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Jan 26, 2020
Could Ethereum Hit $1 Trillion? Analyst Says Over 1,000% Rally Possible
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: cryptocurrencies
While the cryptocurrency didn’t perform that well in 2019, Ethereum (ETH) is one of the best-performing digital assets of all time, rallying from an ICO price under a dollar to the $160 where it is today.
Despite this jaw-dropping gain in and of itself, investors in the cryptocurrency believe it will go higher. So much higher than one analyst laid out a case for the cryptocurrency’s value to surge to $1 trillion, 13 digits.
For some perspective, a trillion-dollar Ethereum market capitalization at current price levels would equate to about a $9,000 ETH price, with the current supply in mind. The cryptocurrency reaching such lofty prices would require it to rally by over 5,000%. Crazy, right?
Jan 26, 2020
SpaceX is launching ‘dark satellites’ to stop its Starlink project from wreaking havoc with astronomical research. Astronomers are skeptical
Posted by Tracy R. Atkins in categories: Elon Musk, satellites
Such a simple solution. Paint them black.
Elon Musk has promised SpaceX satellites won’t interfere with scientific discoveries — but scientists aren’t so sure.
Jan 26, 2020
AI swarm intelligence
Posted by Philip Raymond in categories: machine learning, robotics/AI, singularity, software
Jan 26, 2020
How ‘brain hacking’ could help fight Alzheimer’s, depression and more
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Millions suffer from conditions without known causes. Some contend with constant pain, many live with unrelenting mental anguish. None of them know why.
Now a groundbreaking theory of brain illness — presented in a thrilling new book by science journalist Donna Jackson Nakazawa called “The Angel and the Assassin” (Ballantine Books) — offers big answers by pointing to the tiny packages called microglia.
Microglia are long-dismissed free-floating brain cells located all over the brain, making up 10 percent of the cells that populate the inside of our skulls. According to emerging research, these cells appear to play a significant role in a host of conditions including Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia, traumatic brain injury, anxiety disorders and more.
Jan 26, 2020
World’s #1 Publisher of Information About Alternative Cancer Treatments
Posted by Paul Battista in category: biotech/medical
Jan 26, 2020
Home: In the search for natural ways to keep the body younger
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: food, life extension
Researchers have discovered a nutrient in certain fruits and vegetables they call a “geroprotector,” a new term for something that protects against the root causes of aging. And they believe this geroprotector does such […].
Jan 26, 2020
Why Do Some People Believe in Conspiracy Theories?
Posted by Paul Battista in category: futurism
Jan 26, 2020
Photos: Solar Orbiter encapsulated inside launch shroud
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, space, transportation
The Airbus-built Solar Orbiter spacecraft has been closed up inside the payload fairing of a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket in preparation for liftoff from Cape Canaveral in February on a joint mission between the European Space Agency and NASA.
Technicians inside the Astrotech payload processing facility encapsulated the Solar Orbiter spacecraft — designed with thermal shielding to protect against the heat of the sun — inside the Atlas 5’s payload fairing Jan. 20. The spacecraft inside the Atlas 5 rocket’s 4-meter-diameter (13.1-foot) aerodynamic nose shroud will soon travel to ULA’s Vertical Integration Facility, where crane will hoist the payload package atop the launcher.
Valued at nearly $1.7 billion, the Solar Orbiter mission will travel closer to the sun than Mercury, where it will join NASA’s Parker Solar Probe for tandem observations of the solar wind and giant solar eruptions that can affect communications and electrical grids on Earth, plus satellite operations.