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Aug 13, 2018
Sunlight Might Be the Key to Turning Our Oceans Into Drinkable Water
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
The Department of Energy is betting big on a new technology to turn saltwater into freshwater.
Aug 13, 2018
The LEAF Advisory Board Expands
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biological, education, life extension
As our organization grows and we are doing more and more things, there is an ever greater need for specialist knowledge and guidance to help inform our decisions as a company. We rely on the advice and expertize of both our scientific and business advisors and we have added to them this week with two new experts joining us.
We are delighted to announce that Steven A. Garan has joined our scientific advisory board. Steven is the Director of Bioinformatics at the Center for Research & Education on Aging (CREA) and serves on its advisory board, and he is a researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. While at the University of California, Berkeley, he played a major role in the invention and the development of the Automated Imaging Microscope System (AIMS), and he collaborated for many years with a group from Paola S. Timiras’ lab, researching the role that caloric restriction plays in maintaining estrogen receptor-alpha and IGH-1 receptor immunoreactivity in various nuclei of the mouse hypothalamus.
Steven was also the director of the Aging Research Center and is a leading scientist in the field of aging research. His numerous publications include articles on systems biology, the effects of caloric restriction on the mouse hypothalamus, and the AIMS. He is best known for coining the word “Phenomics”, which was defined in “Phenomics: a new direction for the study of neuroendocrine aging”, an abstract published in the journal Experimental Gerontology.
Aug 12, 2018
Inside the Very Big, Very Controversial Business of Dog Cloning
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, business
Barbra Streisand is not alone. At a South Korean laboratory, a once-disgraced doctor is replicating hundreds of deceased pets for the rich and famous. It’s made for more than a few questions of bioethics.
By
- David Ewing Duncan
Aug 12, 2018
Mitochondria-targeted hydrogen sulfide attenuates endothelial senescence
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Aging (Albany NY). 2018 Jul 19;10:1666–1681. doi: 10.18632/aging.101500.
Latorre E, Torregrossa R, Wood ME, Whiteman M, Harries LW.
1University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter, UK.2College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, UK.
Aug 12, 2018
AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order
Posted by Peter Morgan in categories: Peter Diamandis, robotics/AI, singularity
“In his brilliant book, Kai-Fu Lee applies his superpowers to predicting the disruptive shifts that will define the AI-powered future and proposes a revolutionary social contract that forges a new synergy between AI and the human heart.” – Marc Benioff, Chairman & CEO Salesforce.
“AI is surpassing human intelligence in more and more domains, transforming the planet. Kai-Fu Lee has been at the epicentre of the AI revolution for thirty years and has now written the definitive guide.” – Erik Brynjolfsson, professor, MIT, bestselling co-author of The Second Machine Age and Machine, Platform, Crowd
“Kai-Fu Lee is at the forefront of the coming AI revolution, helping us transcend the limitations of thought, reach, and vision. This seminal book on AI is a must read for anyone serious about understanding the future of our species.” – Peter Diamandis, Executive Founder, Singularity University; bestselling author of Abundance and BOLD.
Continue reading “AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order” »
Aug 12, 2018
The Battle for a Star Trek Future: Federation vs. Terran Empire
Posted by B.J. Murphy in categories: government, space
When I think about our future, I cannot help myself but look upon the fictional universe of Star Trek. Not just because of their unabiding pursuit “to boldly go where no one has gone before,” but equally their philosophical measurement of their day-to-day lives.
As the U.S. government continues to impose xenophobic policies and attempts to militarize space, our future runs the risk of becoming something similar to the tyrannical (albeit fictional) entity known as the Terran Empire.
Continue reading “The Battle for a Star Trek Future: Federation vs. Terran Empire” »
Aug 12, 2018
India’s impressive concept about nothing
Posted by Sidney Clouston in category: futurism
In Gwalior, a congested city in the centre of the India, an 8th-Century fort rises with medieval swagger on a plateau in the town’s heart. Gwalior Fort is one of India’s largest forts; but look among the soaring cupola-topped towers, intricate carvings and colourful frescoes and you’ll find a small, 9th-Century temple carved into its solid rock face.
This is ground zero for zero
Chaturbhuj Temple is much like many other ancient temples in India – except that this is ground zero for zero. It’s famous for being the oldest example of zero as a written digit: carved into the temple wall is a 9th-Century inscription that includes the clearly visible number ‘270’.
Continue reading “India’s impressive concept about nothing” »
Aug 12, 2018
Thirty micrometres a minute: scientists discover the speed of death
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
By studying frogs’ eggs, researchers have measured the rate at which cells kill themselves off for an organism’s greater good