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Jun 9, 2022
Surgical Needles / Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Equipment
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biotech/medical
The fascinating stories and secrets behind hit Japanese products, plus parts and machines that boast the top share of niche markets. In the first half: the story behind the world’s smallest surgical needles—only 0.03mm in diameter. In the second half: pharmaceutical manufacturing equipment essential for making pills. They apply coatings which allow easier ingestion and controlled release of the medicine. We go behind the scenes with the Japanese company that develops this equipment.
Jun 9, 2022
Real-Life ‘Star Trek’ Tractor Beams Will Change How We Practice Medicine
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, tractor beam
Circa 2015
Star Trek’s ideal view of medicine is closer than we think.
Continue reading “Real-Life ‘Star Trek’ Tractor Beams Will Change How We Practice Medicine” »
Jun 9, 2022
Scientists grew living human skin around a robotic finger
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI
In the hopes of one day building super realistic cyborgs, researchers built a robotic finger that wears living human skin.
Jun 9, 2022
Japan’s Asteroid Mission Return Sample Supports the Idea of Panspermia
Posted by Len Rosen in categories: materials, space
Did life begin on Earth, or did it come from space? Amino acids, peptides and proteins may have an off-world origin giving credence to panspermia.
Twenty amino acids discovered in the sample materials returned provide evidence to support the evolving panspermia hypothesis.
Jun 9, 2022
Andrea De Souza — Eli Lilly — Leveraging Big Data & Artificial Intelligence For Unmet Medical Needs
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: biotech/medical, business, health, information science, neuroscience, robotics/AI
Leveraging big data & artificial intelligence to solve unmet medical needs — andrea de souza — eli lilly & co.
Andrea De Souza, is Associate Vice President, Research Data Sciences and Engineering, at Eli Lilly & Company (https://www.lilly.com/) where over the past three years her work has focused around empowering the Lilly Research Laboratories (LRL) organization with greater computational, analytics-intense experimentation to raise the innovation of their scientists.
Jun 9, 2022
Energy Dome launches world’s first CO2 battery for long-duration energy storage
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, sustainability
Italian company Energy Dome has announced the successful launch of its first CO2 Battery facility in Sardinia, Italy. The milestone marks the final de-risking of the CO2 Battery technology as Energy Dome enters the commercial scaling phase, becoming the first commercial long-duration energy storage technology on the market offering a reliable alternative to fossil fuels for dispatchable baseload power globally.
The Energy Dome CO2 battery uses carbon dioxide to store renewable energy, such as solar and wind energy, over a long period and release it quickly. Energy Dome says the technology can be quickly deployed anywhere in the world at less than half the cost of similar-sized lithium battery storage facilities.
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Jun 9, 2022
Scientists uncover clues about the generation of nanomachines in Salmonella
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology
Researchers at the University of Liverpool have captured a clear view of the generation process of “protein machinery” that plays a key role in the colonization of pathogenic Salmonella bacteria.
The findings, published in Nature Communications, answer an important question about how various proteins self-assemble to create a higher-ordered functional organelle in Salmonella to boost metabolism.
Many pathogenic bacteria, such as Salmonella, use specialized nano-sized organelles, or bacterial microcompartments (BMC). The BMC has a virus-like polyhedral shell made of proteins to encase multiple metabolic cargo enzymes. The protein shell provides a selectively permeable barrier which controls the passage of metabolites and sequesters the reactions in its interior. This ensures higher efficiency of the encapsulated reactions and prevents toxic products from being released into the rest of the cell, providing the pathogens a competitive advantage in human gut.
Jun 9, 2022
Concurrent Heart Conditions Linked to Tripled Dementia Risk
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension, neuroscience
Having multiple conditions that affect the heart are linked to a greater risk of dementia than having high genetic risk, according to a largescale new study.
Led by Oxford University and the University of Exeter, the study is among the largest ever to examine the link between several heart-related conditions and dementia, and one of the few to look at the complex issue of multiple health conditions.
Published in The Lancet Healthy Longevity, the paper looked at data from more than 200,000 people, aged 60 or above, and of European ancestry in UK Biobank. The international research team identified those who had been diagnosed with the cardiometabolic conditions diabetes, stroke, or a heart attack, or any combination of the three, and those who went on to develop dementia.
Jun 9, 2022
Training a robot to recognize and pour water
Posted by Michael Taylor in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Jeffrey DeanUnless you’re actively scrubbing the CO2, that’s what happens when you recirculate air.
James FalkA carbonator?
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