The iPhone Nano Rumor Strikes Again: Coming to Verizon in 2010? [Rumor]

The latest round of iPhone rumors reads like a roundup of everything we've heard before. Now the mythical iPhone nano is back, and supposedly said device will be coming to Verizon in 2010 featuring a new hybrid cellular radio.

Keep in mind this is all coming from an industry analyst report supplied to Apple Insider, and as with all analyst reports, take it with a huge chunk of rock salt.

Rumor has it that the new iPhone will have a hybrid UMTS/CDMA radio inside, so it'll work on nearly all major carriers. The report also cites that the device will have a 2.8" screen, downsized from the current 3.5" display.

That's nothing we haven't heard before, but the one thing that might make this report more believable than others is the tidbit about who'll make the thing. According to the document, Pegatron will build the phone and not Hon Hai, the current manufacturer.

Baseless speculation, or looming product launch? Whatever the case, I'm much less excited about these rumors now that Android handsets are available on Verizon. As great as an iPhone would be on Big Red, there are very solid alternatives that you can pick up today, so why wait? [Apple Insider]







99 ford ranger with no brake pedal at all

I have a 99 ranger and resently I have changed both front calipers and the master cyl. and the rear springs, wheel cyls. and shoes. After changing all these parts and bleeding the lines i have no pedal. I have hooked it up to a computer to command it to bleed i manually bleed the lines and also us

I Spy With My Little Eye…

Update:  SOLVED!!

How about a riddle for your Saturday?  I’ll give you some clues, and then post the answer in the comment section tomorrow morning (or sooner, if someone guesses the correct answer).  To be fair to everybody, the answer will be something well known that you will have been familiar with since your childhood.  Ready?

File:Question mark.svg

Although composed of several bodies, this is referred to as one object.

It is visible to the naked eye; in fact, it is an ancient eye test, and can still be used to measure “perfect” (20/20) vision.

File:Snellen chart.svg

This object is often used as a guidepost.

It is mentioned in Homer’s Iliad.

It is visible in the northern skies (north of latitude 25 degrees south) all year.

File:Red and green aurora.jpg

In about 50,000 years, it will be gone.

Do you know to what I am referring?  The first person to guess correctly can choose the subject of my next post (must be about astronomy;  must be researchable).

Good luck!

How Do You Get a Degree in Green Energy?

Quick question for those of you who might have some background in this area:

My brother-in-law in interested in pursuing an education in green energy (meaning he wants to work with wind, solar, hydro, or geothermal energy in some capacity). He wants to work in that particular field, but he has n

THERMAL OIL BOILER

Please give your idea and how to solve.

When the thermal oil temperature reach to 120^0 C, the circulating pump pressure drop to only 1.1 Bar.

And when the thermal oil temperature below 95^0 C, the circulating pump pressure was increase back to 7.5 Bar. I checked all lines and expansion ta

15 things that suck about the Palm Pre

I’m coming from a Blackberry 8830, and after having a Palm Pre for a few days, I have quite a few criticisms. It’s not to say I don’t like the Palm Pre, but it definitely isn’t perfect.

  • BATTERY LIFE! I can’t stress this enough. The battery life is absolutely horrible. I’ve tried wifi on and off. I run no apps in the background. When the phone is open (ie the screen is on), I lose about 1% of battery every 2 minutes. Today, I woke up, unplugged the phone, looked at 3 emails, and I was already down to 94%. Two and a half hours later, with minimal use (ie, checking an occasional email as it came in), I was at 65%. I’m not signed into any IM app, since AIM is reported to have battery life problems. I have to charge it at least 2 times a day. I lose about 1% for every text message I send or receive.
  • The camera, at least in darker situations, seems to have a blueish tinge at the “top” of every photo (the top of the camera, so it may be on a side if the camera is rotated). No matter how I turn the camera, it’s always there. Below are some sample pictures showing it (click to see fullsized):cimg0005small
    Notice the left side here

    cimg0003small
    Again notice the left side

  • You can’t change the sounds for texts and emails and set the volume differently than the general system sound.
  • It doesn’t respect notification settings on email accounts. I have one account set to never show notifications when a new email arrives. I still get them.
  • Text entry: there are no arrow keys on the keyboard, so it’s almost impossible to move the cursor within a text field to edit text. You have to try to tap the screen at the right place, and you can never get it right; it’s always somehow one character in front or behind where you want to be. Having an option to delete the character to the right would help with this. On websites with small text entry fields, especially ones that come pre-filled in, it’s all but impossible to edit them. This was trivial on the Blackberry
    EDIT: Yes, I know about holding the orange button and scrolling, but this doesn’t work on small text entry boxes. You have to move your finger within the box (which is only sometimes 2 characters wide) instead of being able to slide it anywhere on the screen
  • Copy and paste: you can’t select any text that’s not in a text entry field. This makes copy and paste, in my opinion, useless.
  • Can’t forward text messages (or copy them…see above).
  • Google Maps:
    • Doesn’t have Google transit integration like the Blackberry
    • Can’t just tap a location on the map and say “directions to here”. You have to put in an intersection manually.
    • Very slow to load. It lags and doesn’t finish even rending the app itself for a few seconds (ie, only one side of the text entry box at the top is present).
    • GPS: my iPod can find my location in my apartment instantly. The Pre can’t find it at all; it just approximates it via triangulation.
  • Calendar:
    • You have to wait a second for it to “render” each day before you can scroll/move to the next day.
    • Birthdays don’t show up in the calendar. Birthdays show up for each contact (either from Google or Facebook), but they don’t show on the calendar.
  • Lags scrolling in the Launcher. Left and right are particularly bad, but up and down also lags. Isn’t it supposed to be hardware accelerated?
  • Email lags compared to the Blackberry.
  • MicroUSB: Why not just use miniUSB like everything else? I have plenty of miniUSB cables, and I could always find one at someone’s house if I was in a bind and needed a quick charge.
  • No microSD slot.
  • It would be nice to have a notification light for new messages
  • Keyboard is much more difficult to use compared to a Blackberry, but I’m already getting used to it.

Other than all of these issues, I really like the phone. The browser is very fast and renders pages great. Multitasking is amazing. As mentioned, reading email is sluggish compared to the Blackberry, but it makes up for it in the read/delete status having 2 way sync with Gmail which wasn’t possible on the Blackberry with BIS. Many of these issues can probably be fixed by a software update; I have my fingers crossed.

Yahble, HIT, Bubblecon, BIZDEV!, Solid State

I use jargon. Here is some of it:

Yahble

Yet Another Huge Binder of LegalesE

These are binders of documentation, policy, plans, and law that you can’t throw out Or Else, but neither you nor anyone else ever reads, and generally are entirely worthless in practice despite being Very Important in theory.

Yahbles collect in the system like lead or mercury. Lovingly, they are passed along the foodchain until everybody dies of heavy metal toxicity induced bureaucratic insanity.

Government agencies and consultants love to make Yahbles. When you force a pile of hot, sweaty consultants into a small, closed space overnight, expect a fresh steaming new Yahble in the morning, there! revealed to thee yonder in the glaring flouresent din of 7:48AM upon ye humble coffee-stained hard white plasix conference table.

It’s also understood that Yahbles are gradually churned into existance from the bowels of The Back Office, but like invention of a new race or ethnicity, nobody has ever witnessed the complete Yahble evolutionary process of a generally accepted Yahble outside of an artifically imposed environment.

HIT

Health Information Technology

This is a common industry term in health-related information technology. In practice, it refers to all the information transmission and processing generally associated with “The Health Care Industry” that doesn’t really work well or that isn’t well understood. Stuff that actually works is just called by its real name, or generally: “software.” Note: HIT does make for cool-sounding portmanteau like “HITman” and “HITbox.”

For example:

Mozilla Firefox web browser: firefox, or just “the browser”

Command-Response terminal simulation system to display text and pictures from a server on another machine over a network that only runs on Windows XP and requires the installation of several vendor-specific plug-ins: HIT

===

Linux: linux, or just “the server”

???: HIT

===

email: email

web 2.o patient physician medical communication cloud computing enterprise suite: HIT

Bubblecon

Internet bubble convention

Bubblecon is some marketing convention for some new hyped technology or industry. Attending bubblecons is a popular means by which one may accumulate a significant collection of business cards titled “CEO,” “Founder,” and “President” —and sometimes, all three at once!

Fact: nobody has ever gotten funded because they attended a bubblecon. I did get laid, though. So YES: in my rigorous scientific sampling of exactly myself, you are more likely to get LAID by a GIRL at a NEW TECHNOLOGY BUSINESS CONVENTION than you are to get your tech startup funded with odds of 1/0 == infinity %. That’s science.

BIZDEV!

Business Development, often predicated by “Vice President” (VPBIZDEV!)

BIZDEV! is always appended with an exclaimation point.

BIZDEV!s love bubblecons because they are concrete and documented evidence of attendance at a work-related events. That’s because documented attendance means work, which is why they are the CEO and visionary entrepreneur, and definitely not bullshit, which is why they are not delusionary aging jock losers that couldn’t cut it at a regular sales job. This Very Important Job is colloquially known as “networking,”and it is the Most Important Job at all startup companies. Also, see “ideas” and “twitter.”

Solid State

in a HIT context, it means a unit of health care organization that is maximally automated with the utmost elegance and efficiency. It is the platonic ideal of how “things should work”. Generally, see Solid State.

A Force Fix for Healthcare

You want a policy that will force health care to work? Fine. This will work.

All licensed medical third-party payers must publish a public, free, unrestricted web service from which anyone can simulate any and all medical insurance decisions. These insurance decisions include:

  • Determination of coverage and all policy purchasing qualifications
  • Premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and all other payer financial details
  • Reimbursement per submission, necessary medical documentation and justification, and all other medical provider-submitted details

No health insurance decision can be executed that cannot be publicly simulated via this web service in advance. Any simulation can be authorized by a patient policy holder and medical provider to become an executed health insurance decision. All documentation necessary to simulate all possible decisions must be published on a public, free, unrestricted website.

Each submission optionally includes a simulated date of submission. The web service will return the decision as of that date. In effect, one could map a decision given a submission from now each day back until the date of service implementation. Submissions without a date specified will be assumed to be for the current date.

Any health insurance decision that does not comply with this policy is grounds for a declaration of Policy Corruption by the federal government. Continued violations will result in the forced restructure of the third party payer. This restructuring will resemble an FDIC restructuring an insolvent bank, including a federally-insured ceiling policy in the event of an insurer failure.

Simply: given this submission, what do you do? In a payer contract, any inability to give an absolute answer to this question immediately can only be for two reasons:

  • flagrant incompetence (bad)
  • fraud (bad)

Why would there be any ambiguity? Think: there is no medical decision making. There is no clinical participation. There is no interaction with patients, the human body, or the environment. It’s simply: discrete data in, discrete data out. And: SOMEHOW decisions are being made. Are these decisions made by:

A) a consistent, understandable, fair, contract of discrete cause and effect? (good)

or

B) “some guy” making some arbitrary decision about who gets what whenever? (bad)

Because if you want A (good) and not B (bad), this test enforces it with an obvious true / false test without divulging trade secrets or private health information and without snowing regulators. (i.e. the Law and Order “we’ll fill your office with boxes of incomprehensible paper forms —that will teach you to mess with the Bureaucracy!” trick) And there is no need for new regulatory committees, laws, and policies. Any medical provider could very simply verify the integrity of the system: here’s what we submitted, here’s what you said you would do, did you do it? Y/N.

Further, it solves the incentive to health care providers to submit their claims electronically, and it stimulates entrepreneurs to build high-tech businesses using the new wealth infrastructure.

And finally, it’s a policy that can actually be DEFINED and ENFORCED to create real WEALTH and directly SOLVE THE PROBLEM of modernizing American health care by empowering the public with concrete data and services —rather than some vague and useless policy like “it is illegal to be inefficient, and you (somebody?) must complete all these forms to prove it.” That crap only makes more Yahbles. Yahbles are intellectual toxins that gradually weighs us down and makes our institutions sick. The Solid State health system clears the air and plants seeds of innovation and productivity.

You Can’t Solve Problems By Making It Illegal To Have The Problem

The fashion in health care’s “policy sphere” is to fix logistical problems by making having the problem itself illegal. That’s… not going to work. Consider, from Forbes: “How Safe Are Your Medical Records?”

Notification laws are slowly changing as part of the stimulus bill, which has mandated new accounting rules. Physicians will now be required to track disclosures of a patient’s medical information and disclose security breaches in some cases. The new rules won’t go into effect until 2014.

Really. So, if problem is a policy lapse due to an bloated, unresponsive, overloaded health care bureaucracy, then the solution is to force all medical providers to keep Yet Another Huge Binder of Legalese (Yes, the dreaded Yahble) for which you are Legally Liable to Keep A Copy In Your Office At All Times

Genius! I’ll just organize another meeting and invent another acronym. That will be ten million dollars to my Health Care Information Technology consulting firm, please. (Unless, of course, you don’t mind being declared a Federally Deficient Medical Provider. Can you really afford that legal liability? Oh, by the way, we noted in our report that your hospital has a ten million dollar budget discrepancy this year. We advise a hiring freeze in IT, investment in a clock-punch payroll system for physicians, and cuts in “loss-leading” non-surgical, non-specialist departments like primary, preventative, and hospice care.)

Listen: it’s silly to make things that are already illegaldouble illegal.” For example, it’s already clearly against “company policy” to steal cash from the cash register at a medical office —not to mention illegal. There’s no need to Really Really say so in a Yahble. That’s true for cash; that’s true for medical records.

It was illegal in Soviet Union to be inefficient, too. That didn’t make their institutions more productive. That just gave anybody an excuse to prosecute political and economic deviants because, hey, there’s policy for everything. Everybody’s already criminal. We just haven’t gotten around to prosecuting you yet —and do you really want to fight this battle? (ref: U.S. intellectual property law.  ever been accused of “trademark” or “patent” infringement? you’d understand)

Do not learn Dvorak!

Please excuse this interruption for this important news bulletin:

Do not learn Dvorak!

Deep in the tomes of Ancient Geek from beyond Last Thursday, it is rumored to be written that the True Geek shall achieve divine productivity through careful dedication to the art of Dvorak Typing. Type faster with less stress! Dvorak: the rational keyboard —not that abominable scrabble-bag QWERTY layout that The Man grinds into garrulous school children to Keep The Good Word Down.

These are LIES.

I learned Dvorak touchtyping three years ago. It is true: it is a bit less stressful to type in Dvorak than QWERTY.

The problem: all computers and applications are designed for QWERTY. (enjoy trying to use emacs or vim on a QWERTY lettered keyboard reconfigured to type Dvorak. I did learn Dvorak emacs —what a waste of my life)

So, finally, before it was Too Late, I switched back from Dvorak to QWERTY when I converted to OS X with the purchase of a new MacBook last month.

Listen: I have been hamstrung for weeks because I can’t type fluently. You do NOT want to scramble your touchtyping mental wiring during an important project. You will need to dedicate hours each day carefully retraining your fingers. You will not have this time because you are already behind because you’re unable to type your work efficiently. This is bad.

There is one time to learn a keyboard layout: school. Unless you have nothing better to do than practice typing an hour each day —precisely the description of an elementary school typing class— DO NOT DISTURB YOUR TYPING MUSCLE MEMORY!

However, I do strongly recommend occasional typing drills to keep your typing skills sharp. I use this flash drill. The keyboard is the human connection to cyberspace. Don’t get left behind because you’re too lazy to type well.

June 11th At Westport, CT: Federal Red Flags, HIPAA Security Rules and Fraud Prevention

Josh and I will be attending Fairfield County Medical Association’s “Federal Red Flags, HIPAA Security Rules and Fraud Prevention”  presented by the by Kenneth C. Citarella at Tiburon Restaurant at 333 Wilton Road, Westport, CT 06880.

We’ll be traveling up from New York City, so if you’re in the area and want to hack health care, this guy would probably know something about doing that, so email us and tag along. I’m a member of Fairfield County Medical Association, so the cost is $50.

Event Registration Fax Form (pdf)

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Technology is a double-edged sword and hence needs to be handled with responsibility. Genetic engineering is nothing but the technology by means of which genetic material is scientifically engineered to replicate the original genetic material in living organism be it plants, animals or even human beings. Genetic engineering involves creation of recombinant DNA by cutting up DNA molecules and splicing together fragments from similar or dissimilar organisms.

Genetic engineering has been put to use in several fields. Transgenic plants, pest-resistant plants were created which helped to increase the quantity as well as quality of food crops, which only meant increased food supply for the needy. Scientists also found out a way to alter somatic cells and hence modify the genetic make up of people to cure certain diseases or ailments. Thus, the advancements in the field of genetic engineering are considered to be positive developments. However, there are certain issues associated with this field that make us think whether the practice of genetic engineering can be considered as valid and harmless on an ethical scale.

Genetic engineering helps to create transgenic plants, which are nothing but a cross of different species of plants. Often these sort of medications or engineering techniques are carried out in order to improve the quantity and the quality if the yield. However the creation of genetically engineered plants means creation of a different species of plants altogether. In addition to this several questions have also been raised about the ill effects of creating genetically engineered plants.

First and foremost it has been observed that genetically engineered plants, which were made pest-resistant, also created damage to several other insects. Hence while creating insect-resistant plant varieties, care should be taken that it doesn’t drive the entire species of that insect or other insects towards extinction. Also, there exists a possibility that insects can develop resistance to that pesticide element in the plant and hence pose increased danger.

The biggest ethical issue in genetic engineering is about the concern over creating living creatures out of genetic material. Human cloning or even crossing animal and human genes to create living creatures will lead to the emergence of a different type of creatures. There can be several unethical things that can happen like creation of living organisms and using them as labor or slaves. Thus care has to be taken about who could use these technological advances, and what are the unethical threats, which need to be prevented.

Besides this, one major ethical issue that a majority of people have cited in this reference is that the use of genetic engineering for creation of life forms is similar to ‘playing God’ and taking control of creation and destruction of life on earth. While on one hand, the ability of genetic engineering to cure diseases and health conditions is a great benefit, the possibilities of its misuse are plenty.

Any new technology has its set of advantages and disadvantages. However you cannot proscribe a beneficial technology because of the possible misuse. Saying no to genetic engineering would be like refusing to log on to the Internet because you are afraid your email account might get hacked. The simple solution is to use the technology with great caution. Technology is never inherently good or bad; it is the intentions of the people who use it.

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Genetic Engineering Ethics In Science Fiction

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Q: I am a final year university student who is currently writing an ethics essay. I have been trying to put forward the view that some of the ethical problems associated with new technology have already been explored in science fiction. I would like help in substantiating this view. My essay is on the topic of human genetic engineering and cloning. While I am familiar with some of the work on this topic I was hoping for some help in tracking down some short stories or novels which deal with either the ethical problems or the social implications of these topics. At the moment my list includes Hyperion Quartet by Dan Simmons Glory Season by David Brin Some parts of the Uplift books by David Brin As you can see this is rather short and mostly deals with the social consequences rather than the ethics. Does anyone have any suggestions? I would appreciate any recommendations (along with magazine titles and editions for short stories if possible) I am also interested in peoples opinions on the idea that science fiction is the ideal medium for exploring tomorrows ethical dilemmas.

A: -Greg Egan, definitely. Egan mostly seems to be interested in the boundary between ontology and the more speculative aspects of physics. I find that a bit of a shame, because I don't think it's his real strength. Anyone can wave their hands about the Copenhagen Interpretation, but nobody is better than Egan at writing about the ethical and social implications of advanced biotechnology. I'd start with _Distress_. The first chapter is stunning, but you should pay close attention to the whole book. Don't miss the voluntary autists, the asexes, the notion of targeted biowarfare, and the ethical implications of the way that bioengineering interacts with intellectual property law. -Most of the Lois McMaster Bujold books have some facet of genegineering ethics conundrums. I especially recommend Memory and the last one "A Civil Campaign" in which a conniving aristocrat creates 180 daughters of himself and ova that have been deposited in the local gene bank. Memory deals with a set of clones and how they become enmeshed in a web of mistaken identity and amnesia. Another one is "Falling Free" in which a corporation creates a new "race" of mankind that has four arms and no legs for work in freefall.

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Genetic Engineering – Ethics and Controversy

Genetic Engineering Ethics

Genetic Engineering - Stem Cell Research Ethics and Controversy

ISSUE'S AND CONTROVERSY

Stem Cell research is a highly controversial and emotive subject that is, more often that not, misunderstood, misrepresented and fraught with 'ifs and buts'. There are fears that science is moving too fast without giving proper consideration to potential impacts and to ethical concerns. The subject is a confusing and complex one that is difficult to grasp and constantly changing. Governments around the world struggle to develop policies and guidelines at the same time as individuals struggle with their conscience and beliefs.

There are two key areas of debate:

The scientific debate; what is proven, what is debatably proven, research results that are received with skepticism.

The ethical/moral debate; some people base their objections on religious beliefs, some on ethical grounds, others believe simply, that changing or 'messing with' the human genome is simply not right, against nature and a highly dangerous path to follow. Others harbour concerns about the directions in which stem cell research can be taken.

Significantly much of the debate is held at an emotional level with scientific facts often overlooked or conveniently ignored. So with that in mind lets first look at the issues that are currently facing scientist in the field.

Exciting claims are regularly reported by scientists with their findings published in reputable science journals with all the relevant data and background information, the media, picking up on these stories, repackages the findings for public consumption and dutifully supplies the splash headline:

'Brain stem cells to cure diabetes'
'Giant leap for the 'secret of long life'

Unfortunately the fine detail is the thing that is often lost leading to much misconception, once you get to the small print you discover that all is not as it seems. Sentences like 'hold much promise', 'seems to suggest', 'has the exciting potential to be', 'it is reasonable to assume' abound in reports of advances in genetic engineering and stem cell research.

WHAT ARE SOME OF THE SCIENTIFIC HURDLES STILL TO BE OVERCOME?

As rapidly as the field of stem cell research is developing new questions and problems arise, with each new discovery another set of problems seems to arrive. Scientist really don't fully understand why embryonic stem cells can proliferate successfully in the laboratory without differentiating but adult stem cells are not so easily controlled or proliferated. As yet there is no reliable and reproducible way to create stem cell lines. For experimentation to continue successfully it is essential that results can be reproduced repeatedly, at present this simply doesn't happen. Scientists have yet to agree a set of test to confirm that the fundamental properties of a stem cell exists in a set of laboratory stem cells. Even the test that are used are not wholly reliable and accurate.

In actuality scientist don't really know exactly how the process of stem cell differentiation takes place, whether the stem cell be embryonic or adult. Differentiation occurs when a stem cell becomes a specific cell type, this happens when the stem cell receives signals telling it to start to become a cell. Scientists barely know what those signals are and how they affect the process. Directing the differentiation of stem cells has developed over the years but is still not an wholly exact science. It seems likely the process relies on a series of complex interactions. Controlling the differentiation is proving to be a major difficulty, how to make a stem cell become the exact cell type you want is not so easy and certainly not reliably reproducible in all areas.

Scientist simply don't know how many different types of adult stem cells exist and where they exist. They also don't know how adult stem cells come to exist or how they know where to go to do their repair and replacement functions. The question of just how flexible different adult stem cell types are is still unknown. Some scientist claim that adult stem cells can differentiate into many kinds of cells outside of their specialism, others argue that this is a fluke of the laboratory.

One of the major goals for scientists is to develop a way to use stem cells to repair damaged tissue. To do this they require a large amount of cells. Embryonic stem cells are the easiest to proliferate but are not a genetic match for the patient, adult stem cells are a match but are not easy to grow or control in large numbers. The recent announcement from Seoul University is being seen as a major step forward in this area.

There are many other problems that face the scientists; the laboratory process requires the use of some animal products that leave residue, how long a laboratory created cell survives in a human is an unknown. There has been significant progress in the field but there are still many unanswered questions.

THE ETHICAL DEBATE

The biggest problem with the ethical debate is that the potential for stem cell research to produce cures for some of the worlds most deadly and debilitating diseases is pitted against fervently and deeply held moral and faith based beliefs.

The issue that gets the most attention and is often the focus for opponents of stem cell research is the use of embryonic stem cells. This is because during the process of stem cell line creation the embryo is destroyed, opponents argue that this is the taking of human life - murder. Opponents argue that, as every embryo has the potential to become a human being that each and every one is sacrosanct. Proponents argue that even under natural conditions not all embryos go on to form a baby, that unused harvested embryos would anyway be destroyed and that, ultimately the ends justify the means. Many opponents of Embryonic stem cell research put forward compelling arguments for more vigorous experimentation and research into the use of Adult stem cells. They see this as an answer to the dilemma of the potential for disease relief. In reality this debate is quite clear cut, either you believe that embryonic stem cell research is fundamentally wrong because it destroys a potential human or you believe embryonic stem cell research is acceptable because the embryo will never become a human even if it has the potential to do so.

But this argument is merely a very vocal, media fed argument that only scratches at the surface of far deeper and potentially more impactful debates. There are big questions regarding the potential directions in which stem cell research can be taken; designer babies and eugenics, cloning, chimera. What of the rights of the women who donate their eggs for research and just how much attention is being paid to the health risks? What are the potential impacts of research on the future?

CHIMERA

A chimera is an organism constructed out of living parts from more than one biological species. Many scientist see the creation of chimera as a useful tool for the observation of stem cell behaviour.

The Science

The use of chimera is seen as a way to overcome some of the hurdles outlined above. Basically it allows the scientist to test what happens when stem cells are introduced into a patient, without experimenting on humans. For experimentation purposes what happens is that human stem cells are implanted into an animal host, either an animal embryo or an adult animal. Most commonly used are mice and monkeys. Some of the experiments that have been done already involve implanting brain cells and creating mice with entire human immune systems. It is also worth noting that this is not an entirely new idea and that human-animal chimera also exist in the form of animal tissue implanted into humans; pig heart valves are commonly used as replacement organs for people with heart disease. The extent to which the implanted human stem cells affect the host animal is dependent on the stage at which the material is introduced. If the human stem cells are introduced into an early stage animal embryo then they have a much more profound effect because the stem cells of the host are less differentiated. If the stem cells are introduced into an adult animal the effect, in theory is much less profound because much less differentiation is taking place so the stem cells are more of an addition. But just how far should we go with the use of chimera? Where should the boundaries be drawn? When does the 'yuck' factor kick in?

The Ethics

The 'yuck factor' is the point at which our reaction to a piece of information or something we see makes us squirm. If we see a monkey running around a cage, we're unlikely to squirm even if we know that a percentage of that monkeys brain is made up of human cells. But what if we saw a sheep with human feet? Although there is no proof that this has happened, it is theoretically possible. In fact there are a lot of theoretically possible outcomes of chimeric experimentation and many of them may not be so evident to the naked eye. It is the mixing of animal and human cells that concerns the ethicists that have bothered to notice this element of stem cell research. For example how human would a monkey with 20% human cells be, is it human or monkey? Some might say that 20% human cells does not make a monkey human but where is the line to be drawn? These are some of the issues that the bioethicists are fighting with.

For more information on the chimera debate a good starting point is The Other Stem-Cell Debate

For a Christian Perspective: The Stuart Little Syndrome
CLONING

There are two basic types of cloning Reproductive cloning and Research cloning. Reproductive cloning means to recreate a genetic duplicate of a human being and in itself raise a great many ethical issues, therefore it is dealt with separately on this site. Research cloning is the use of cloning techniques to create an embryo for research purposes only.

The Science

The technique can be used to produce stem cells for research. The technique used is called Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer: SCNT, what happens is that nucleus from a body cell is transplant into an egg. Using electricity or chemicals this entity is triggered into producing an embryo. The resulting embryo can then be used to obtain embryonic stem cells. This process is also know as embryo cloning or therapeutic cloning. Some of the uses for this technique include producing patient specific stem cells, the genetic material of the patient is implanted into a donor egg thus producing stem cells that are a genetic match for the patient. This stem cells could then be used for therapeutic cell transplant. Another proposed use is that stem cells could be created with genetic disorders allowing research of that disorder to be carried out. There are however a few scientific problems; the cost of therapeutic patient specific cell production may make it a non-starter or at least only available to the very rich; the very specificness of the cells means that they can only be given to the patient they were grown for, unlike conventional drugs which can be given to almost anyone. Even though recent research has improved the efficiency of cell line production it still takes a lot of time and eggs to produce very few usable lines. Also lets be clear the technique is still only useful for research purposes and there are many hurdles to be overcome before any real human use is possible.

The Ethics

Lets not forget that cloning in itself uses human embryos whether created using the in vitro fertilization method or using donated eggs, so already we have the ethical difficulties previously outlined. But there are yet more ethical problems arising out of cloning cells. There are fears that research cloning will open the door to human cloning. With the proliferation of cloned embryos the chances of a few hundred embryos going astray becomes more possible. One of the major concerns is the treatment of the women who donate their eggs. How informed is the consent they give?

THE DONORS

Whichever method is used to obtain stem cells at some point or other an egg is needed. Adult stem cells are near to impossible to proliferate outside of an egg, embryonic stem cells are taken from an embryo. So a donor is needed; enter the women. Eggs are often donated by women who seek fertility treatment, they give their spare eggs to science. Some women are paid to produce eggs for research. As far as it is know all women give 'informed' consent for the eggs to be taken. But there are big questions being asked as to exactly how informed that consent actually is.

The Science

Cloning and stem cell production requires an enormous amount of eggs. Initial attempts at cloning needed 242 eggs to produce a single usable embryonic line, since then that figure has been reduced to 20 eggs for one embryonic line. During a normal cycle a woman produces just one egg so inevitably women are treated with drugs to stimulate multiple egg production. The process requires a two stage drug programme, firstly to shut down the ovaries and then to stimulate them to produce the eggs. A woman treated with drugs to stimulate multiple egg production can produce about 10 eggs.

The Ethics

At its simplest the procedure for egg extraction is painful and invasive. However the drugs used to stimulate multiple egg production can produce serious health risks. Whilst most women suffer only minor symptoms such as headaches or nausea some can develop much serious problems such as severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome, which can lead to dangerous fluid buildup, clotting disorders, renal failure, infertility and even death. One drug that is used in the procedure is called Lupron (leuprolide acetate) a drug that is not approved or tested for this purpose, although it is being legally used because it is approved for other purposes. Lupron has caused many problems which have been reported to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) including chest pain, nausea, depression, emotional instability, loss of libido (sex drive), amblyopia (dimness of vision), syncope (fainting), asthenia (weakness), asthenia gravis hypophyseogenea (severe weakness due to loss of pituitary function), amnesia (disturbance in memory), hypertension (high arterial blood pressure).

A woman who donates spare eggs from fertility treatment has a clear motive for wanting to undertake such a procedure, she wants a baby. However those choosing to voluntarily donate eggs will have different motivations; possibly they believe they are helping to find ways to cure disease, but how many realise just how far into the future those cures are? Maybe they are doing it for the money, tho' laws exist preventing excessive payments in some countries, in other poorer countries that money can be more than useful, but how aware are the women of the risks they are taking ?

EUGENICS AND DESIGNER BABIES

There are issues associated with the connections between stem cell research, eugenics and designer babies. It is within the area of stem cell research that information will be found that will enable scientists to pursue eugenics, the betterment of humanity and the ability for parents to choose not only the sex but also physical and character traits of their offspring, designer babies. Because these are such big issues they are covered elsewhere on this site.

Genetic Engineering Ethics

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