The FDA Just Approved Transgenic Chickens That Make Medicine

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given the thumbs up to a genetically modified chicken that produces a drug in its eggs. It’s the latest addition to a growing area in medicine known as “ farmaceuticals .” Read more…

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The FDA Just Approved Transgenic Chickens That Make Medicine

These Are the Blood Vessels of an 80 Million-Year-Old Dinosaur

For the first time, paleontologists have isolated original blood vessels from a dinosaur. You’re looking at the tattered fragments of the structures that channeled blood through the legs of Brachylophosaurus canadensis , a 30-foot-long hadrosaur that roamed Montana 80 million years ago. Read more…

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These Are the Blood Vessels of an 80 Million-Year-Old Dinosaur

Microsoft Open Sources and Forks Windows Live Writer Into Open Live Writer

SmartAboutThings writes: Windows Live Writer is a blogging tool that Microsoft originally released back in 2006, and it still remains popular today, which has prompted Microsoft to promise that it will make it open source earlier this year. Now the company has officially open-sourced and forked Windows Live Writer into Open Live Writer, having put its repositories on GitHub already. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Open Sources and Forks Windows Live Writer Into Open Live Writer

Google Drive Adds New Advanced Search Features to Make Finding Files Easier

Searching for your Google Drive files got a whole lot easier today with an update that offers an easier way to open your advanced search options, quicker ways to access files on iOS, and more options to narrow your searches. Read more…

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Google Drive Adds New Advanced Search Features to Make Finding Files Easier

Samsung wants to get into the self-driving car business

It’s too soon to crack wise that Apple will design a self-driving car and Samsung will build it , but we’re another step closer to that being a reality. The Korean conglomerate is launching a new division of its business that’ll manufacture car components for other companies, beginning with in-car infotainment gear. According to the release, the eventual aim is to branch out into the components necessary to build autonomous vehicles for other companies. The move follows that of its local rival LG, which formed a vehicle components division in 2013 and is now gearing up to produce components for car companies. According to the Wall Street Journal , Samsung’s move into the automotive components business comes at a time when its smartphone arm is suffering. The company recently moved mobile chief JK Shin out of his office in favor of a younger, hipper replacement in the hope of reviving its flagging profits. Of course, that may turn out to be a fools errand, given that the mobile industry’s boom years seem to be at an end. On the upside, self-driving cars share more than a few components with smartphones, so it makes sense that Samsung’s know-how would transfer across. Expertise in battery technology, GPS, mobile computing, wireless chips, touch screens and similar tech are all found in autonomous vehicles, so it should be fairly simple. In addition, by producing the components for other companies, there’s a smaller element of risk than if it attempted to go it alone straight out of the gate. Those with longer memories will also recall that Samsung used to actually make cars in the ’90s, although the project was ill-fated. The company launched Samsung Motors in 1994, but by the time it had begun to produce vehicles, the 1997 Asian financial crisis forced it into a sale. The division was picked up by Renault, although Samsung maintains a 19.9 percent stake in the firm, as well as control over use of the name Samsung. Via: Vincent Se Young Lee (Twitter) Source: WSJ , Reuters , Samsung

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Samsung wants to get into the self-driving car business

Reports: Police Raid Home of Possible Bitcoin Creator Craig Wright

The Guardian and Reuters are reporting that police have raided the home of Craig Wright , an Australian CEO who was identified today in investigations by Gizmodo and Wired as a likely candidate for the secret identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the elusive creator of Bitcoin. Read more…

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Reports: Police Raid Home of Possible Bitcoin Creator Craig Wright

FDA Approves Device That Can Plug Gunshot Wounds in 15 Seconds 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared the use of the XSTAT 30—an innovative sponge-filled gunshot wound dressing device—for use in the general population. Approved last year for battlefield use, the device can plug a gunshot wound in just 15 seconds. Read more…

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FDA Approves Device That Can Plug Gunshot Wounds in 15 Seconds 

Apple pushed an update for the new Apple TV today that finally lets you use the Remote app to contro

Apple pushed an update for the new Apple TV today that finally lets you use the Remote app to control the device. Additionally, Apple Music gets Siri support so get ready to sing into your remote. Or something . Read more…

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Apple pushed an update for the new Apple TV today that finally lets you use the Remote app to contro

PlayStation Now offers 12 months of game streaming for $100

For a game streaming service to succeed, it needs three components: a decent library, competitive pricing and reliable, silky-smooth performance. PlayStation Now struggles on all three fronts, but slowly those shortcomings are being rectified. For instance, there’s now a better value subscription plan — $99.99 will net you 12 months of access, which works out at just over $8 per month. Compared with Sony’s existing one-month ($19.99, or $240 per year) and three-month ($44.99, or $180 per year) plans, it’s a steal. Via: Polygon Source: PlayStation Now

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PlayStation Now offers 12 months of game streaming for $100