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Oct 17, 2018
Startups in the Aging Sector â Ending Age-Related Diseases 2018
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, life extension
Earlier this year, we hosted the Ending Age-Related Diseases 2018 conference at the Cooper Union in New York City. This conference was designed to bring together the best in the aging research and biotech investment worlds and saw a range of industry experts sharing their insights.
Dr. Oliver Medvedik, LEAF vice president and Director of the Maurice Kanbar Center for Biomedical Engineering at the Cooper Union, chaired a panel with a focus on starting up biotech companies and dealing with the challenges inherent to launching a company in this industry.
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Surprising discoveries for health and long life.
âAn extraordinary eighty-year study has led to some unexpected discoveries about long life.â
-O, The Oprah Magazine
Oct 17, 2018
What can neuroscience tell us about ethics?
Posted by Mike Ruban in categories: ethics, neuroscience
Today on The Neuroethics Blog is a post by Adina L. Roskies, Professor of Philosophy and chair of the Cognitive Science Program and Helman Family Distinguished Professor at Dartmouth College, entitled âWhat can neuroscience tell us about ethics?â
By Adina L. Roskies Image courtesy of Bill Sanderson, Wellcome Collection What can neuroscience tell us about ethics? Some say nothing â ethics is a normative discipline that concerns the way the world should be, while neuroscience is normatively insignificant: it is a descriptive science which tells us about the way the world is. This seems in line with what is sometimes called âHumeâs Lawâ, the claim that one cannot derive an ought from an is (Cohon, 2018). This claim is contentious and its scope unclear, but it certainly does seem true of demonstrative arguments, at the least. Neuroethics, by its name, however, seems to suggest that neuroscience is relevant for ethical thought, and indeed some have taken it to be a fact that neuroscience has delivered ethical consequences. It seems to me that there is some confusion about this issue, and so here Iâd like to clarify the ways in which I think neuroscience can be relevant to ethics.
Oct 17, 2018
Undoing Aging 2019 is on the horizon
Posted by Michael Greve in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
It will be our second conference totally focussed on the science of actual human rejuvenation therapies to repair the damage of aging.
We are happy to begin introducing the speakers, starting with Dr. Jerry Shay.
Dr. Shay is the Vice Chairman of the Department of Cell Biology at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Dr. ShayÂŽs work on the relationships of telomeres and telomerase to aging and cancer is well recognized.
Oct 17, 2018
How Robots and Drones Will Change Retail Forever
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: drones, internet, robotics/AI
We are in the early days of what might be called the âphysical cloud,â an e-commerce ecosystem that functions like the internet itself. Netflix caches the movies you stream at a data center physically close to you; Amazon is building warehouse after warehouse to store goods closer to consumers. And the storage systems at those warehouses are looking more like the data-storage systems in the cloud. Instead of storing similar items in the same placeâa helpful practice when humans were fetching the goodsâAmazonâs warehouses store multiples of the same item at random locations, known only to the robots. Trying to find an Instapot at one of Amazonâs warehouses would be like trying to find where in the cloud one of your emails is stored. Of course, you donât have to. You just tap your screen and the email appears. No humans are involved.
What if you could store and deliver goods as easily as data? Amazon, Walmart and others are using AI and robotics to transform everything from appliance shopping to grocery delivery. Welcome to the physical cloud.
Oct 16, 2018
YouTube Went Down for Millions Around the World
Posted by Mary Jain in category: futurism
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YouTube is down and reports are coming in worldwide about the service being unavailable.
Oct 16, 2018
SpaceX successfully landed its Falcon 9 rocket on the California coast for the first time
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: drones, space travel
Original Story: This evening, SpaceX is set to launch a used Falcon 9 rocket from California, a flight that will be followed by one of the companyâs signature rocket landings. But this time around, SpaceX will attempt to land the vehicle on a concrete landing pad near the launch site â not a drone ship in the ocean. If successful, itâll be the first time that the company does a ground landing on the West Coast.
Up until now, all of SpaceXâs ground landings have occurred out of Cape Canaveral, Florida, the companyâs busiest launch site. SpaceX has two landing pads there, and has managed to touch down 11 Falcon 9 rockets on them. And each time the company has attempted to land on land, itâs been a success.
Oct 16, 2018
How will NASA transform by joining forces with private space travel?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
60 years of NASA has brought us the first moon landing, the Voyagers, a progression of Mars rovers, Hubble, Cassini, TESSâŠand the next six decades are going to see it venturing even further into uncharted territory, but this time, the space agency will not be alone on the voyage.
NASA couldnât even start fantasizing about private spaceflightâor collaborating with the private sectorâwhen it first took off in 1958. Now companies like SpaceX, Boeing and Blue Origin will bring dreams that originally lived between the pages of science fiction books into reality. Dreams like space travel for anyone.
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Oct 16, 2018
Autonomous Flights Are One Step Closer to Reality
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
The air cargo industry is already considering one-person flight crews. Self-flying planes may be next.