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May 7, 2019

Teslas Can Now Detect Broken Parts and Pre-Order Replacements

Posted by in category: transportation

A new update pushed to Tesla vehicles includes a “live issue detection” feature, which enables them to “keep tabs on certain components to let you know if they need replacing and order parts ahead of your next service visit,” according to a company statement sent to Electrek.

Once the vehicle figures out which replacement part it needs, it pre-orders it to the closest Tesla Service Center. Owners can then schedule a visit through the Tesla app.

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May 7, 2019

Here’s why scientists think discovering aliens is inevitable and imminent

Posted by in categories: alien life, chemistry

Amino acids, just like those that make up every protein in our bodies, have been found in the tails of comets.


Because, following a string of remarkable discoveries over the past two decades, the idea of alien life is not as far-fetched as it used to seem.

Discovery now seems inevitable and possibly imminent.

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May 7, 2019

Drug Therapies

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

For Tinnitus

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May 7, 2019

700 Years of Persian Manuscripts Now Digitized and Available Online

Posted by in category: government

Too often those in power lump thousands of years of Middle Eastern religion and culture into monolithic entities to be feared or persecuted. But at least one government institution is doing exactly the opposite. For Nowruz, the Persian New Year, the Library of Congress has released a digital collection of its rare Persian-language manuscripts, an archive spanning 700 years. This free resource opens windows on diverse religious, national, linguistic, and cultural traditions, most, but not all, Islamic, yet all different from each other in complex and striking ways.

“We nowadays are programmed to think Persia equates with Iran, but when you look at this it is a multiregional collection,” says a Library specialist in its African and Middle Eastern Division, Hirad Dinavari. “Many contributed to it. Some were Indian, some were Turkic, Central Asian.” The “deep, cosmopolitan archive,” as Atlas Obscura’s Jonathan Carey writes, consists of a relatively small number of manuscripts—only 155. That may not seem particularly significant given the enormity of some other online collections.

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May 7, 2019

Security Company to Install Gun-Detecting AI in Mosques Worldwide

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, security

The Christchurch mosque will be one of the first to undergo installation.

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May 7, 2019

Google I/O 2019

Posted by in category: innovation

Returns to the Shoreline Amphitheatre May 7–9. Join us for a hands-on experience with Google’s latest product and platform innovations.

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May 7, 2019

Aging Analytics Agency Photo 5

Posted by in category: life extension

Announces the publication of a new 315-page open-access report: “National Longevity Development Plans: Global Overview 2019 (First Edition)”.


It offers comprehensive profiles of relevant initiatives in the UK, the Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, Israel, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Japan, the USA, Spain, the European Union and China, and utilizes sophisticated analytical metrics to compare the overall strength, focus, proactivity and relevance of their Longevity-related projects, initiatives and development plans.

Link to the Report: https://www.aginganalytics.com/longevity-development-plans

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May 7, 2019

JUST IN: DARPA Hypersonic Vehicle Prototypes to Fly in 2019

Posted by in category: transportation

Two hypersonic vehicle prototypes developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Air Force are due to fly by the end of the year, the agency’s director said May 1.

One vehicle is part of the hypersonic air-breathing weapon concept, or HAWC, program. The other is the tactical boost glide, or TBG, effort, said Steven Walker.

“We’re on track for both to have flights … before the calendar year ends,” he told reporters during a breakfast meeting in Washington, D.C. However, that might be questionable because once “you actually get into the building of these things and qualifying the hardware, … things tend to slip.”

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May 7, 2019

Samumed Begins Phase 3 Trial for Knee Osteoarthritis

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

San Diego-based biotechnology company Samumed has recently announced that it will be moving to phase 3 clinical trials of its drug lorecivivint (SM04690) for the treatment of knee osteoarthritis.

What is osteoarthritis?

Osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis in the knee and a leading cause of adult disability, particularly among older people. This degenerative, “wear-and-tear” arthritis is characterized by the destruction of the articular cartilage and structural changes to the bone, which leads to pain, inflammation, and loss of joint function and mobility. It occurs most often in people who are at least 50 years old, but it may occur in younger people as well.

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May 7, 2019

Space experiment looks to slow the aging process using nanoparticles

Posted by in categories: life extension, nanotechnology, space travel

The latest SpaceX Dragon cargo mission to the International Space Station (ISS) included an experiment that could help to combat the ravages of time here on Earth. The European experiment will test how ceramic nanoparticles interact with cells to act as an anti-aging supplement that not only holds promise for alleviating the effects of growing old, but also for combatting chronic illness and space-related stresses for astronauts on prolonged space missions.

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