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Mar 30, 2019
We Can Live Forever Thanks to Technology Says Leading Anti-Aging Scientist
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, cryptocurrencies, finance, life extension
“If I can bring forward the defeat of aging even one day, I would have saved the lives of 110,000 people.” – Dr. Aubrey de Grey at EmTech Asia 2019.
The age-old quest for immortality was largely confined to the myths and legends of past civilizations until about just two decades back when telomerase, the active component for the gene that confers immortality to cells was successfully isolated in a science laboratory. That turned the tide on the entire conversation from whether aging could be treated, to how it could be treated.
Since then it has spawned a whole new medical field – ‘healthspan’ – where scientific research is conducted with the aim of extending healthy human lives for as long as hundreds and thousands of years, if not outright immortality. It is not surprising that the intensive research into anti-aging technologies has attracted financial backing from those who are interested in technological progress – the tech community, the likes of Google and even cryptocurrency tycoons such as Ethereum Founder, Vitalik Buterin, who donated $2.4 million worth of ether to the nonprofit foundation SENS Research Foundation, of which Dr Aubrey de Grey is the Chief Science Officer.
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Mar 30, 2019
Telomere Lengthening: Curing all diseases including cancer & aging
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, education, life extension
My mission is to drastically improve your life by sharing how you can quickly break bad habits and build and keep new healthy habits. I read the books and do all the research and share my findings with you in my YouTube videos! Not a bad deal, eh?
This video is a book review of Telomere Lengthening: Curing all diseases including cancer & aging by Dr. Bill Andrews and Jon Cornell.
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Mar 30, 2019
A New Male Birth Control Pill is Being Tested. Here’s What to Know
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
A second male birth control pill succeeded in preliminary testing, suggesting that a new form of contraception may eventually exist.
The new pill, which works similarly to female contraception, passed initial safety tests and produced hormone responses consistent with effective birth control in 30 men, according to research presented by the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute and the University of Washington at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting. (The study has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal.) It’s early days for the drug — which has not yet been submitted for approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — but co-principal investigator Dr. Christina Wang, lead researcher at LA BioMed, says it’s an important step toward effective, reversible male hormonal contraception.
“In females you have many, many methods. You have the pill, you have the patch, you have the vaginal ring, you have intrauterine devices, injections,” Wang says. “In men there is nothing that is like hormonal contraception. The standard is not equal for the genders.”
Mar 30, 2019
New drugs that unleash the immune system on cancers may backfire, fueling tumor growth
Posted by Ours Ondine in category: biotech/medical
Scientists are still debating how, and whether, drugs called checkpoint inhibitors trigger tumor “hyperprogression”.
Mar 30, 2019
EHF Fellow: Veronica Harwood-Stevenson
Posted by Alan R. Light in categories: materials, sustainability
Another possibility for an alternative to traditional plastics?
A substance made by solitary bees.
Sometimes the answers to life’s most complicated questions are hidden in the smallest details. That’s a truth Veronica Harwood-Stevenson discovered when she found there might be a way to create a sustainable alternative to plastic products by mimicking a natural substance produced by bees.
Mar 30, 2019
The Moon Has ‘Moving Water,’ but Don’t Break Out Your Swimsuit
Posted by Alan R. Light in category: space
Surprised I haven’t seen more about this:
Tabloids reported over the weekend that a “bombshell” report found moving water on the Moon which could lead to “Moon colonization.” Obviously those headlines are misleading—there are no rivers flowing along the lunar surface. Let’s talk about what really happened.
NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), a probe that has orbited the Moon since 2009, spotted water molecules being absorbed and released from grains of dust on the lunar surface throughout the day, based on the temperature. These results mark the only dataset recording the distribution of water during the lunar day, according to the paper published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
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Mar 30, 2019
Robotic picking machine’s first apple harvest underway: Video
Posted by Alan R. Light in categories: food, robotics/AI
Robotics are going to become common in farming, reducing the need for back-breaking labor.
Mar 30, 2019
Day 2 of Undoing Aging 2019 was all about Restoring Cellular Youth and Senolysis with many inspiring speakers, like Judy Campisi, Jerry Shay, Tim Cash or Joachim Lingner
Posted by Michael Greve in category: life extension
Feeling excited for Day 3 to start with Molecular Vandalism and what to do about it!
UA 2019: fb.com/events/2044104465916196/
Mar 29, 2019
Schwarzites: Long-sought carbon structure joins graphene, fullerene family
Posted by Victoria Generao in categories: materials, nanotechnology
UC Berkeley chemists have proved that three carbon structures recently created by scientists in South Korea and Japan are in fact the long-sought schwarzites, which researchers predict will have unique electrical and storage properties like those now being discovered in buckminsterfullerenes (buckyballs or fullerenes for short), nanotubes and graphene.
The new structures were built inside the pores of zeolites, crystalline forms of silicon dioxide – sand – more commonly used as water softeners in laundry detergents and to catalytically crack petroleum into gasoline. Called zeolite-templated carbons (ZTC), the structures were being investigated for possible interesting properties, though the creators were unaware of their identity as schwarzites, which theoretical chemists have worked on for decades.
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