Preparing winemakers for climate change through cloning – ABC Online

Australia's winemakers are uniquely placed with grape types which, if cloned, could challenge established varieties in major markets such as the USA.

That is the view of Primary Research Scientist for Viticulture at South Australia's Research Development Institute Michael McCarthy.

He has been involved in the testing of cloned grapes from warm regions.

This is to gauge how they will perform in areas predicted to be warmer in 50 years' time due to climate change.

"Maybe the rest of the world might be more interested in some of our material," Dr McCarthy said.

"We have clones that just don't exist in the rest of the world anymore because our planting is clean.

"Phylloxera is not an issue, root-borne virus transmission is not an issue. We have planting material in Australia that is probably unique to the rest of the world."

Dr McCarthy was in Orange in the central west of New South Wales discussing the issue with vignerons operating in the area known for its cool climate wines.

Grapes cloned from one area of Australia may perform just as well in another region, although have different characteristics even within the new area.

"[We are] understanding how wine styles within regions may change as that region warms up going into the future," he said.

"What we are trying to do is identify sites across Australia that have the same clones in common.

"We take out the clonal difference and look at the wine style from cool to hot regions.

"So if this currently cool region becomes a warm region in 50 years' time how will those wine styles change?"

The region is known for chardonnay, which is Australia's number one white wine export, despite a decline in domestic consumption in recent years.

However this has changed with chardonnay enjoying a resurgence on the home tables.

Winemakers from the Orange region pointed out that the style of wine can change just by planting vines at different heights above sea level.

President of the Orange Vigneron Association and winemaker Justin Jarrett believed lessons had been learnt from the heady days when demand for chardonnay was exceptionally high.

"When you look at the Australian wine industry we don't want to be at the bottom of the wine ladder. You want to be up the top," he said.

"You want to deliver a product that people are prepared to pay more for."

Continued here:

Preparing winemakers for climate change through cloning - ABC Online

Sorry, ‘Jurassic Park’ fans: Scientists say dinosaur cloning probably isn’t going to happen – Travel+Leisure

Scientists at the University of Manchester have cast doubt over previous research that claimed the discovery of a protein from extinct dinosaur species.

Earlier research published in the journal Science claimed protein peptides had survived from a 68-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex. This discovery led to a proliferation of "Jurassic Park"-esque theories claiming that scientists could possibly clone the DNA and recreate the extinct dinosaurs, as happens in the classic 1993 Steven Spielberg film.

The team from Manchester found that the reported proteins could have also come from cross-contamination with the bones of ostriches or alligators, both of which were used in labs where the original studies took place, according to a press release on these new findings.

The researchers of this most recent study were quick to point out that they did not set out to disprove the findings of their colleagues, nor did their own findings definitively negate the possibility of dinosaur cloning. They had originally been studying collagen fingerprints, or the protein inside bones, and how long it can survive over time.

All this research is saying is that contamination cannot be ruled out, Mike Buckley, a zoo-archeologist someone who studies ancient animals at the University of Manchester and one of the chief researchers, told Travel + Leisure.

They found that collagen had not been proven to survive more than 3.5 million years and that the proteins the original paper claimed came from dinosaurs may very well have come from another animal.

For fans of the Jurassic Park movie franchise or those excited for the upcoming Jurassic World 2 premiere, the research might be disappointing, but its not all bad news. Ancient DNA is a field of study that paleontologists are still exploring, and nothing can be ruled out.

The more we understand how these ancient molecules survive, the idea is were more likely to be able to find real, ancient DNA which you could then take advantage of, Buckley said.

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Sorry, 'Jurassic Park' fans: Scientists say dinosaur cloning probably isn't going to happen - Travel+Leisure

Send in the clones: Orphan Black, TV’s smartest show, is back – The Guardian

An addictive blend of revenge drama and sci-fi thriller Orphan Black. Photograph: Netflix

Those and for some bizarre reason, they are few in number who have been watching Orphan Black for the past four seasons will be counting down the hours to the weekend. For this Sunday sees the start of the fifth, and final, series on Netflix of one of TVs true hidden gems.

This clever Canadian import an addictive blend of revenge drama and sci-fi thriller is that rare thing on TV these days: a mythology-heavy plot twister with characters so well-crafted, and lines so intelligently written, that you genuinely, deeply care about what happens to them.

The plot is reasonably straightforward. Just over 30 years ago, genetics company Neolution secretly perfected the idea of human cloning and implemented two projects, one male (Project Castor) and one female (Project Leda). The male clones were largely funnelled into the military, while most of the female clones were sent out into the world, some unaware of the truth of their creation, then monitored.

The central storyline follows one of those female clones, petty criminal Sarah Manning (Tatiana Maslany), who has been raised in the wild only to belatedly discover she is a clone. She struggles to find her sisters and uncover the truth about Neolution, their shadowy parent companies Dyad and Topside, and the Proletheans the religious organisation headed by a former MIT scientist turned Christian fundamentalist who is dedicated to wiping out any project survivors.

But what makes Orphan Black such a pleasure is not its plot, compelling and carefully thought out though it is, but its characterisation, and the portrayals its excellent cast proffers. Much has been made of the fact that Maslany plays all but one of the Project Leda clones. Its a fantastic feat that allows the Canadian actor to show off her range as she slips effortlessly from the British Sarah to uptight American housewife Alison or Ukrainian-raised and near-feral Helena. She inhabits each entirely, right down to their different eye rolls, ensuring that even when they talk to each other or, memorably, hang out and dance, we never think oh thats one person playing all these parts.

Maslanys performances are superlative and were rightly the subject of a campaign for Emmy recognition, which she finally won last year but it helps that she is working with an intelligent, witty script that doesnt hold back from placing womens stories at its heart. These clones are not AIs subjugated by the male gaze of their creator, but ordinary women with different backstories and separate, equally interesting lives that we respond to.

So we urge science PHD student Cosima to find a cure for the autoimmune disease attacking the clones. We root for Sarah in her quest for the truth. We laugh at and with the ditzy Krystal, who stubbornly refuses to believe shes a clone (because really shes a seven at most on a good day, and Ive been told Im a 10). We even feel sympathy for ice-cold Rachel, raised by Project Leda scientists Ethan and Susan Duncan and convinced she is the heir to Neolution, the one clone who could rule them all.

Nor is it just the clones that engage us. As Sarahs adopted brother Felix, Jordan Gavaris does his best to steal the show, while Maria Doyle Kennedy brings a wonderful hint of steel to Mrs S, Sarah and Felixs foster mother. And Rosemary Dunsmore is gloriously creepy as Susan Duncan, a woman for whom maternal warmth seems little more than a front.

This is a show preoccupied with motherhood, the role of women in society and the age-old debate of nurture v nature. The clones may all look alike but their personalities are determined by how they were raised as much as by their shared progenitor and the shows creators John Fawcett and Graeme Manson unpick these themes with subtlety and care.

A striking intelligence runs through Orphan Black. Each series takes its episode titles from a different influential work. Series one drew on Charles Darwins Origins of the Species and series two, the writings of Francis Bacon, arguably the father of scientific method. Series three quoted the farewell address of Dwight Eisenhower, a speech best known for coining the term military-industrial complex. And series four delved into the works of Californian feminist and scientist Donna Haraway, author of A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology and Socialist-Feminism in the late 20th Century. The final series will apparently reference Ella Wheeler Wilcoxs celebrated 1914 protest poem 1695 a furious rallying cry against standing silently by.

Beyond the episode titles, though, the show takes in everything from Greek mythology and Margaret Thatchers government to HG Wells creation classic The Island of Doctor Moreau, which serves as both the shows biggest influence and its best MacGuffin. Nods to further facets of the science v religion panoply are littered throughout: Felixs surname is Dawkins, Sarah first learns about the existence of clones at Huxley station, and George Bernard Shaws Pygmalion, with its tale of woman refashioned by man, is a recurring allusion.

This willingness to engage with intriguing dense, even themes while never letting the plot drag is what makes Orphan Black such fun to watch. In contrast to other mythology-heavy shows, it rarely puts a foot wrong. Will this final series bring resolution? With a story this convoluted theres always the chance that the ball will be dropped. But series fours excellently paced finale, which left a number of characters in peril while hinting that central mysteries are beginning to unravel fast, is reason enough to anticipate a conclusion worthy of all thats come before. Orphan Black is truly one of the most singular, smart and well-told pieces of television in recent years.

Orphan Black returns to Netflix on Sunday in the UK (series 1-4 are available to watch now) and on BBC America in the US and Space in Canada.

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Send in the clones: Orphan Black, TV's smartest show, is back - The Guardian

International grifter gets 5 years in prison for Denver credit card cloning scam – The Denver Post

A 27-year-old Romanian with a crime record trailing through Europe and the Middle East was sentenced to five years in prison Wednesday for his role in a credit card cloning scam in Denver.

A jury convicted Laurentiu Urziceanu on Jan. 19 of 22 felony counts including possession of a fraud device, bank fraud and aggravated identity theft. He was acquitted of one count of bulk cash smuggling.

Urziceanu and an accomplice cloned credit cards of customers at two Denver banks using sophisticated electronic devices, cameras and computers, said Tim Neff, a prosecutor inthe U.S. Attorneys Office in Denver.

Initially afraid that he would be returned to Romania upon his arrest in Chicago, Urziceanu sought political asylum by claiming that he was a gypsy who was the target of persecution in his homeland. His temporary stay in the U.S. will be behind bars.

Urziceanus arrest happened because of an observant Denver Greyhound bus teller, Neff said at Urziceanus sentencing hearing in U.S. District Court in Denver. The teller apparently believed Urziceanu might be a terrorist.

On Jan. 25, 2016, when Urziceanu tried to send fraud devices in a package through Greyhound, the teller noticed he seemed unusually hurried and his claim that the package contained a toy and sweaters was dubious. A bomb squad was calledand when they examined the contents of the box, they discovered seven pin-hole cameras and credit card skimming devices that wereplaced inside ATMs to steal credit card numbers.

Special Agent David Lauber of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security resealed the package and sent it to Chicago. When Urziceanu, using the alias Brazovics Balazs Peter, of Italy, retrieved the package, federal agents arrested him following a chase through the crowded streets of downtown Chicago, Neff said. At the time, had a forged Hungarian drivers license in his possession.

The tiny pin cameras were used to record bank pin numbers from more than 100 bank customers.

Urziceanu and his accomplice had allegedly stolen credit card information from 19 Wells Fargo Bank customers, court records indicate. They cloned credit cards and used them to withdraw $6,600 from bank accounts. The pair was in Denver only three days before going to Chicago, Neff said.

At one point, Urziceanu went to a Boulder post office on Jan. 25, 2016, and mailed a box of money to his girlfriends mother, Domnica Iovan, in Chieti, Italy.

While in Chicago, he had sent another box containing $22,000 in cash hidden in a speaker box to a family member named Ionescu Ecaterina in Rome, Italy.

Urziceanu entered the country on foot illegally near Rio Grande City, Texas, on Jan. 7, 2015, court records indicate. Neff said the international griftercame to America with larceny in his heart. Urziceanu was arrested in Texas on an immigration hold, but paid a $15,000 bond and fled the state, court records say.

The Rome Crime Squad arrested Urziceanu on April 28, 2011, outside the S. Paolo IMI Bank in Rome after he wascaught installing equipment that taped transmissions in an ATM. That July he was sentenced to from one to six months in prison.

Neff said Urziceanu was later arrested in Israel in a similar case but was not convicted of that crime.

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International grifter gets 5 years in prison for Denver credit card cloning scam - The Denver Post

B.o.B Talks Conspiracy Theories About 9/11, Snapchat, Cloning, Chemtrails, The Illuminati & More (VIDEO) – AllHipHop (blog)

(AllHipHop News)In early 2016, B.o.B became one of the most prominent faces of the so-called Flat Earth movement when the southern rapper used his Twitter feed to question the idea our world is round.

His support for the flat Earth concept even led to a back-and-forth with famed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.

Bobby Ray recently spoke with HotNewHipHop about other conspiracy theories such as Snapchat secretly gathering peoples facial scans, human cloning, UFOs,geoengineering, chemtrails, fluoride, the Illuminati, and 9/11.

I feel like [9/11] is an inside job. The evidence that has surfaced over the years I feel like there wasan insurance policy taken out on the building for terrorist attacks, ironically, said B.o.B. Its just a lot of differentthings that dont add up, so I definitely feel like its an inside job.

It was some of the conspiratorial reactions to the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that first introduced a teenage Bobby to theories about false flag operations and secret societies.

Besides being a vocal contrarian, B.o.B is also the creator of music projects such asThe Adventures of Bobby Ray,Strange Clouds,Underground Luxury, Psycadelik Thoughtz,andEther.

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B.o.B Talks Conspiracy Theories About 9/11, Snapchat, Cloning, Chemtrails, The Illuminati & More (VIDEO) - AllHipHop (blog)

Reasons Against Cloning – VIDEOS & ARTICLES

Written by Patrick Dixon

Futurist Keynote Speaker: Posts, Slides, Videos - What is Human Cloning? How to Clone. But Ethical?

Human cloning: who is cloning humans and arguments against cloning (2007)

How human clones are being made - for medical research. Arguments for and against human cloning research. Why some people want to clone themselves or even to clone the dead (and not just cloning pets).

Why investors are moving away from human cloning and why human cloning now looks a last-century way to fight disease (2007)

Should we ban human cloning? Arguments against cloning

An abnormal baby would be a nightmare come true. The technique is extremely risky right now. A particular worry is the possibility that the genetic material used from the adult will continue to age so that the genes in a newborn baby clone could be - say - 30 years old or more on the day of birth. Many attempts at animal cloning produced disfigured monsters with severe abnormalities. So that would mean creating cloned embryos, implanting them and destroying (presumably) those that look imperfect as they grow in the womb. However some abnormalities may not appear till after birth. A cloned cow recently died several weeks after birth with a huge abnormality of blood cell production. Dolly the Sheep died prematurely of severe lung disease in February 2003, and also suffered from arthritis at an unexpectedly early age - probably linked to the cloning process.

Even if a few cloned babies are born apparently normal we will have to wait up to 20 years to be sure they are not going to have problems later -for example growing old too fast. Every time a clone is made it is like throwing the dice and even a string of "healthy" clones being born would not change the likelihood that many clones born in future may have severe medical problems. And of course, that's just the ones born. What about all the disfigured and highly abnormal clones that either spontaneously aborted or were destroyed / terminated by scientists worried about the horrors they might be creating.

A child grows up knowing her mother is her sister, her grandmother is her mother. Her father is her brother-in-law. Every time her mother looks at her, she is seeing herself growing up. Unbearable emotional pressures on a teenager trying to establish his or her identity. What happens to a marriage when the "father" sees his wife's clone grow up into the exact replica (by appearance) of the beautiful 18 year old he fell in love with 35 years ago? A sexual relationship would of course be with his wife's twin, no incest involved technically.

Or maybe the child knows it is the twin of a dead brother or sister. What kind of pressures will he or she feel, knowing they were made as a direct replacement for another? It is a human experiment doomed to failure because the child will NOT be identical in every way, despite the hopes of the parents. One huge reason will be that the child will be brought up in a highly abnormal household: one where grief has been diverted into makeing a clone instead of adjusting to loss. The family environment will be totally different than that the other twin experienced. That itself will place great pressures on the emotional development of the child. You will not find a child psychiatrist in the world who could possibly say that there will not be very significant emotional risk to the cloned child as a result of these pressures.

What would Hitler have done with cloning technology if available in the 1940s? There are powerful leaders in every generation who will seek to abuse this technology for their own purposes. Going ahead with cloning technology makes this far more likely. You cannot have so-called therapeutic cloning without reproductive cloning because the technique to make cloned babies is the same as to make a cloned embryo to try to make replacement tissues. And at the speed at which biotech is accelerating there will soon be other ways to get such cells - adult stem cell technology. It is rather crude to create a complete embryonic identical twin embryo just to get hold of stem cells to make - say - nervous tissue. Much better to take cells from the adult and trigger them directly to regress to a more primitive form without the ethical issues raised by inserting a full adult set of genes into an unfertilised egg.

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Reasons Against Cloning - VIDEOS & ARTICLES

Cloning Your VS 2017 Packages – Microsoft – Channel 9 (blog)

So, you've just installed VS 2017. Now you want to "copy" that setup and share what you installed with your coworkers, say you're trying to create a standard work or class setup...

How do you capture what you installed? You're sure there's some kind of command line switch or something, some way to export your currently installed VS 2017 setup/package/workload?

Nope.

There is a cool new VS 2017 Setup API, Setup Configuration, though, with code samples and everything. Maybe that can be used?

Yep!

Today's quick and dirty project from Tim Sneath uses the Setup Configuration API to capture and export your currently installed packages, generating the command line parameters that you can use to install a like looking VS setup on another PC.

timsneath/vs-clone

Clones a Visual Studio 2017 installation so it can be reproduced on another machine. Run this on a machine that already has Visual Studio 2017 installed, and it will interrogate the instance of Visual Studio to identify what workloads and components were selected, and attempt to create a command line that recreates the same installation.

Syntax:

...

... [Click through for the repo]

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Cloning Your VS 2017 Packages - Microsoft - Channel 9 (blog)

Woodbury Police Need Your Help In Credit Card Cloning Case – Patch – Patch.com


Patch.com
Woodbury Police Need Your Help In Credit Card Cloning Case - Patch
Patch.com
Woodbury, MN - Woodbury police are trying to solve a credit card cloning case, and need the public's help. Can you identify this individual?
Police seek help identifying woman suspected in credit card cloning ...Woodbury Bulletin

all 2 news articles »

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Woodbury Police Need Your Help In Credit Card Cloning Case - Patch - Patch.com

Hair Cloning is Happening – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

By the time theyre 50, 85 percent of American men will have significant hair loss, according to the American Hair Loss Association.

Now, an international team of hair restoration doctors is turning to cutting-edge science to grow more hair through cloning.

Ric Ortega has dealt with hair loss for a while. For him, it's a health concern.

Im outside a lot because I work in the construction industry, and I worry about skin cancer on the top of my head, explained Ortega.

Ortega is considering a hair cloning clinical trial with Kenneth Williams, Jr. D.O, a hair restoration surgeon with Orange County Hair Restoration in Irvine, California.

Williams is working with Hair Clone, a British company that believes it will perfect the science of cloning hair.

The typical candidate would be someone who has had multiple surgeries and cant have any more hair transplantations, but they do have lots of areas of balding, Williams said.

Doctors would harvest 50 hair follicles and send them to a cryopreservation tank in England. Surgeons there would remove the hair shaft from the bulb, which holds cells that control growth. Then, the cells are multiplied in a special cell culture.

Then, when the patient is ready, they have the actual transplantation," Williams explained. "They would let us know and wed go through the process of replication, and shortly, those 50 cells will now turn into 1,500 cells.

The trial would cost Ortega between $4,000 and $10,000, plus airfare to England, where hed get his cloned hair. England is the only western country that allows this type of treatment.

Williams said hair cloning is the next biggest frontier in hair science.

Hair Clone hopes to start a small trial in England later this year.

The good news is, companies around the world are racing to start hair cloning trials as soon as they can.

Published at 5:57 PM CDT on Apr 7, 2017

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Hair Cloning is Happening - NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Hard drive imaging vs. cloning: What’s the difference? – Windows Central


Windows Central
Hard drive imaging vs. cloning: What's the difference?
Windows Central
Before you perform either process on your PC, it's good to know exactly what imaging and cloning are. They both involve creating a backup of your hard drive, but there are significant differences that make them suitable for different situations ...

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Hard drive imaging vs. cloning: What's the difference? - Windows Central

Police warn of criminals cloning credit cards using stolen information – ABC Action News

We all know our credit card information is under constant attack, but according to law enforcement, more criminals are using that information to make physical, fraudulent credit cards.

"The criminals who have bee doing this for a while, it's actually really easy," Detective Tim White, with the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office Economic Crime Division, said. They're able to buy the different mechanisms to make the cards and to re-code the mag-strip that's on the back of the card."

Law enforcement just arrested 34-year-old Joandy Jimenez of Miami with 20 counterfeit cards at a gas station on Gunn Highway. He was using the cards to fill an illegal bladder with as much gasoline as he could.

According to White, the criminals can re-code old credit cards or prepaid debit cards. Some criminals have the ability to print brand new cards.

"They may even print a fake number on the front of it," he said.

White says some clerks are checking to see if numbers match after the card is swiped and new chip technology is making counterfeiting more difficult.

He says the most popular ways for criminals to get your information is through unsecured wifi connections, unprotected websites and skimmers at gas stations and ATMs.

He said the best way to keep from becoming a victim is to check your credit card and bank activity daily.

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Police warn of criminals cloning credit cards using stolen information - ABC Action News

This man is cloning old-growth redwoods and planting them in safe places (video) – Treehugger

David Milarch is on a quest to save California's coast redwoods, some of the world's oldest and largest living things; he may be saving the planet along the way.

There is nothing like a coast redwood. Sequoia sempervirens is the planets tallest tree, soaring to heights of more than 320 feet into the sky. They have trunks of more than 27 feet wide and can live for over 2,000 years. Some of the arboreal gentle giants living today were alive during the time of the Roman Empire.

Before the mid-19th century, coast redwoods spread throughout a range of some 2 million acres along the California coast, starting at Big Sur and stretching all the way into southern Oregon. People had been peacefully co-existing with the forests forever. But with the gold rush came the logging; today only 5 percent of the original old-growth coast redwood forest remains along a 450-mile strip of coast. And as the planet warms up, the specific conditions required by the redwoods change; their future doesn't look so great. Animals can migrate north to escape the south's warming temperatures and consequential habitat change; trees, not so much.

But with David Milarch on the case, maybe they can.

In 1991, Milarch, an arborist from Michigan, literally died from renal failure, before being revived and springing back to life. There's nothing like a near-death experience to inspire a new course in life, as was the case with Milarch. His new quest? To harvest the genetics of the coast redwoods and give them an assist in migration.

"I feel tremendous sorrow that 95 percent of them were killed and we didnt even know what they do to anchor our ability as human beings to live on this planet," says Milarch. "We killed them. Thats the bad news. Its my job when I walk through there [the forest] to yell out to those trees, to hold those trees, and say Im here to do everything in my power on Earth to bring all the human beings and all the help that I can to put this back. To put back every single tree that was cut down and killed. And Im going to do it."

By cloning and replanting them in places where they once thrived but were lost, he is not only increasing their numbers but planting them in locations where they have a better chance of longevity. And the result is two-fold: Save the trees and save the planet (for humankind, at least, the planet will go on with or without us, but you know what I mean). Redwood trees are among the most effective carbon sequestration tools in the world, notes Moving the Giants, Milarch takes part in a global effort to use one of natures most impressive achievements to re-chart a positive course for humanity.

To learn more about Milarch and the work he is doing, watch this wonderful short film. It might make you wonder if one can become an angel from a near-death experience alone.

For more on the project and how to help, visit Archangel Ancient Tree Archive.

Continue reading here:

This man is cloning old-growth redwoods and planting them in safe places (video) - Treehugger

Facebook gives zero fucks about cloning Snapchat, adds geostickers in Instagram – TNW

Instagram now has geostickers similar to those found on Snapchat. Why? Because parent company Facebook has apparently given its last fuck.

Instagram todayannouncedthe introduction of geostickers to Stories. When you post a new image to your Instagram Story, you can add a sticker of the locale it was taken. This is pretty much the same as Snapchats geostickers, only with subtle design differences.

Gary Vaynerchuk was so impressed with TNW Conference 2016 he paused mid-talk to applaud us.

Credit: Instagram

Since launching Stories, Instagram has not-so-secretly started poaching Snapchats best features. Since, the social app has seen an explosion of new users. Stories, in fact, mirrors Snaps so closely from text and emoji overlays to the single feed layout that Instagram may have slowed the growth of its rival service.

Snapchat first introduced geostickers last August. They functioned very similarly to Snapchats existing geofilters, which are region-specific filters you can put over your pictures.

Apparently, Instagrams explosion post-Snapchat-lite makeover is the reason Facebook is testing a similar Story feature for Facebook.

Currently, Instagram Stories only have stickers for New York and Jakarta, although theyre not available for all users yet.

New Geostickers in Instagram Stories for New York City and Jakarta on Instagram

Read next: Palo Alto startup predicts retail failure via satellite images

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Facebook gives zero fucks about cloning Snapchat, adds geostickers in Instagram - TNW

Waxhaw police: Man charged with credit card cloning – WSOC Charlotte

by: Liz Foster Updated: Mar 3, 2017 - 10:17 PM

WAXHAW, N.C. - A man accused of cloning credit cards and using them across the entire region is facing charges after being arrested in Louisiana.

Waxhaw police have been looking for Derrick Butler for several months.

(Butler)

They said he cloned a credit card belonging to a Waxhaw woman, used it at a Charlotte store and signed his real name.

Detectives got surveillance video from the store and matched the picture and signature to the one on his drivers license. Butler was charged with identity theft and credit card fraud.

Investigators believe Butler is part of a larger group of people who are cloning credit cards and using them across the entire middle part of the state.

They said the group may be cloning cards and using them across the Charlotte area.

Detectives told Channel 9 at one point, Butler and others were in the High Point areaand found in possession ofdozens of cloned cards.

The case is still under investigation and Waxhaw police are trying to identify at least one other person suspected of fraud. They're also trying to figure out how the credit cards were cloned.

Read more top trending stories onwsoctv.com:

2017 Cox Media Group.

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Waxhaw police: Man charged with credit card cloning - WSOC Charlotte

‘Miracle of nature’ Scientists a step closer to HUMAN CLONING after creating mouse embryos – Express.co.uk

Scientists have managed to develop a mouse embryo structure using stem cells grown under laboratory conditions, according to findings published in the academic journal Science.

The cells then grew into primitive embryos that had identical internal structures to those that emerge under normal development in the womb.

Researchers hope to gain a deeper insight into how embryos develop just before implantation.

Getty

The development marks significant progress in embryo development as previously attempts to grow artificial cells had only had limited success.

Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, who led the team, said: Im looking at it as a miracle of nature as well as trying to understand the process. Its incredibly beautiful that we can begin to understand those forces that give rise to self-organisation during the earliest stage of development.

The embryos were developed from a combination of genetically modified mouse cells, known a master cells and a 3D scaffold, referred to as an extracellular matrix, where the cells could grow.

Prof Zernicka-Goetz said: Both the embryonic and extra-embryonic cells start to talk to each other and become organised into a structure that looks like and behaves like an embryo.

The research could eventually be useful in the understanding of miscarriages and infertility should the procedure be carried out on human cells.

One in six pregnancies end in miscarriage, though there is still no explicit answer to how this happens.

Getty

She said: If we can translate the knowledge into humans it will be incredibly powerful for understanding our own development at a stage when many human lives are lost.

However researchers said although the artificial embryo closely resembles a natural one, it is unlikely to develop further into a healthy mouse foetus. This would require a yolk sac, which provides nourishment for the embryo and where blood vessels develop.

Experiments are currently legally carried out on leftover human embryos from In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF), but these can only be held for a maximum of 14 days under legal frameworks.

Getty

The outcome of the experiment has also been criticised by some concerned that it may pave the way for genetically modified (GM) humans.

Dr David King, the Director of Human Genetics Alert, said: What concerns me about the possibility of artificial embryos is that this may become a route to creating GM or even cloned babies.

Until there is an enforceable global ban on those possibilities this kind of research risks doing the scientific groundwork for entrepreneurs who will use the technologies in countries with no regulations.

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'Miracle of nature' Scientists a step closer to HUMAN CLONING after creating mouse embryos - Express.co.uk

We know Dolly the sheep was cloned 20 years ago, but how old was she at birth? – Washington Post

By Jos Cibelli By Jos Cibelli March 3 at 12:41 PM

In 1997 Dolly the sheep was introduced to the world by biologists Keith Campbell, Ian Wilmut and colleagues. Not just any lamb, Dolly was a clone. Rather than being made from a sperm and an egg, she originated with a mammary gland cell of a no-longerliving six-year-old Fynn Dorset ewe.

With her birth, a scientific and societal revolution was also born.

Some prominent scientists thought it was too good to be true. But more animals were cloned: first the laboratory mouse, then cows, goats, pigs, horses, even dogs, ferrets and camels. By early 2000, the issue was settled: Dolly was real and cloning adults was possible.

The implications of cloning animals in our society were self-evident from the start. Our advancing ability to reprogram adult, already specialized cells and start them over as something new may one day be the key to creating cells and organs that match the immune system of each individual patient in need of replacements.

But what somehow got lost was the fact that a clone was born at Day Zero created from the cell of another animal that was six years old. Researchers have spent the past 20 years trying to untangle the mysteries of how clones age. How old, biologically, are these animals born from other adult animals cells?

Decades of cloning research

Dolly became an international celebrity, but she was not the first vertebrate to be cloned from a cell taken from the body of another animal. In 1962, developmental biologist John Gurdon cloned the first adult animal by taking a cell from the intestine of one frog and injecting it into an egg of another. Gurdons work did not go unnoticed he went on to share the 2012 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine. But it was Dolly who captured our imagination. Was it because she was a warm-blooded animal, a mammal, much closer to human? If you could do it in a sheep, you could do it in us!

Dolly, along with Gurdons frogs from 35 years earlier and all the other experiments in between, redirected our scientific studies. It was amazing to see a differentiated cell an adult cell specialized to do its particular job transform into an embryonic one that could go on to give rise to all the other cells of a normal body. We researchers wondered whether we could go further: Could we in the lab make an adult cell once again undifferentiated, without needing to make a cloned embryo?

A decade after Dolly was announced, stem cell researcher Shynia Yamanakas team did just that. He went on to be the Nobel co-recipient with Gurdon for showing that mature cells could be reprogrammed to become pluripotent: able to develop into any specialized adult cell.

Now we have the possibility of making individualized replacement cells potentially any kind to replace tissue damaged by injury, genetic disorders and degeneration. Not only cells: We may soon be able to have our own organs grown in a nonhuman host, ready to be transplanted when needed.

If Dolly was responsible for unleashing the events that culminate in new methods of making fully compatible cells and organs, then her legacy would be to improve the health of practically all human beings on this planet. And yet I am convinced that there are even better things to come.

Dollys secrets still unfolding

In the winter of 2013, I found myself driving on the wrong side of the road through the Nottingham countryside. In contrast to the luscious landscape, I was in a state of gloom: I was on my way to see Keith Campbells family after his sudden death a few weeks earlier.

Keith was a smart, fun, loving friend who, along with Ian Wilmut and colleagues at the Roslin Institute, had brought us Dolly 15 years earlier. We had met at a conference in the early 1990s, when we were both budding scientists playing around with cloning, Keith with sheep, I with cows. An extrovert by nature, he quickly dazzled me with his wit, self-deprecating humor and nonstop chat, all delivered in a thick West Midlands accent. Our friendship that began then continued until his death.

When I knocked at the door of his quaint farmhouse, my plan was to stay just a few minutes, pay my respects to his wife and leave. Five hours and several Guinnesses later, I left feeling grateful. Keith could do that to you, but this time it wasnt Keith, it was his latest work speaking for him. Thats because his wife very generously told me about the project Keith had been working on at the time of his death. I couldnt hide my excitement: Could it be possible that after 20 years, the most striking aspect of Dollys legacy was not yet revealed?

See, when Dolly was cloned, she was created using a cell from a six-year-old sheep. And she died at age 6 , a premature death for a breed that lives an average of nine years or more. People assumed that an offspring cloned from an adult was starting at an age disadvantage; rather than truly being a newborn, it seemed as though a clones internal age would be more advanced than the length of its own life would suggest. Thus the notion that clones biological age and their chronological one were out of sync and that cloned animals will die young.

Some of us were convinced that if the cloning procedure was done properly, the biological clock should be reset: A newborn clone would truly start at Day Zero. We worked very hard to prove our point. We were not convinced by a single DNA analysis done in Dolly showing slightly shorter telomeres, the repetitive DNA sequences at the end of chromosomes that count how many times a cell divides. We presented strong scientific evidence showing that cloned cows had all the same molecular signs of aging as a non-clone, predicting a normal life span. Others showed the same in cloned mice. But we couldnt ignore reports from colleagues interpreting biological signs in cloned animals that they attributed to incomplete resetting of the biological clock. So the jury was out.

Aging studies are very hard to do because there are only two data points that really count: date of birth and date of death. If you want to know the life span of an individual, you have to wait until its natural death. Little did I know, that is what Keith had been doing back in 2012.

On that Saturday afternoon I spent in Keiths house in Nottingham, I saw a photo of the animals in Keiths latest study: several cloned Dollies, all much older than Dolly at the time she had died, and they looked terrific. I was in awe.

The data were confidential, so I had to remain silent until late last year when the work was posthumously published. Keiths co-authors humbly said: For those clones that survive beyond the perinatal period ... the emerging consensus, supported by the current data, is that they are healthy and seem to age normally.

These findings became even more relevant when in December researchers at the Scripps Research Institute found that induced pluripotent stem cells reprogrammed using the Yamanaka factors retain the aging epigenetic signature of the donor individual. In other words, using these four genes to attempt to reprogram the cells does not seem to reset the biological clock.

The new Dollies are now telling us that if we take a cell from an animal of any age and we introduce its nucleus into a non-fertilized mature egg, we can have an individual born with its life span fully restored. They confirmed that all signs of biological and chronological age matched between cloned and non-cloned sheep.

There seems to be a natural, built-in mechanism in the eggs that can rejuvenate a cell. We dont know what it is yet, but it is there. Our group as well as others are hard at work, and as soon as someone finds it, the most astonishing legacy of Dolly will be realized.

Cibelli is scientific director of the Larcel-Bionand laboratory in Spain and a professor of animal biotechnology at Michigan State University. This article was originally published on theconversation.com.

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We know Dolly the sheep was cloned 20 years ago, but how old was she at birth? - Washington Post

Facts About Cloning – Live Science

Dolly the Sheep in a field at The Roslin Institute.

Cloning is the process of taking genetic information from one living thing and creating identical copies of it. The copied material is called a clone. Geneticists have cloned cells, tissues, genes and entire animals.

Although this process may seem futuristic, nature has been doing it for millions of years. For example, identical twins have almost identical DNA, and asexual reproduction in some plants and organisms can produce genetically identical offspring. And scientists make genetic doubles in the lab, though the process is a little different.

There are three different types of cloning, according to the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI):

In gene cloning, a genetic engineer extracts DNA from an organism and then uses enzymes to break the bonds between nucleotides (the basic building blocks of DNA) and snip the strand into gene-size pieces, according to the University of Nebraska.

Plasmids, small bits of DNA in bacterial cells, are combined with the genes. Then, they are transferred into living bacteria. These bacteria are allowed to grow into colonies to be studied. When a colony of bacteria containing a gene of interest is located, the bacteria can be propagated to make millions of copies of the plasmids. Then, the plasmids can be extracted for gene modification and transformation.

Gene modification, or gene design, is when a genetic engineer cuts the gene apart and replaces regions of it with new material. Transformation is the step in which the new genetic material is transferred to a new organism, which changed it genetically. The organism, such as a plant, is grown, and the seeds they produce have inherited the new genetic properties.

Reproductive cloning

In reproductive cloning, a genetic engineer removes a mature somatic cell (any cell except for reproductive cells) from an organism and transfers the DNA into an egg cell that has had its own DNA removed, according to the NHGRI. Then, the egg is jump-started chemically to start the reproductive process. Finally, the egg is implanted into the uterus of a female of the same species as the egg.

The mother gives birth to an animal that has the same genetic makeup as the animals that donated the somatic cell. This was the process that produced Dolly the sheep.

Therapeutic cloning

Therapeutic cloning works in a similar way to reproductive cloning. A cell is taken from an animal's skin and is inserted into the outer membrane of a donor egg cell. Then, the egg is chemically induced so that it creates embryonic stem cells. These stem cells can be harvested and used in experiments aimed at understanding diseases and developing new treatments. [Infographic: How Stem Cell Cloning Works]

The first study of cloning took place in 1885, when German scientist Hans Adolf Eduard Driesch began researching reproduction. In 1902, he was able to create a set of twin salamanders by dividing an embryo into two separate, viable embryos, according to the Genetic Science Learning Center. Since then, there have been many breakthroughs in cloning.

In 1958, British biologist John Gurdon cloned frogs from the skin cells of adult frogs. On July 5, 1996, a female sheep gave birth to the now-famous Dolly, a Finn Dorset lamb the first mammal to be cloned from the cells of an adult animal at the Roslin Institute in Scotland.

"The birth of Dolly and the new understanding of the opportunity to change the functioning of cells made researchers consider other possible ways of modifying cells," Ian Wilmut, the scientist who led the team that created Dolly, told Live Science.

Since Dolly, many more animal clones have been born, and the process is becoming more mainstream. Research has also been conducted on human-cell cloning. In 2013, scientists at Oregon Health and Science University took donor DNA from an 8-month-old with a rare genetic disease and successfully cloned human embryonic stem cells for the first time. Unfortunately, the researchers didn't remove the cells to save the child. The project was to prove that mature donor cells could be used to produce new ones. This research has evolved into using stem cells for many different applications, including hair regrowth, treatments for burns and more.

Several companies are currently providing services that use cloning technology. For example, South Korea-based Sooam Biotech clones pets for around $100,000. And a Texas-based company, Viagen Pets, clones cats for $25,000 and dogs for $50,000.

Even plants are being cloned. One company is cloning maple trees to provide lumber for guitar-makers, with the aim of duplicating a quality in the wood, called figuring, that gives a guitar a sort of shimmering appearance.

There are many other applications for cloning. The movie "Jurassic Park" stirred the public's imagination and asked the question, "Can we use cloning to bring back extinct species through cloning?" For this process to be successful, scientists would need living DNA from the extinct animal and a living animal egg that is closely related to the extinct creature.

On July 30, 2003, a group of scientists led by Jose Folch at the Center of Food Technology and Research of Aragon, in northern Spain, brought back an extinct wild goat called a bucardo, or Pyrenean ibex. The cloned animal lived for only 10 minutes, according to National Geographic, but the scientists proved that an extinct animal could be brought back. Researchers at Harvard are currently working to clone woolly mammoths, and they say they should be able to do so by 2019.

While cloning a human is currently illegal in most parts of the world, cloning stem cells from humans is a very promising field of research. Stem cells can be reprogrammed to become any type of cell needed to repair or replace damaged tissue or cells in the body. Stem cell research has the potential to help people who have spinal injuries and other conditions.

Another area of research, the cloning of hair follicles, began more than a decade ago. It's just one potential application of human-cell cloning: treating hair loss. "We have learned recently that human hair cells lose their potential to multiply when expanded in cell cultures in a petri dish," said Ken L. Williams Jr., a surgeon and founder of Orange County Hair Restoration and author of "Hair Transplant 360: Follicular Unit Extraction" (Jp Medical Ltd., 2015). "Global gene expression analysis of the human hair follicle, however, has revealed that a special 3D spheroid culture may be able to allow cloning of hair cells in the future years. By manipulating the environment that the human hair cells grow, induction or expansion of hair cells occurs."

Another example of practical human-cell cloning is to use stem cells to help burns heal. A biotech company, RenovaCare, has created what it calls the CellMist System. In this process, stem cells are applied to the burned area on the patient, and that application triggers new skin-cell growth. Though it's still experimental, this process could help burn victims heal faster and experience less scarring.

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Facts About Cloning - Live Science

Is Max cloning Tracey the barmaid to take over Walford in … – Metro – Metro

(Picture: BBC)

EastEnders could be set to turn sci-fi as fans may have discovered the first hints of a shocking CLONING storyline which will see Max Branning deploy ANDROIDS disguised as background character Tracey the barmaid in his bid to take over Albert Square.

The shocking turn of events will see the schemer, who we have already seen plotting to bring down the Queen Vic, create an army of Traceys which will leave the Carters and the rest of the community quivering with fear.

The plan is genius in its execution as no-one ever notices silent Tracey, it will be too late by the time characters realise that the Square is actually overrun with clones of the dutiful pint puller. But in a heart-stopping twist, Maxs best laid plans were nearly destroyed when Tracey actually spoke. Luckily, the Tracey that Shirley was talkingwith was the genuine article and Max breathed a sigh of relief.

While the characters are oblivious to Maxs slow burning plan, savvy fans and press have already spotted it coming to fruition. As while the real Tracey was talking with Shirley in the Vic, one of the cunningly placed droids was immersed in the pancake race crowd outside. And who knows how many others are lurking about?

And disaster soon struck when Ian Beale took a funny turn, collapsing to the ground after feeling dizzy during the race. Could this have been the work of Tracey Clone Unit TX13-40Y?

An EastEnders source whispered to us: We are very keen to preserve the secrecy of this storyline, but suffice to say we are working in conjunction with the Doctor Who team to create an explosive and pretty hypnotic series of twists for fans.

Maxs shocking plan to clone Tracey may not have gone unnoticed by fans but it will strike the heart of the Walford community without warning and soon, they will realise that incidents such as the bus crash and the materialisation of devil incarnate Keegan are all connected. Traceys clones are powerful forces to be reckoned with and Max may be about to win this war.

It is thought that actress Jane Slaughter will soon find herself appearing several times in all scenes, meaning that the extra will become the busiest member of the soap cast.

Rumours of this creating disharmony among the rest of the actors have been blown out of proportion, although an on set mole has suggested that many werent happy that Tracey the Barmaid will soon utter the iconic line: Get outta my pub! to the Carters while flanked by Max and 30 of her clones.

DISCLAIMER: We may be taking the piss ever so slightly. The real story is that Tracey appeared in two scenes in a row but given that soap episodes arent filmed in real time, this isnt really a massive issue. Let Tracey enjoy the pancake race.

MORE: EastEnders spoilers: Keegan exacts a cruel porn video revenge on teen Bex Fowler with huge consequences

MORE: EastEnders spoilers: What is wrong with Ian Beale as he suffers a shock collapse?

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Is Max cloning Tracey the barmaid to take over Walford in ... - Metro - Metro

20 Years After Dolly: Cloning Past, Present and Future – KQED

Its been 20 years since scientists in Scotland told the world about Dolly the sheep, the first mammal successfully cloned from an adult body cell. What was special about Dolly is that her parents were actually a single cell originating from mammary tissue of an adult ewe. Dolly was an exact genetic copy of that sheep a clone.

Dolly captured peoples imaginations, but those of us in the field had seen her coming through previous research. Ive been working with mammalian embryos for over 40 years, with some work in my lab specifically focusing on various methods of cloning cattle and other livestock species. In fact, one of the coauthors of the paper announcing Dolly worked in our laboratory for three years prior to going to Scotland to help create the famous clone.

Dolly was an important milestone, inspiring scientists to continue improving cloning technology as well as to pursue new concepts in stem cell research. The endgame was never meant to be armies of genetically identical livestock: Rather, researchers continue to refine the techniques and combine them with other methods to turbocharge traditional animal breeding methods as well as gain insights into aging and disease.

Not the Usual Sperm + Egg

Dolly was a perfectly normal sheep who became the mother of numerous normal lambs. She lived to six and a half years, when she was eventually put down after a contagious disease spread through her flock, infecting cloned and normally reproduced sheep alike. Her life wasnt unusual; its her origin that made her unique.

Before the decades of experiments that led to Dolly, it was thought that normal animals could be produced only by fertilization of an egg by a sperm. Thats how things naturally work. These germ cells are the only ones in the body that have their genetic material all jumbled up and in half the quantity of every other kind of cell. That way when these so-called haploid cells come together at fertilization, they produce one cell with the full complement of DNA. Joined together, the cell is termed diploid, for twice, or double. Two halves make a whole.

From that moment forward, nearly all cells in that body have the same genetic makeup. When the one-cell embryo duplicates its genetic material, both cells of the now two-cell embryo are genetically identical. When they in turn duplicate their genetic material, each cell at the four-cell stage is genetically identical. This pattern goes on so that each of the trillions of cells in an adult is genetically exactly the same whether its in a lung or a bone or the blood.

In contrast, Dolly was produced by whats called somatic cell nuclear transfer. In this process, researchers remove the genetic material from an egg and replace it with the nucleus of some other body cell. The resulting egg becomes a factory to produce an embryo that develops into an offspring. No sperm is in the picture; instead of half the genetic material coming from a sperm and half from an egg, it all comes from a single cell. Its diploid from the start.

Long Research Path Led to Dolly

Dolly was the culmination of hundreds of cloning experiments that, for example, showed diploid embryonic and fetal cells could be parents of offspring. But there was no way to easily know all the characteristics of the animal that would result from a cloned embryo or fetus. Researchers could freeze a few of the cells of a 16-cell embryo, while going on to produce clones from the other cells; if a desirable animal was produced, they could thaw the frozen cells and make more copies. But this was impractical because of low success rates.

Dolly demonstrated that adult somatic cells also could be used as parents. Thus, one could know the characteristics of the animal being cloned.

By my calculations, Dolly was the single success from 277 tries at somatic cell nuclear transfer. Sometimes the process of cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer still produces abnormal embryos, most of which die. But the process has greatly improved so success rates now are more like 10 percent; its highly variable, though, depending on the cell type used and the species.

More than 10 different cell types have been used successfully as parents for cloning. These days most cloning is done using cells obtained by biopsying skin.

More Than Genes Can Affect a Clone

Genetics is only part of the story. Even while clones are genetically identical, their phenotypes the characteristics they express will be different. Its like naturally occurring identical twins: They share all their genes but theyre not really exactly alike, especially if reared in different settings.

Environment plays a huge role for some characteristics. Food availability can influence weight. Diseases can stunt growth. These kinds of lifestyle, nutrition or disease effects can influence which genes are turned on or off in an individual; these are called epigenetic effects. Even though all the genetic material may be the same in two identical clones, they might not be expressing all the same genes.

Consider the practice of cloning winning racehorses. Clones of winners sometimes also will be winners but most of the time theyre not. This is because winners are outliers; they need to have the right genetics, but also the right epigenetics and the right environment to reach that winning potential. For example, one can never exactly duplicate the uterine conditions a winning racehorse experienced when it was a developing fetus. Thus, cloning champions usually leads to disappointment. On the other hand, cloning a stallion that sires a high proportion of race-winning horses will result very reliably in a clone that similarly sires winners. This is a genetic rather than a phenotypic situation.

Even though the genetics are reliable, there are aspects of the cloning procedure that mean the epigenetics and environment are suboptimal. For example, sperm have elegant ways of activating the eggs they fertilize, which will die unless activated properly; with cloning, activation usually is accomplished by a strong electric shock. Many of the steps of cloning and subsequent embryonic development are done in test tubes in incubators. These conditions are not perfect substitutes for the female reproductive tract where fertilization and early embryonic development normally occur.

Sometimes abnormal fetuses develop to term, resulting in abnormalities at birth. The most striking abnormal phenotype of some clones is termed large offspring syndrome, in which calves or lambs are 30 or 40 percent larger than normal, resulting in difficult birth. The problems stem from an abnormal placenta. At birth, these clones are genetically normal, but are overly large, and tend to be hyperinsulinemic and hypoglycemic. (The conditions normalize over time once the offspring is no longer influenced by the abnormal placenta.)

Recent improvements in cloning procedures have greatly reduced these abnormalities, which also occur with natural reproduction, but at a much lower incidence.

Continuing Onward With Cloning

Many thousands of cloned mammals have been produced in nearly two dozen species. Very few of these concern practical applications, such as cloning a famous Angus bull named Final Answer (who recently died at an old age) in order to produce more high-quality cattle via his clones sperm.

But the cloning research landscape is changing fast. The driving force for producing Dolly was not to produce genetically identical animals. Rather researchers want to combine cloning techniques with other methods in order to efficiently change animals genetically much quicker than traditional animal breeding methods that take decades to make changes in populations of species such as cattle.

One recent example is introducing the polled (no horns) gene into dairy cattle, thus eliminating the need for the painful process of dehorning. An even more striking application has been to produce a strain of pigs that is incapable of being infected by the very contagious and debilitating PRRS virus. Researchers have even made cattle that cannot develop Mad Cow Disease. For each of these procedures, somatic cell nuclear transplantation is an essential part of the process.

To date, the most valuable contribution of these somatic cell nuclear transplantation experiments has been the scientific information and insights gained. Theyve enhanced our understanding of normal and abnormal embryonic development, including aspects of aging, and more. This information is already helping reduce birth defects, improve methods of circumventing infertility, develop tools to fight certain cancers and even decrease some of the negative consequences of aging in livestock and even in people. Two decades since Dolly, important applications are still evolving.

George Seidelis aprofessor of biomedical science atColorado State University.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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20 Years After Dolly: Cloning Past, Present and Future - KQED

The Angels had two No. 97s on the basepaths, may be cloning their players – MLB.com

By Matt Monagan |

What do you do if you have a solid, up-and-coming prospect in your farm system? Do you trade him away for an experienced veteran? Do you play him every day, hoping that he alone can bring your franchise a World Series championship?

No, that's silly. Any forward-thinking GM would just keep cloning the player and build an army of young, tireless talent that takes them through the postseason.

The Angels seemed to be ahead of the curve during their 7-5 Spring Training win over the Cubs on Tuesday -- featuring a No. 97 at first and No. 97 at third in the eighth inning.

Soon to be.

Major kudos to Los Angeles' GM Billy Eppler. If they win, they'll have changed the fabric of -- oh wait, MLB.com's Maria Guardado reports that that's actually Chad Hinshaw at third base and Michael Barash at first. Hinshaw wears No. 97 at Minor League camp, while Barash sports the digits on the Major League fields. So, no clones. I guess that's probably a good thing.

But just imagine the possibilities...

This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

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The Angels had two No. 97s on the basepaths, may be cloning their players - MLB.com