ConfirmedCynic
ConfirmedCynic t1_jdpx6kd wrote
I don't know about organs made out of plastic, but it's conceivable that the cells employed for bio ones could be genetically modified to be improved over the originals.
ConfirmedCynic t1_jdplur0 wrote
Reply to comment by blitcap in Who do you think will be the winners and losers of the coming AI revolution? by tshirtguy2000
It would have to be certified before it would be allowed to, for example, issue prescriptions. I have a feeling that this would be very long in coming, seeing as it more or less would require doctors to voluntarily put themselves out of work.
ConfirmedCynic t1_jdpkcp4 wrote
Reply to comment by MistyDev in Who do you think will be the winners and losers of the coming AI revolution? by tshirtguy2000
It's what is already happening though, with corporations becoming increasingly monolithic and wealth becoming increasingly concentrated. Why would this trend change, seeing as the process feeds itself? More wealth means more power means more ability to tilt the table to one's own advantage means more wealth.
If companies were interested in being fair, they would have shared the fruits of increased productivity of their employees with their employees. Instead, they do everything they can to squeeze the employees and increase their own take. Why ever would they suddenly have such a fundamental change of heart and share the fruits of increased productivity achieved through AI, which doesn't even come from the employees?
It all seems pretty obvious.
ConfirmedCynic t1_jcm2kod wrote
Reply to comment by Southern-Trip-1102 in IVO Ltd. to Launch Quantum Drive Pure Electric Satellite Thruster into Orbit on SpaceX Transporter 8 with partner Rogue Space Systems by ComfortableIntern218
You're assuming it has nothing to interact with. Maybe it uses the solar wind somehow. Plenty of charged particles in the solar wind. Maybe it can push against the Earth's magnetic field.
ConfirmedCynic t1_ja5p8wi wrote
Reply to comment by peadith in Opinion: Mining on the moon is no longer a loony idea, and Canada can capitalize on it by Gari_305
With current technologies? None.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j9vxbik wrote
Reply to comment by PrimalWrath in Return to Office - My experience & rationalization. by [deleted]
Society is ruled by extroverts. 96 percent of managers are extroverts, according to one study. They're reasserting their control and arranging things to suit themselves as always.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j6ciswy wrote
Why stop there? You could specify your personal tastes on how the characters should look and sound (although there would have to be a few limits where it would otherwise interfere with the plot/dialogue), and the AI would generate that. Each person could watch their own version of the movie.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j5t3kh9 wrote
Reply to comment by MrGraveyards in NASA, DARPA Will Test Nuclear Engine for Future Mars Missions by Gari_305
More than just designs, they were testing firing one (NERVA) for a while.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j4oahvx wrote
Reply to comment by Ok_Anywhere_1791 in UCI Researchers Discover Nanowire Coating Technology that Could Make Batteries Last Forever by otvortex
Here I am, with a list of developments I've kept hopeful track of, but ok.
Reasons for hope:
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John Goodenough's battery
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XNRGI's battery
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Lyten lithum sulfur batteries
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solar shingles
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SpaceX
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magnetic reconnection space drive (Fatima Ebrahimi) (2021) hopes to have a first prototype soon
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Mach Effect
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"augmented reality", HoloLens
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hot fusion companies (including Apollo Fusion)
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Quaise Energy geothermal power
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detonation engine for rockets
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NMN
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Gaianneschi fatty acid drug delivery (2019, no news since)
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DpC
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TREM
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ISRIB: small molecue cognitive enhanc
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PAMPS hydrogel for cartilege = Bolt Biotheraputics's ISAC anti-cancer therapy
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Alkahest young blood plasma for brain healing
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αKLOTHO and TGFβR2 treatment for osteoarthritis
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NaNots (NaNotics) - subtractive nanoparticles
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Senisca - correcting dysregulation of RNA processing (2021)
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retrolytics (2020, Andrew Gudkov)
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GlyNAC (Rajagopal Sekhar)
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LyGenesis (2022, starting first human trial)
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Lomecel-B
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senolytics
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David Sinclair (Harvard)'s anti-aging pill (SOCOM trial)
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elements from young blood
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hypothalamus regeneration
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trodusquemine (aka MSI-1436) = Novo Biosciences is struggling for funding
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Underdog Pharmaceuticals - now Cyclarity - clearing arteriosclerosis
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LNP mRNA to restore heart function by reprogramming T cells to remove fibrotic cells (Jan 2022)
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carbon nanotubes for atherosclerosis (2020)
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Mitrix Bio - harvesting healthy mitochondria from a bioreactor for transplant
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Satellite Bio
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mRNA delivery of Stemin and YAP5SA to repair hearts (Robert Schwartz) 2022
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anti-CD47 and other immune system activating treatments
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iNKT cell reinvigoration via galactosylceramide (2018)
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SeNBD (May 2021)
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MuTaTo (2019)
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metarrestin - preventing metastasis - now in a phase I clinical trial (2021)
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Hadiyah-Nicole Green (nano-particles with laser therapy) Ora Lee Smith Center (2020) trying to crowdfund there was another group that reported results with this... from Wales maybe?
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PRL3-zumab humanized antibody binds PRL3 thereby inhibiting tumors, phase II clinical trial (2021)
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GP532 a TLR5 agonist, Andrei Gudkov (2021)
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MR1 (Enara Bio) (universal anti-cancer T cell therapy) (2020)
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T cells: BAFT upregulation
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allogenic iNKT (invariant natural killer) cells, Yang Lab (2021)
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nanoparticles from maize (2022)
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aspirin could cut risk of death in cancer
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ELANE/PPE (2021, Becker, Onchilles Pharma)
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Clinically translatable cytokine delivery platform for eradication of intraperitoneal tumors (2022, Nash and Veish) (drug factory beads)
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albumin nanoparticle (2022, Duxin Sun)
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dostarlimab (PD-1 inhibitor, anti-cancer) (2022)
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cancer-killing “drug factory” implants ( Veiseh, Avenge Bio) 2022 -LIfT BioSciences N-LIfT
Revisit later:
- plasminogen supplement? (sea squirt)
Dud list:
- BLP
- MKC8866
ConfirmedCynic t1_j4nsdzf wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in UCI Researchers Discover Nanowire Coating Technology that Could Make Batteries Last Forever by otvortex
And they still aren't the be all for screens. Also, they were going on about OLEDs in the 90s even.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j4np39c wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in UCI Researchers Discover Nanowire Coating Technology that Could Make Batteries Last Forever by otvortex
These all add up to "we won't hear about it again". Which more or less seems to be the case nearly all of the time with these battery announcements.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j3vyy1m wrote
Reply to comment by Ivebeenfurthereven in Astronomers find 2nd Earth-size planet in intriguing alien solar system by Gari_305
It isn't, actually. 0.72 AU but the Sun's habitable zone extends from 0.9 AU to 1.5 AU. It may have been at one time, when the sun was dimmer.
I guess this all depends on who you ask about the boundaries of the habitable zone though, answers vary.
ConfirmedCynic t1_j3kgohc wrote
Seriously? They're going to parachute the cargo? What could possibly go wrong with that?
ConfirmedCynic t1_izl352t wrote
Reply to comment by KasukeSadiki in The technological singularity is happening (oc/opinion) by FrogsEverywhere
And I meant that they are effectively different. One is a universe that can experience itself, the other is just the same as non-existence.
ConfirmedCynic t1_izjd9ej wrote
Reply to comment by Drakolyik in The technological singularity is happening (oc/opinion) by FrogsEverywhere
> If something mimics consciousness perfectly, it's effectively no different than being conscious.
It seems no different, not is no different. This is an external perception. I wouldn't call a society of machines in which everything functions perfectly convincingly but nothing is truly self aware as being equivalent to a group of human beings each with their own experience of consciousness.
We can, with confidence, assume that other people are truly conscious because they are made in the same way we are.
ConfirmedCynic t1_iymoj8x wrote
Reply to Is it possible that nuclear defense technologies will surpass the abilities of nuclear weapons in the future, rendering them near useless? by Wide-Escape-5618
I recall reading about a Russian statement that they could wipe out US coastal areas simply by detonating weapons underwater, causing destructive wave action.
ConfirmedCynic t1_iyk4d9b wrote
Reply to ‘Cleaner Air Is Coming’ as London Expands Vehicle Pollution Fee to Entire Metro Area by chrisdh79
This seems like an automobile version of sweeping homeless people old cars owned by people who can't afford better off of the streets.
ConfirmedCynic t1_iydjppc wrote
Reply to comment by 18LJ in Texas company wins grant to 3D-print moon bases by Gari_305
Another person who thinks you can somehow "destroy" a dead, airless rock.
ConfirmedCynic t1_iydjh9e wrote
This sounds like an excellent use of NASA's funds. Focus on this sort of thing and hand off the transport/"trucking" side to private space companies.
ConfirmedCynic t1_ix0p5ya wrote
So what would the consequences of this be? Anyone who is depressed becomes unemployable for impacting the happiness quota?
ConfirmedCynic t1_iwug8a7 wrote
By "accelerators" they mean particle accelerators. And some extra text so the bot doesn't mindlessly delete this.
ConfirmedCynic t1_iu5zaou wrote
Reply to comment by powabiatch in Major breakthrough in cancer research: Papers reveal 'dark matter' that contributes to disease's growth by Ezekiel_W
What effect would epigenetic reprogramming have on nascent cancers?
ConfirmedCynic t1_itrylo8 wrote
Reply to NASA announces its unidentified aerial phenomena - A 16-people team — including an astronaut, a space-treaty drafter, a boxer, and several astrobiologists — will soon begin its review of unexplained aerial phenomena (UAP) for NASA research team to examine mysterious sightings. by yourSAS
A boxer in case the need to punch out an alien (a la Independence Day) arises?
This is just click bait by the person who wrote the article. The boxer is an astrophysicist.
ConfirmedCynic t1_it89ccd wrote
Reply to comment by arhombus in Engineers at Duke University have developed a novel delivery system for cancer treatment involving a radioactive implant demonstrating its potential against one of the disease’s most troublesome forms: pancreatic cancer. by chrisdh79
If it does work, it might be too costly, playing whack-a-mole with tumors as they pop up for the rest of the patient's life. There are anti-metastasis drugs under development though. Perhaps in combination with those.
ConfirmedCynic t1_je3hxj5 wrote
Reply to comment by Sirisian in New cars sold in EU must be zero-emission from 2035 by Vucea
Where will the power come from? Seeing how busy they've been shutting down power plants, that is.