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Apr 15, 2020
Deadly olive tree disease ‘could cost billions’
Posted by Fyodor Rouge in categories: biotech/medical, food
Deadly pathogen is threatening Olive tree farming in Europe 👌👍mmn.
🧐🧐🧐, Those who checked the previous post about Locusts in Africa may have a look at this too.
A deadly pathogen affecting Europe’s olive trees could cost over €20 billion.
Apr 15, 2020
Expert Disaster Preppers Explain How to Ride Out the Coronavirus Pandemic
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, food
For guidance in this time of uncertainty, we spoke with five expert preppers about what they’re doing to ride out the pandemic, how they’ll be ready for whatever comes next—and how you can be too.
Long lines outside grocery stores. Aisles stripped of canned food, toilet paper, and hand sanitizer. A fast-moving pandemic disease that, as of last week, was infecting more than 30,000 people every day.
Just a month ago, such a situation was unimaginable for most of us. But for disaster preppers, it’s precisely the scenario they’re determined to be ready for.
Continue reading “Expert Disaster Preppers Explain How to Ride Out the Coronavirus Pandemic” »
Apr 15, 2020
AI Is Helping Us Combat The Economic Problem Of Human Trafficking
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, robotics/AI
When we think of human trafficking, we often think about the despondent faces of women and children who live in slums all over the world. What if human trafficking is much closer to home than we think? In 2019, Markie Dell, stood on the TEDx stage to recount her experience of being a domestic human trafficking victim. She was an awkward teenager who was groomed by a girl that she befriended at a birthday party. She was subsequently kidnapped, drugged, sexually violated, intimidated at gunpoint into dancing in strip clubs for an entire year.
She didn’t know that she was a human trafficking victim until a police officer handed her a book called, “Pimpology”. Then, she knew that she was being human trafficked.
Continue reading “AI Is Helping Us Combat The Economic Problem Of Human Trafficking” »
Apr 15, 2020
Extreme closeup of mouse-brain slice wins top Life Science Microscopy prize
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: neuroscience, science
Apr 15, 2020
Virgin Orbit aces final test flight before first launch (photos)
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: transportation
On Sunday (April 12), Virgin Orbit completed the final test of its development program, sending its carrier plane, Cosmic Girl, aloft over the Southern California desert with an orbital rocket beneath its wing.
Apr 14, 2020
Finally We May Have a Path to the Fundamental Theory of Physics… and It’s Beautiful—Stephen Wolfram Writings
Posted by Tracy R. Atkins in category: physics
Apr 14, 2020
Life 3 0 Audiobook Age of Artificial Intelligence
Posted by TJ Wass in categories: business, Elon Musk, mathematics, robotics/AI
If anyone wants to learn about the future of artificial intelligence and the rise of super-intelligent machines here is Billionaire rocket scientist businessman Elon Musk’s favorite book of the year written by MIT math Professor Max Tegmark at the Future of Life Institute. The book Life 3.0 is presented in this free audio-book format on YouTube and is a 7 hour video talking about how we will become a Libertarian Utopia soon thanks to advances in technology.
Apr 14, 2020
Gene editing rids mice of DNA segment linked to autism
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics, neuroscience
Researchers have used the gene-editing technique CRISPR to delete a segment of DNA associated with autism and schizophrenia from mouse brain cells.
The technique has only proven effective in mice so far but may eventually be suitable for treating brain conditions in people, says Xiao-hong Lu, assistant professor of pharmacology and neuroscience at Louisiana State University Health in Shreveport.
Unlike techniques used to manipulate DNA in the mouse brain, CRISPR can be applied to people. He says, “We need a tool to help us to carry the genetic elements into the [human] brain.”
Apr 14, 2020
A 100-Drone Swarm, Dropped from Jets, Plans Its Own Moves
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: drones, military, surveillance
Circa 2017
What’s small, fast, and is launched from the bottom of a fighter jet? Not missiles, but a swarm of drones.
U.S. military officials have announced that they’ve carried out their largest ever test of a drone swarm released from fighter jets in flight. In the trials, three F/A-18 Super Hornets released 103 Perdix drones, which then communicated with each other and went about performing a series of formation flying exercises that mimic a surveillance mission.
Continue reading “A 100-Drone Swarm, Dropped from Jets, Plans Its Own Moves” »