Did we stutter? Almost one million Toyotas. Recalled. Because spiders. Read more…
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870,000 Toyotas Recalled Due to "Spider-Related Problem"
Did we stutter? Almost one million Toyotas. Recalled. Because spiders. Read more…
Read the original:
870,000 Toyotas Recalled Due to "Spider-Related Problem"
When left to its own devices, liquids form into spherical drops. But add a little electricity, and you get “electrospraying” and “electrospinning, ” and you can watch electricity play Rumpelstiltskin. Read more…
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How to use electricity to spin liquid into nanostring
For people going blind from retinal degeneration, there are almost no therapies. Their vision dims and they lose their sight as doctors look on helplessly. But a new experiment involving retinas grown from stem cells promises a new direction for research — and, in the future, a possible treatment. Read more…
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Your replacement retinas might look like this
Japanese researchers have successfully cloned a mouse from a drop of blood taken from a donor’s tail. The breakthrough means that animals don’t have to be euthanized when extracting their cells, which could prove important if we’re ever going to clone endangered animals. Read more…
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Scientists Clone a Mouse From a Single Drop of Blood
An anonymous reader writes “A new phenomenon discovered in ultracold atoms of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) could offer new insight into the quantum mechanical world and be a step toward applications in ‘atomtronics’—the use of ultracold atoms as circuit components. Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology have reported the first observation of the ‘spin Hall effect’ in a cloud of ultracold atoms, acting as a single quantum object and then called BEC, the lowest state of matter, with solid and liquid coming next. As one consequence, the researchers made the atoms, which spin like a child’s top, skew to one side or the other, by an amount dependent on the spin direction.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Phenomenon Discovered In Ultracold Atoms Brings Us a Step Closer To Atomtronics
Frozen mosses that were buried under glaciers 400 years ago have now been regrown. Surprisingly, the hardy “bryophytes” required no special techniques to regenerate. That means they might be candidates for colonizing extreme environments — even in space. Read more…
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Scientists Revive 400 Year-Old Frozen Plants
3D printing isn’t all about making guns and toys —some researchers are using it to make real medical advances . Now, a team of researchers from the University of Oxford has managed to create a 3D printer that can produce synthetic tissue using just water and oil. More »
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Scientists Can Print Synthetic Tissue Using Just Water and Oil
Earlier this month, doctors announced that a baby had been cured of an HIV infection . Now, using a similar technique, it appears that 14 adults have likewise been successfully treated for the disease. The trick, say the scientists, is to tackle the infection early. The research was conducted by Asier Sáez-Cirión of the Pasteur Institute and his results now appear in the open source journal PLOS Pathogens . His team analyzed 70 people with HIV who had been treated by combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) just a short time after infection, a range spanning 35 days to 10 weeks. This is much sooner than people are normally treated. And in fact, these patients, called the Visconti Cohort , were all diagnosed with HIV early (and by chance) when they turned up at hospitals to be assessed for other conditions. The cohort stuck to the antiretrovirals (ARVs) for an average of three years, during which time the drugs kept the virus in check (they do not eradicate HIV from the body). Eventually, all of the patients stopped taking the ARVs for various reasons (personal choice, different drug protocols, etc.). Normally, HIV will return when patients stop taking their ARVs. But this time, something interesting happened. The authors of the study described it this way: We identified 14 HIV patients (post-treatment controllers [PTCs]) whose viremia remained controlled for several years after the interruption of prolonged cART initiated during the primary infection. That’s roughly one in ten of the patients , a group that included four women and 10 men. On average, they were off the medication for seven years. It’s important to note that the patients still have the HIV infection. Also, they’re not ” supercontrollers ” (the
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First a baby, now 14 adults “functionally cured” of HIV
Yes, blood . Blood out the eyes. It’s a display that’s as impressive as it is shocking — in a last-ditch effort to ward off predators, several species of horned lizards will increase the blood pressure in vessels surrounding their eyes, to the point that they actually rupture, gushing five-foot fountains of hemoglobin at the faces of coyotes, bobcats, and other beasts of prey native to the Sonoran desert. More »
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Watch this lizard shoot a five-foot stream of blood from its freaking eyeballs
In a stunning first for neuroscience, researchers have created an electronic link between the brains of two rats, and demonstrated that signals from the mind of one can help the second solve basic puzzles in real time — even when those animals are separated by thousands of miles. More »
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Brain-to-brain interfaces have arrived, and they are absolutely mindblowing