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Sep 26, 2016

Graphene nanoribbons show promise for healing spinal injuries

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology, transportation

The combination of graphene nanoribbons made with a process developed at Rice University and a common polymer could someday be of critical importance to healing damaged spinal cords in people, according to Rice chemist James Tour.

The Tour lab has spent a decade working with graphene nanoribbons, starting with the discovery of a chemical process to “unzip” them from multiwalled carbon nanotubes, as revealed in a Nature paper in 2009. Since then, the researchers have used them to enhance materials for the likes of deicers for airplane wings, better batteries and less-permeable containers for natural gas storage.

Now their work to develop nanoribbons for medical applications has resulted in a material dubbed Texas-PEG that may help knit damaged or even severed spinal cords.

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Sep 26, 2016

The microdoctors in our bodies

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, robotics/AI

ETH researchers are developing tiny, sophisticated technological and biological machines enabling non-invasive, selective therapies. Their creations include genetically modified cells that can be activated via brain waves, and swarms of microrobots that facilitate highly precise application of drugs.

Richard Fleischner, who directed the 1966 cult film Fantastic Voyage, would have been delighted with Bradley Nelson’s research: similar to the story in Fleischner’s film, Nelson wants to load tiny robots with drugs and manoeuvre them to the precise location in the human body where treatment is needed, for instance to the site of a cancer tumour. Alternatively, the tiny creatures could also be fitted with instruments, allowing operations to be performed without surgical intervention. The advantages compared with conventional treatments with drugs are clear: far more targeted therapy, and as a result, fewer side effects.

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Sep 26, 2016

Closing in on high-temperature superconductivity

Posted by in categories: energy, physics, transportation

Realistic hover cars coming to future near you.


The quest to know the mysterious recipe for high-temperature superconductivity, which could enable revolutionary advances in technologies that make or use electricity, just took a big leap forward thanks to new research by an international team of experimental and theoretical physicists.

The research paper appears in the journal Science on Sept. 16, 2016. The research is focused on revealing the mysterious ingredients required for high-temperature superconductivity — the ability of a material’s electrons to pair up and travel without friction at relatively high temperatures, enabling them to lose no energy — to be super efficient — while conducting electricity.

Continue reading “Closing in on high-temperature superconductivity” »

Sep 26, 2016

Science journalists are suing the FDA over alleged manipulation of the news

Posted by in category: science

Ever wonder why we we don’t have gene therapy yet to the population?


This could get nasty.

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Sep 26, 2016

The science world is freaking out over this 25-year-old’s answer to antibiotic resistance

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, science

A 25-year-old student has just come up with a way to fight drug-resistant superbugs without antibiotics.

The new approach has so far only been tested in the lab and on mice, but it could offer a potential solution to antibiotic resistance, which is now getting so bad that the United Nations recently declared it a “fundamental threat” to global health.

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria already kill around 700,000 people each year, but a recent study suggests that number could rise to around 10 million by 2050.

Continue reading “The science world is freaking out over this 25-year-old’s answer to antibiotic resistance” »

Sep 26, 2016

Jet thruster

Posted by in category: futurism

This handheld jet thruster takes the hard work out of swimming.

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Sep 26, 2016

A sickeningly bad idea indeed

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, life extension

A strong rebuttle to the sick article in the Telegraph which attempts to discredit Zuckerberg and Chan and their commitment to curing diseases.


Science and progress hardly ever stop just because a few cuckoos think we’re going too far. That’s what I tell myself most of the times when I bump into depressingly ill-informed articles about ageing and the diseases of old age. I tell myself that the best thing to do is to just let such articles disappear into oblivion and not give them any extra visibility. However, if instead of a few cuckoos we’re faced with an army of cuckoos, then we’re in for troubles.

At the time of this writing, people who are in favour of or oppose rejuvenation aren’t many, and neither are those who know about it but don’t care. Quite likely, most people in the world haven’t even heard about it yet. What I fear is that, when the advent of rejuvenation biotechnologies will be close, people who oppose rejuvenation will do their best to persuade undecided ones that disease is better than health, and ultimately, provoke an us-vs-them conflict that could jeopardise the cause of rejuvenation. The best way to avoid that conflict is to convince as many people as possible to support rejuvenation biotechnologies before they even arrive, so that when they do, those who oppose them will only be a few cuckoos indeed and not an army. Exposing the intellectual misery of deathist arguments is indubitably a good way of reaching this goal; that’s why I chose to respond to this spectacularly stupid article, instead of just ignoring it.

Continue reading “A sickeningly bad idea indeed” »

Sep 26, 2016

Michelle Simmons: a quantum queen

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Quantum Goddess


Can the University of New South Wales researcher propel Australia first over the finish line in the race to build a reliable quantum computer? Elizabeth Finkel reports.

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Sep 26, 2016

Quantum study sparks questions about why time runs forward and not backward

Posted by in categories: futurism, quantum physics

Why do we remember the past, but not the future? It seems like a silly question, but for some scientists, it’s a deep mystery wrapped up in physics and perception.

The mystery takes another twist in a study appearing in the same journal that published Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity more than a century ago.

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Sep 26, 2016

Quantum Internet Edges Closer As Researchers Teleport Photon State Six Kilometers Away

Posted by in categories: internet, quantum physics

Researchers from the University of Calgary demonstrated that photons’ states could be teleported at a record 6 kilometer distance over “dark fiber.” The team hopes this research could help them establish the fundamentals for a “global quantum internet.”

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