50% Reversal Of Alzheimer’s In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your “Golden Gate”

This past Thursday scientists revealed that a skin cancer drug known as bexarotene, a drug used to treat a type of skin cancer called cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, had dramatically reversed Alzheimer’s in mice within 72 hours. In 3 short days, researchers noticed a 50% reduction in amyloid plaque — a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease — as well as huge improvements in memory. Scientists at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine made the discovery, and explained how mice with Alzheimer’s would return again and again to a cage which would jolt them with an electrical shock, but after treatment with bexarotene the mice would remember to avoid the cage. Another way the researchers mark the progress of the mice’s brains is through the use of tissue paper. When pieces of tissue paper are added to their environment, healthy mice always incorporate them into their nest, while Alzheimer’s mice are never able to make this simple intuitive leap. After treatment with the drug, the Alzheimer’s mice quickly began intelligent use of the paper once again.

The fact that bexarotene has been around for some time means that it can be used immediately in human trials for Alzheimer’s patients. With regards to the surprising discovery, Gary Landreth, the lead researcher at Case Western warned CNN: “I want to say as loudly and clearly as possible that this was a study in mice, not in humans,” he said. “We’ve fixed Alzheimer’s in mice lots of times, so we need to move forward expeditiously but cautiously.” Landreth said his lab had been working on other drugs for Alzheimer’s for 10 years when a graduate student, Paige Cramer, decided to try bexarotene, which works on a receptor involved in amyloid beta clearance. Some other drugs that worked in mice were too toxic to use in humans. “We’re really lucky that bexarotene is a great drug with an acceptable safety profile,” he said. “This doesn’t happen very many times in life.’”

In other interesting Alzheimer’s-related news, UCLA neuroscientists have demonstrated that they can strengthen memory in human patients by stimulating a critical junction in the brain known as the entorhinal cortex. This small area is considered the doorway to the hippocampus, which helps form and store memories, and the entorhinal cortex plays a crucial role in transforming daily experience into lasting memories. “The entorhinal cortex is the golden gate to the brain’s memory mainframe,” explained senior author Dr. Itzhak Fried, professor of neurosurgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “Every visual and sensory experience that we eventually commit to memory funnels through that doorway to the hippocampus. Our brain cells must send signals through this hub in order to form memories that we can later consciously recall.” The experiment that was designed by the researchers is absolutely fascinating — involving taxi cabs, video games, virtual cities, and subjects suffering from seizures, and you can read the amazing story in full by visiting Science Daily. To learn more about the bexarotene mice experiments be sure to visit CNN. For more incredible stories about the human brain simply head over to The Human Brain On FEELguide.

SEE ALSO: Did You Know: What Happens To Your Body And Brain On Pot
SEE ALSO: Nicotine Patches & Living A “Joyous Life” In Your 30s/40s Can Prevent Dementia
SEE ALSO: Forbes Looks At The Top 5 Mindblowing Developments In Neuroscience: From Erasing Memories To Moral Magnets

MouseBrain 50% Reversal Of Alzheimers In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your Golden GateSources: CNN and Science Daily

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50% Reversal Of Alzheimer’s In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your “Golden Gate”

50% Reversal Of Alzheimer’s In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your “Golden Gate”

This past Thursday scientists revealed that a skin cancer drug known as bexarotene, a drug used to treat a type of skin cancer called cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, had dramatically reversed Alzheimer’s in mice within 72 hours. In 3 short days, researchers noticed a 50% reduction in amyloid plaque — a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease — as well as huge improvements in memory. Scientists at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine made the discovery, and explained how mice with Alzheimer’s would return again and again to a cage which would jolt them with an electrical shock, but after treatment with bexarotene the mice would remember to avoid the cage. Another way the researchers mark the progress of the mice’s brains is through the use of tissue paper. When pieces of tissue paper are added to their environment, healthy mice always incorporate them into their nest, while Alzheimer’s mice are never able to make this simple intuitive leap. After treatment with the drug, the Alzheimer’s mice quickly began intelligent use of the paper once again.

The fact that bexarotene has been around for some time means that it can be used immediately in human trials for Alzheimer’s patients. With regards to the surprising discovery, Gary Landreth, the lead researcher at Case Western warned CNN: “I want to say as loudly and clearly as possible that this was a study in mice, not in humans,” he said. “We’ve fixed Alzheimer’s in mice lots of times, so we need to move forward expeditiously but cautiously.” Landreth said his lab had been working on other drugs for Alzheimer’s for 10 years when a graduate student, Paige Cramer, decided to try bexarotene, which works on a receptor involved in amyloid beta clearance. Some other drugs that worked in mice were too toxic to use in humans. “We’re really lucky that bexarotene is a great drug with an acceptable safety profile,” he said. “This doesn’t happen very many times in life.’”

In other interesting Alzheimer’s-related news, UCLA neuroscientists have demonstrated that they can strengthen memory in human patients by stimulating a critical junction in the brain known as the entorhinal cortex. This small area is considered the doorway to the hippocampus, which helps form and store memories, and the entorhinal cortex plays a crucial role in transforming daily experience into lasting memories. “The entorhinal cortex is the golden gate to the brain’s memory mainframe,” explained senior author Dr. Itzhak Fried, professor of neurosurgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “Every visual and sensory experience that we eventually commit to memory funnels through that doorway to the hippocampus. Our brain cells must send signals through this hub in order to form memories that we can later consciously recall.” The experiment that was designed by the researchers is absolutely fascinating — involving taxi cabs, video games, virtual cities, and subjects suffering from seizures, and you can read the amazing story in full by visiting Science Daily. To learn more about the bexarotene mice experiments be sure to visit CNN. For more incredible stories about the human brain simply head over to The Human Brain On FEELguide.

SEE ALSO: Did You Know: What Happens To Your Body And Brain On Pot
SEE ALSO: Nicotine Patches & Living A “Joyous Life” In Your 30s/40s Can Prevent Dementia
SEE ALSO: Forbes Looks At The Top 5 Mindblowing Developments In Neuroscience: From Erasing Memories To Moral Magnets

MouseBrain 50% Reversal Of Alzheimers In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your Golden GateSources: CNN and Science Daily

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50% Reversal Of Alzheimer’s In Mice In 3 Days, And Boosting Memory By Stimulating Your “Golden Gate”

IRS Employee Stole Data To Forge $8M In Fraudulent Returns


coondoggie writes “A former Internal Revenue Service employee this week got 105 months in prison for pleading guilty to theft of government property and aggravated identity theft in a case where the guy tried to get away with nearly $8 million in fraudulent tax returns. The U.S. Department of Justice said Thomas Richardson used his inside knowledge of IRS operations to commit his crime, which was pretty audacious. According to the DOJ, Richardson admitted that within a two-day period, April 15 to April 17, 2006, he filed or caused to be filed 29 fraudulent 2005 individual income tax returns totaling $7,922,657.”


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IRS Employee Stole Data To Forge $8M In Fraudulent Returns

Let’s Make Mead: The Ancient Berserker Crunk-Juice of Kings [Video]

Mead is almost certainly the first beverage that got humans drunk (sorry, beer). It predates wine by ten to thirty thousand years. Hell, it predates the cultivation of soil. Best of all, you only need three common ingredients to whip up a batch. So let’s do that. More »


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Let’s Make Mead: The Ancient Berserker Crunk-Juice of Kings [Video]

Canonical aims for enterprise desktop with Ubuntu business remix



Canonical has announced the availability of the Ubuntu Business Desktop Remix, a new variant of the popular Linux distribution that has been customized for use in enterprise environments. It is based on Ubuntu 11.10, the current stable version of the distro, but it offers a slightly different set of packages in the default installation.

The business remix omits Ubuntu’s standard games, multimedia applications, and social networking tools. Instead, it adds a handful of enterprise-relevant packages, such as VMware View. The remix is free (as in beer) to download, but users are required to fill out a registration form on the Web before they will get access to the ISO.

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Spotify iOS app update brings 320kbps music to mobiles

Enjoying your Spotify tracks on the go just got a little better, at least on iOS, where an app update to v0.4.23 gifts users “very high quality” 320kbps music streaming (for Premium subscribers) and syncing, up from the previous max of 160kbps. Enabling the higher quality streams — though heavy listeners may want to mind those bandwidth quotas — is as simple as ticking the “Extreme” box in the settings, as shown above by The Next Web to join in a quality that was previously only available via the desktop app or in the living room. If you’re just signing up or setting up the app again the one-tap Facebook log-in should also be a convenient addition (or not, if you don’t use Facebook and insist on telling everyone you don’t at every opportunity — we heard you the first ten times). There’s no word on updates for the other mobile platforms yet, but we’ll keep an eye out.

[Thanks, Pete]

Spotify iOS app update brings 320kbps music to mobiles originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Feb 2012 02:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Spotify iOS app update brings 320kbps music to mobiles

Is That Carbon Fiber? Nope. Say Hello to Tegris

0tegris01.jpg

There’s an exciting new material on the block, and it’s showing up in…luggage. Baggage manufacturer Tumi is now using Tegris, a polypropylene thermoplastic composite developed by textile and chemical giant Milliken, and is rolling it out in their new Tegra-Lite collection, starting with a carry-on.

0tegris02.jpg

So what is Tegris, and why is it better than, say, the polycarbonate used in Pelican cases? Here are the talking points we think will be of interest to product designers:

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Is That Carbon Fiber? Nope. Say Hello to Tegris

Logging consulting hours – The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly

There’s tons written about the world of startups and even freelancers, but almost nothing written about the world of software development services. The underbelly of the startup world, shops which get hired to do a lot of the dev work. I’ve decided to start blogging a bit more about it, mostly adapting emails i’ve sent to my team . Hopefully they won’t kill me for using them as an example. The joy of being a consultant is that you’ve got more freedom over your time, the downside is that eventually your time is logged and billed to a client hourly. That means rather than just reporting what you’ve done in a sprint retrospective, you’ve got to keep a log. At Cubox, we use minutedock , it’s nifty and comes from New Zealand, a country which like Uruguay, is small, was invaded by the british, has the southern most capital in it’s hemisphere, and has way more sheep than people. When developers are billing their time, they need to track what they were doing. It’s hard for clients to know if you spent the day playing call of duty, or fixing some complicated bug. The time logged in minutedock is provided to clients in our invoices, as written. It is the primary way in which everybody knows what you were working on, how the project is advancing, and if there are problems. When clients are worried about how much things cost, they use these items to dispute payments. All entries in the time log need to be detailed. They need to say specifically what you were doing and what value it provides to the client. Remember these may be read weeks, or months after you wrote them, by somebody who does not understand the code or architecture of the application. All work we do should have an associated ticket in pivotal tracker, if it doesn’t exist when you start to do the work, add the ticket. It’s how we track things, it’s how our clients know what we’re working on. All time logs in minutedock should have the full ticket title. If you’re working on a sub-part of that ticket you should include that information. Examples of from the logs; The good, the bad, and the ugly. GOOD – “Implement Connect Flow Header to Confirmation step, routes modification for testing, style changes, copy modification” GOOD – “Clean up validations of Deal/PurchaseOrder. Fix bug with Purchase order and refund” GOOD – “Updating rubydeps for ruby 1.9 to create a dependency graph” GOOD – “#meetings discussing high-level architecture, services, jobs, and the implementation of the customer FSMs” GOOD – “Fix purchase order creation for new customers WIP” GOOD – “Fixing template error in collect_address_data partial” BAD – “We have a bazillion pending tests. See to that.” BAD – “Analytics, resque, etc.” BAD – “Changes in coffeescript models” BAD – “Changes for KM and GA” BAD – “oauth” BAD – “Pairing with pablo” BAD – “Pairing with pote” BAD – “Js client” BAD – “Meeting with Clark” BAD – “Fixing Mixpanel gem bugs” BAD – “Fixing sign up issues” BAD – “integration tests” BAD – “Improve site usability” UGLY – “” (Thursday Feb 2 – 0:45) The good ones are clear and descriptive. They include more text and i can understand what was worked on even if i wasn’t following the project day to day. The bad ones are vague, sometimes not related to the work at all. Often the bad ones are like 12 hours ‘oauth’ or 8 hours ‘integration tests’. Sometimes the bad ones include abbreviations which aren’t explained or documented anywhere. Very few programmers are judged by the quality of code itself. Ironically enough, we judge programmers by the window dressing around their code. That is, those blog posts, talks, readme files, and application as a whole which is judged. Star programmers are known for what they built and how they communicated it. When doing contracting, as we do at cubox, a big part of that communication are the tickets we write when we log our time. It feels dumb, and less important than the real work. What’s more, it’s a written language, not code. It’s important, and it’s how we’ll be judged.

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Logging consulting hours – The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly

Walt Disney World tightens the rules on FastPasses

On The Disney Blog, John Frost describes the upcoming rule-tightening for FastPasses in Walt Disney World. FastPass is a ride reservation system: park visitors visit a ride, feed their entry ticket to a kiosk, and it spits out a coupon that can be redeemed later in the day for admission via a shorter queue. Until now, FastPass expiry times were not enforced (that is, the pass might say it was good for 3-4PM, but you could use it any time after 3), which led people like me to collect FastPasses all morning (you can get one every hour or so) when the lines were short, and then use them all in a bunch in the afternoon when the lines got longer.

Frost says the rule change is a precursor to a much more dramatic change, a FastPass replacement (?) called xPass, which allows visitors to reserve their ride-times far in advance, over the Web, simultaneous with their other bookings — dining, hotel, etc. This feels like it would suck a lot of spontaneity out of Disney World visits, though for certain very slow-loading/long-queueing rides, it would be nice to guarantee a ride in advance.

Meanwhile, Frost has some excellent suggestions for ways to fine-tune the new FastPass system:


Here are a few tweaks I would like Disney to do to improve the FastPass system a bit.

* More surprise fastpasses. Standby queue dropping below 15 minutes? Send a digital fastpass to guests on their mobile phones.
* Shorten the wait time required to get an additional fast pass later in the day.
* Let guests pick their return window. Maybe just morning, afternoon, or night. But at least that way you have an option if you arrive at a fastpass machine only to find out you have an restaurant reservation scheduled for that same time.
* Allow locals to get a digital fast pass for one ride from home the night before. Make it for afternoon or peak dining times only. This solves the having to show up at the crack of dawn problem.
* Rides with a through-put of more than 2000 guests an hour should not have fastpass. Instead move those machines to spinners and other low capacity attractions.
* Display publicly the number of fastpasses that can be redeemed an hour. Perhaps as a % of the standby queue. This will help guests decide if they need to get a Fastpass for the attraction or not.
* Limit the number of Fastpass that can be issued before 11AM to 50% of the day’s fastpasses. This saves some Fastpass capacity for guests who arrive later in the day

Fastpass Changes Coming to Walt Disney World

(Image: Rockin Rollercoaster Fastpass Walt Disney Hollywood Studios, a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike (2.0) image from kathika’s photostream)


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Walt Disney World tightens the rules on FastPasses