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Jan 17, 2020
Google parent Alphabet is now a $1 trillion company
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: futurism
Google’s parent company Alphabet ($GOOG) is now the fourth US company to hit a market cap of $1 trillion. It hit the number just before markets closed on Thursday, ending the day’s trading at $1,451.70 per share, up 0.87 percent.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai took over as CEO of Alphabet in December, after Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin relinquished control of Alphabet. It’s been a bumpy couple of years at the company that included allegations of sexual misconduct by executives and a 20,000-person Google Walkout employee protest.
Alphabet is slated to report fourth-quarter earnings on February 3rd, and Wall Street analysts are expecting it to report revenue of $46.9 billion, a year-over-year uptick of almost 20 percent.
Jan 17, 2020
Concerns over new virus from China prompt rare airport screenings for some travelers
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
The virus is from the same family as MERS and SARS, which caused deadly international outbreaks.
Jan 17, 2020
Scientists Create “Strange Metal” Packed With Entangled Electrons
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: computing, quantum physics
And it could help in the development of quantum computers.
Jan 17, 2020
Google’s Sycamore beats top supercomputer to achieve ‘quantum supremacy’
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: quantum physics, supercomputing
Jan 17, 2020
Damon’s Hypersport AI Boosts Motorcycle Safety
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
For all its pure-electric acceleration and range and its ability to shapeshift, the Hypersport motorcycle shown off last week at CES by Vancouver, Canada-based Damon Motorcycles matters for just one thing: It’s the first chopper swathed in active safety systems.
Continue reading “Damon’s Hypersport AI Boosts Motorcycle Safety” »
Jan 17, 2020
Microsoft’s AI bot XiaoIce to create 999 virtual women
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: robotics/AI
After Samsung’s artificial humans, Microsoft is experimenting with customized social bots as emotional companions.
Jan 17, 2020
Avoiding ageing’s 4 deadly killers — Cardiovascular Disease (Part 1)
Posted by Dr Nick Engerer in category: aging
If you’re like me — you’re excited about the imminent increases to our healthspan that longevity technologies will soon offer us. However, if you want to stick around long enough to take advantage of all of the soon-to-be available lifespan and healthspan boosting technologies, you need to make sure you don’t die in the process!
How will you die? The four deadly killers
Ever since science effectively cured infectious disease through antibiotics, vaccinations and the like, there has been a distinct shift in what kills humans to the four deadly killers, which are considered ‘age related diseases’. These are — cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease, metabolic disease and cancer. If you manage to escape the most likely causes of death as a young person, which are largely accidental accidental death (mostly car accidents), homicide or mental illness related (suicide) — then it is most likely that one of those four deadly killers will end your life.
But here’s the good news — there’s a growing body of immediately actionable longevity technologies that you can engage with to offset your risk of dying of these diseases. In a series of posts on the topic, I’m going to cover a few key resources at your disposal for minimising your risk for each of these four categories. First-up, cardiovascular disease.
Continue reading “Avoiding ageing’s 4 deadly killers — Cardiovascular Disease (Part 1)” »
Tags: aging, anti-aging, Antiaging., biohacking, health, healthspan, inflammaging, longevity
Jan 17, 2020
Belgian brain doctor awarded for easing coma survivors’ return
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Not all patients who fall into a coma return, and when they do it can mark a moment of joy for their loved ones—but their troubles are rarely over.
Often, brain damage leaves them paralysed or unable to communicate.
Belgian neurologist Steven Laureys has dedicated himself to the question of how to improve the lives of the formerly comatose, and of their families.