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Sep 21, 2019

Deuterium, REDOX & Epilepsy — The Microbiome Connection

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Deuterium, REDOX & Vitamin C changes gut microbiome composition, affecting health & disease like epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, dysbiosis, IBS, IBD, Crohn’s.

Sep 21, 2019

Huawei Connect 2019

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Of interest?


Welcome to our annual HUAWEI CONNECT in Shanghai from September 18 to 20. At this year’s event we will announce our latest cloud and AI solutions, and share what we’re doing to help our customers and partners go digital.

Sep 21, 2019

Cancer Cells Have “Unsettling” Ability to Hijack the Brain’s Nerves

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Startling discovery could open up avenues for treating some aggressive tumors.

Sep 21, 2019

The Real Robotics Revolution Arrives as a Service

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

The real robotics revolution is not having robots take care of tasks but having them available to businesses as a service. And so another acronyms to represent the expanding world of as a service is added to today’s business vocabulary.

Sep 21, 2019

Cosmopsychism explains why the Universe is fine-tuned for life Essays

Posted by in category: alien life

Is the Universe a conscious mind?

Cosmopsychism might seem crazy, but it provides a robust explanatory model for how the Universe became fine-tuned for life.

Sep 20, 2019

Venus was potentially habitable until a mysterious event happened

Posted by in categories: climatology, space

Venus likely maintained stable temperatures and hosted liquid water for billions of years before an event triggered drastic changes in the planet, according to a new study.

Now, Venus is a mostly dead planet with a toxic atmosphere 90 times thicker than ours and surface temperatures that reach 864 degrees, hot enough to melt lead. It’s often called Earth’s twin because the planets are similar in size. But the modern comparisons stop there.

However, a recent study compared five climate simulations of Venus’ past and every scenario suggested that the planet could support liquid water and a temperate climate on its surface for at least three billion years. Like the other planets in our solar system, Venus formed 4.5 billion years ago.

Sep 20, 2019

How State-Owned BSNL Lost To Emerging Telecom Giants Like Jio?

Posted by in category: futurism

There was huge storage of reserve of ₹35,000 crores even in 2005, and it was flourishing around the world. But today, it is running at a loss of ₹14,000 crores (only in 2018–19).

Sep 20, 2019

Something Is Killing Galaxies in Extreme Regions of the Universe

Posted by in categories: energy, space

In the most extreme regions of the universe, galaxies are being killed. Their star formation is being shut down and astronomers want to know why.

The first ever Canadian-led large project on one of the world’s leading telescopes is hoping to do just that. The new program, called the Virgo Environment Traced in Carbon Monoxide survey (VERTICO), is investigating, in brilliant detail, how galaxies are killed by their environment.

As VERTICO’s principal investigator, I lead a team of 30 experts that are using the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) to map the molecular hydrogen gas, the fuel from which new stars are made, at high resolution across 51 galaxies in our nearest galaxy cluster, called the Virgo Cluster.

Sep 20, 2019

HPE to acquire supercomputer manufacturer Cray for $1.3 billion

Posted by in category: supercomputing

Hewlett Packard Enterprise has reached an agreement to acquire Cray, the manufacturer of supercomputing systems.

HPE says the acquisition will cost $35 per share, in a transaction valued at approximately $1.3 billion, net of cash.

Antonio Neri, president and CEO, HPE, says: Answers to some of society’s most pressing challenges are buried in massive amounts of data.

Sep 20, 2019

MIT Future of Work Report: We Shouldn’t Worry About Quantity of Jobs, But Quality

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

Robots aren’t going to take everyone’s jobs, but technology has already reshaped the world of work in ways that are creating clear winners and losers. And it will continue to do so without intervention, says the first report of MIT’s Task Force on the Work of the Future.


Widespread press reports of a looming “employment apocalypse” brought on by AI and automation are probably wide of the mark, according to the authors. Shrinking workforces as developed countries age and outstanding limitations in what machines can do mean we’re unlikely to have a shortage of jobs.

But while unemployment is historically low, recent decades have seen a polarization of the workforce as the number of both high- and low-skilled jobs have grown at the expense of the middle-skilled ones, driving growing income inequality and depriving the non-college-educated of viable careers.

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