Webb Space Telescope.

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST or Webb) is an orbiting infrared observatory that will complement and extend the discoveries of the Hubble Space Telescope. It covers longer wavelengths of light, with greatly improved sensitivity, allowing it to see inside dust clouds where stars and planetary systems are forming today as well as looking further back in time to observe the first galaxies that formed in the early universe.