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Feb 2, 2020

Japan Isolates Wuhan Coronavirus, Will Share Findings with Researchers and Companies

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

On Friday, the National Institute of Infectious Diseases announced that it has succeeded in cultivating and isolating the Wuhan coronavirus, reported the Japan Times.

Now that it has isolated the virus, the institute can begin developing a vaccine and a drug for the coronavirus. It can also deliver test kits capable of offering a quick diagnosis.

RELATED: LATEST UPDATES ON WUHAN’S DEADLY CORONAVIRUS

Feb 2, 2020

This Spanish company found a way to produce a fuel without emitting CO2, and it’s made of sewage

Posted by in category: sustainability

With high heat and pressure, Ingelia turns sewage and waste into a fuel that burns like coal, but releases less CO2 and fewer harmful substances.

Feb 2, 2020

Thailand ‘cures’ coronavirus with anti-HIV drug cocktail in 48 hours

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

A Chinese woman infected with the new coronavirus showed a dramatic improvement after she was treated with a cocktail of anti-virals used to treat flu and HIV, Thailand’s health ministry said Sunday.

The 71-year-old patient tested negative for the virus 48 hours after Thai doctors administered the combination, doctor Kriengsak Attipornwanich said during the ministry’s daily press briefing.

“The lab result of positive on the coronavirus turned negative in 48 hours,” Kriengsak said.

Feb 2, 2020

GRAIL: NASA’s Mission to Study the Gravity of the Moon

Posted by in category: space travel

During their yearlong mission in 2012, NASA’s twin GRAIL spacecraft made the most detailed gravitational map of the moon ever created.

Feb 2, 2020

Pentagon report: DoD needs to test how satellites would perform under attack

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

WASHINGTON — The Defense Department’s director of operational test and evaluation warns in a new report that the military today is not able to assess the durability of its satellites if they came under attack.

DoD plans to invest at least $100 billion in space systems over the next decade, “and we are not alone,” writes DOT&E director Robert Behler in his just released annual report for fiscal year 2019.

“We therefore must thoroughly understand how our systems will perform in space, particularly when facing man-made threats,” says the report. “Yet, the DoD currently has no real means to assess adequately the operational effectiveness, suitability and survivability of space-based systems in a representative environment.

Feb 2, 2020

Mysterious Egyptian artifact from the Bronze Age found off Israeli coast

Posted by in category: futurism

A veterinarian taking a morning swim found what turned out to be an anchor engraved with hieroglyphs on the seafloor. But who defaced the Egyptian goddess?

Feb 2, 2020

Wuhan Coronavirus Looks Increasingly Like a Pandemic, Experts Say

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

“It’s very, very transmissible, and it almost certainly is going to be a pandemic,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease.


Rapidly rising caseloads alarm researchers, who fear the virus may make its way across the globe. But scientists cannot yet predict how many deaths may result.

Feb 2, 2020

The World’s First Human Trial Uses Stem Cells To Treat Parkinson’s

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Read more.

Feb 2, 2020

How one entrepreneur is tackling humanity’s most pressing problems

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, computing, internet, neuroscience, particle physics

Braintree founder Bryan Johnson, MBA’07, invests in bold ventures on the next frontier.

Bryan Johnson is determined to explore the depths of your mind and help save humanity from its direst threats.

Continue reading “How one entrepreneur is tackling humanity’s most pressing problems” »

Feb 2, 2020

The building blocks of a brain-inspired computer

Posted by in categories: engineering, information science, robotics/AI

If you’re interested in mind uploading, then I have an excellent article to recommend. This wide-ranging article is focused on neuromorphic computing and has sections on memristors. Here is a key excerpt:

“…Perhaps the most exciting emerging AI hardware architectures are the analog crossbar approaches since they achieve parallelism, in-memory computing, and analog computing, as described previously. Among most of the AI hardware chips produced in roughly the last 15 years, an analog memristor crossbar-based chip is yet to hit the market, which we believe will be the next wave of technology to follow. Of course, incorporating all the primitives of neuromorphic computing will likely require hardware solutions even beyond analog memristor crossbars…”

Here’s a web link to the research paper:

Continue reading “The building blocks of a brain-inspired computer” »