Why Designing Our Own Biology Will Be the Next Big Thing in Medicine – Singularity Hub

Its hard to watch a loved one get sick. Their eyes go glassy. Their breathing is punctuated by body-wracking coughs. Feverish and aching, they struggle to get out of bed.

Hard as these symptoms are to witness, theyre so familiar you dont need a medical degree to know its probably a bad cold and maybe the flu. Get some rest, hydrate, pop some ibuprofen, see a doctor if the symptoms significantly worsenand wash your hands, for heavens sake.

For most of history, however, even the finest physicians only slowly advanced beyond the basics of biology and medicine we take for granted. There have long been forms of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention, but these were rudimentary at best and superstitious at worst.

The history of innovation is not that excitinguntil you get to the 20th century, Jane Metcalfe, cofounder of Wired and founder of Neo.Life, told the audience at Singularity Universitys Exponential Medicine in San Diego this week.

Since then, biology and medicine have been on a tear, Metcalfe said. Early last century, doctors mastered blood transfusions and complex surgeries. They began controlling and eradicating infectious disease with sterilization, antibiotics, and vaccines and found drugs to manage pain.

Then, around the middle of the century, scientists began amassing a deep body of biological knowledgeknowledge were now using to manipulate the fundamental processes of living things.

Its a familiar story, but one that suggests something radical. Just as physics and chemistry have given humans power over the world of the inanimate, biology is giving us the ability to engineer living systems, from viruses and bacteria to animals and people.

Which is why Metcalfe thinks design could be the next big thing in medicine.

Well combat disease and improve human health by designing biological systems from the ground up. We can design embryos. We can edit genes in humans. We have synthetic biology. And so we really are looking at designing future humans, Metcalfe said.

The best known bio-design tool to date is undoubtedly CRISPR genome editing. With CRISPR, scientists are closer than ever to manipulating genes down to the letter.

There are now a number of increasingly refined CRISPR-based systems, the latest of which, CRISPR prime editing, has been described as a word processor for gene editing. Meanwhile, the first approved gene therapies are making their way (at times painfully) into cancer treatment.

Just last year, Metcalfe said, the world was shocked to learn a scientist in China, Dr. He Jiankui, had used CRISPR to edit human embryos and confer immunity to HIV (and potentially other unintended traits in the process). He went even further by implanting the embryos, and the first genetically modified babies were born in China in 2018. Hes work was universally condemned by the scientific community as sloppy and unethical. Yet, another scientist, this time in Russia, has since made public his intentions to use CRISPR to edit human embryos too.

The ethics quite clearly havent caught up to the science, and the tools themselves are still being sharpened, but its likely only a matter of time before scientists, researchers, and doctors begin more responsibly snipping out disease-causing genes and, perhaps, even splicing in beneficial ones.

George Church is anticipating that day.

George is probably the most prolific bioengineer of our time, Metcalfe said. [There] are fifty different alleles that hes tracking that are beneficial to humans. These variants include genes that help protect against cardiovascular disease and Alzheimers disease. Others may improve memory and learning and extend your telomeres.

But our design abilities wont be limited to existing genes, Metcalfe said. Scientists are assembling entirely new synthetic biological systems from scratch too.

Were writing DNA codeand weve been doing this for a whilebut were starting to get good at it, said Andrew Hessel, Humane Genomics CEO and nanotechnology/biotechnology faculty at Singularity University, in a talk following Metcalfes.

Hessel pointed to Twist Bioscience a synthetic biology company that went public in late 2018. Twist manufactures short custom sequences of DNA (oligos) at scale. Customers can design and order sequences and have them delivered by Fedex. With tools like this, synthetic biologists have begun creating synthetic enzymes and proteins, some of which have even proven themselves functionallike their natural siblingsin bacteria.

Scientists are thinking bigger too.

Craig Venter, already famed for his work sequencing the first human genome, announced the first reproducing synthetic bacteria back in 2010. He followed up with a streamlined minimal synthetic cell in 2016. Boasting the smallest known genome, it has no natural counterpart. Then this year, another group announced theyd made synthetic E. coli bacteria with a four million base-pair genomefour times longer than Venters 2010 achievementand using just 61 codons instead of 64. Currently, scientists are working with yeast to make the first synthetic eukaryotic cells.

The ultimate goal is writing whole human genomes from scratch, and Hessel cofounded Genome Project-write (GP-write) to convene the worlds top synthetic biologists to do just that.

There are obviously big hurdles that still need clearingincluding software that can make design more accurate and efficient and DNA synthesis tools that assemble longer base-pair sequencesand Hessels group recently published a paper outlining the challenges. Nonetheless, Hessel said the group doesnt think any of these will take more than a decade to solve.

Literally in 10 years weve gone from making proteins synthetically to making a eukaryote, he said. As soon as we can start making whole chromosomes, well, weve only got 23 of them. Its not going to take very long until you end up bumping up against the human genome.

The pace of change in biology and medicine has been swift, Metcalfe said.

Researchers discovered DNAs structure in 1953, the first IVF baby was born in 1978, and we met Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal, in 1996.

In just the last two decades, scientists went from sequencing the human genome at great cost and effort to sequencing it for under $1,000 in a day. Now there are an estimated million-plus complete human genomes on the books.

Weve graduated from complex and costly gene editing tools to tools that can be sold in a kit for a few hundred bucks. Scientists are building genomes from scratch and booting them up.

The question is no longer whether well be able to design our own biologythe tools are already herethe question is can we handle the responsibility?

This technology is going to touch every business, every sector, every government, every person, Hessel said. This isnt a presentation for now, its the start of a conversation with all of you for the future.

Image Credit:gustavo centurion /Unsplash

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Why Designing Our Own Biology Will Be the Next Big Thing in Medicine - Singularity Hub

Within 10 Years, We’ll Travel by Hyperloop, Rockets, and Avatars – Singularity Hub

Whats faster than autonomous vehicles and flying cars?

Try Hyperloop, rocket travel, and robotic avatars. Hyperloop is currently working towards 670 mph (1080 kph) passenger pods, capable of zipping us from Los Angeles to downtown Las Vegas in under 30 minutes. Rocket Travel (think SpaceXs Starship) promises to deliver you almost anywhere on the planet in under an hour. Think New York to Shanghai in39 minutes.

But wait, it gets even better

As 5G connectivity, hyper-realistic virtual reality, and next-gen robotics continue their exponential progress, the emergence of robotic avatars will all but nullify the concept of distance, replacing human travel with immediate remote telepresence.

Lets dive in.

Did you know that Hyperloop was the brainchild of Elon Musk? Just one in a series of transportation innovations from a man determined to leave his mark on the industry.

In 2013, in an attempt to shorten the long commute between Los Angeles and San Francisco, the California state legislature proposed a $68 billion budget allocation for what appeared to be the slowest and most expensive bullet train in history.

Musk was outraged. The cost was too high, the train too sluggish. Teaming up with a group of engineers from Tesla and SpaceX, he published a 58-page concept paper for The Hyperloop, a high-speed transportation network that used magnetic levitation to propel passenger pods down vacuum tubes at speeds of up to 670 mph. If successful, it would zip you across California in 35 minutesjust enough time to watch your favorite sitcom.

In January 2013, venture capitalist Shervin Pishevar, with Musks blessing, started Hyperloop One with myself, Jim Messina (former White House Deputy Chief of Staff for President Obama), and tech entrepreneurs Joe Lonsdale and David Sacks as founding board members. A couple of years after that, the Virgin Group invested in this idea, Richard Branson was elected chairman, and Virgin Hyperloop One was born.

The Hyperloop exists, says Josh Giegel, co-founder and chief technology officer of Hyperloop One, because of the rapid acceleration of power electronics, computational modeling, material sciences, and 3D printing.

Thanks to these convergences, there are now ten major Hyperloop One projectsin various stages of developmentspread across the globe. Chicago to DC in 35 minutes. Pune to Mumbai in 25 minutes. According to Giegel, Hyperloop is targeting certification in 2023. By 2025, the company plans to have multiple projects under construction and running initial passenger testing.

So think about this timetable: Autonomous car rollouts by 2020. Hyperloop certification and aerial ridesharing by 2023. By 2025going on vacation might have a totally different meaning. Going to work most definitely will.

But whats faster than Hyperloop?

As if autonomous vehicles, flying cars, and Hyperloop werent enough, in September of 2017, speaking at the International Astronautical Congress in Adelaide, Australia, Musk promised that for the price of an economy airline ticket, his rockets will fly you anywhere on Earth in under an hour.

Musk wants to use SpaceXs megarocket, Starship, which was designed to take humans to Mars, for terrestrial passenger delivery. The Starship travels at 17,500 mph. Its an order of magnitude faster than the supersonic jet Concorde.

Think about what this actually means: New York to Shanghai in 39 minutes. London to Dubai in 29 minutes. Hong Kong to Singapore in 22 minutes.

So how real is the Starship?

We could probably demonstrate this [technology] in three years, Musk explained, but its going to take a while to get the safety right. Its a high bar. Aviation is incredibly safe. Youre safer on an airplane than you are at home.

That demonstration is proceeding as planned. In September 2017, Musk announced his intentions to retire his current rocket fleet, both the Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy, and replace them with the Starships in the 2020s.

Less than a year later, LA mayor Eric Garcetti tweeted that SpaceX was planning to break ground on an 18-acre rocket production facility near the port of Los Angeles. And April of this year marked an even bigger milestone: the very first test flights of the rocket.

Thus, sometime in the next decade or so, off to Europe for lunch may become a standard part of our lexicon.

Wait, wait, theres one more thing.

While the technologies weve discussed will decimate the traditional transportation industry, theres something on the horizon that will disrupt travel itself. What if, to get from A to B, you didnt have to move your body? What if you could quote Captain Kirk and just say Beam me up, Scotty?

Well, shy of the Star Trek transporter, theres the world of avatars.

An avatar is a second self, typically in one of two forms. The digital version has been around for a couple of decades. It emerged from the video game industry and was popularized by virtual world sites like Second Life and books-turned-blockbusters likeReady Player One.

A VR headset teleports your eyes and ears to another location, while a set of haptic sensors shifts your sense of touch. Suddenly, youre inside an avatar inside a virtual world. As you move in the real world, your avatar moves in the virtual.

Use this technology to give a lecture and you can do it from the comfort of your living room, skipping the trip to the airport, the cross-country flight, and the ride to the conference center.

Robots are the second form of avatars. Imagine a humanoid robot that you can occupy at will. Maybe, in a city far from home, youve rented the bot by the minutevia a different kind of ridesharing companyor maybe you have spare robot avatars located around the country.

Either way, put on VR goggles and a haptic suit, and you can teleport your senses into that robot. This allows you to walk around, shake hands, and take actionall without leaving your home.

And like the rest of the tech weve been talking about, even this future isnt far away.

In 2018, entrepreneur Dr. Harry Kloor recommended to All Nippon Airways (ANA), Japans largest airline, the design of an Avatar XPRIZE. ANA then funded this vision to the tune of $10 million to speed the development of robotic avatars. Why? Because ANA knows this is one of the technologies likely to disrupt their own airline industry, and they want to be ready.

ANA recently announced its newme robot that humans can use to virtually explore new places. The colorful robots have Roomba-like wheeled bases and cameras mounted around eye-level, which capture surroundings viewable through VR headsets.

If the robot was stationed in your parents home, you could cruise around the rooms and chat with your family at any time of day. After revealing the technology at Tokyos Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies in October, ANA plans to deploy 1,000 newme robots by 2020.

With virtual avatars like newme, geography, distance, and cost will no longer limit our travel choices. From attractions like the Eiffel Tower or the pyramids of Egypt to unreachable destinations like the moon or deep sea, we will be able to transcend our own physical limits, explore the world and outer space, and access nearly any experience imaginable.

Individual car ownership has enjoyed over a century of ascendancy and dominance.

The first real threat it facedtodays ride-sharing modelonly showed up in the last decade. But that ridesharing model wont even get ten years to dominate. Already, its on the brink of autonomous car displacement, which is on the brink of flying car disruption, which is on the brink of Hyperloop and rockets-to-anywhere decimation. Plus, avatars.

The most important part: All of this change will happen over the next ten years. Welcome to a future of human presence where the only constant israpidchange.

Note: This articlean excerpt from my next book The Future Is Faster Than You Think, co-authored with Steven Kotler, to be released January 28th, 2020originally appeared on my tech blog at diamandis.com. Read the original article here.

Abundance-Digital Online Community:Stay ahead of technological advancements and turn your passion into action. Abundance Digital is now part of Singularity University.Learn more.

Image Credit: Virgin Hyperloop One

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This Boat Was 3D Printedand Bigger, Wilder Projects Will Soon Follow – Singularity Hub

Theres a new technological answer to the iconic line youre going to need a bigger boat from Jaws: 3D printing one.

Last month, the University of Maine revealed3Dirigo, a 25-foot, 5,000-pound boat that set new records for the worlds largest solid 3D-printed object and largest 3D-printed vessel. Incidentally, it was created by the new titleholder of the largest prototype polymer 3D printer belt. If there isnt a belt to go with the title, the printer in question can surely print one in XXXL-size.

3Dirigo was printed in just three days. Dr. Habib Dagher, Executive Director of the University of Maines Advanced Structures & Composites Center, toldCNBCthat a typical development and manufacturing process for a craft of similar size could take months or even a year.

The speed of production and sheer size of the finished product illustrate how many 3D printing processesare climbing out of the Trough of Disappointmentin Gartners (in)famous Hype Cycle. Increasing development speed and new use cases point towards further advances in the coming few years.

While 3Dirigo itself is impressive, it will not necessarily hold on to all its records for long. The University of Maines new Big Area Additive Manufacturing Machine (BAAM) 3D printer is designed to print objects up to 100 feet long by 22 feet wide by 10 feet high, with a top printing speed of 500 pounds per hour. BAAM is a one-of-a-kind printer, and it will be used in connection with a variety of research and production initiatives, including rapid prototyping of civilian, defense, and infrastructure applications.

Mass-produced 3D printers are also growing, with many now capable of printing objects bigger than human beings.

The increase in printing sizes is likely a contributing factor to companies and organizations busily integrating 3D printers of all sizes in their setups. A report from Deloitte estimates that large public companies will spend more than $2.7 billion on 3D printingincluding enterprise 3D printers, materials, and servicesin 2019. In 2020, the figure will climb to more than $3 billion. 80 percent of enterprises taking part in a Sculpteo questionnaire said that 3D printing is enabling them to innovate faster. 51 percent of the interviewed enterprises said theyre already actively using 3D printing in production.

Early on in the lifetime of 3D printers, speed and precision were like opposing forces; you couldnt have both. Since then, much has changed, and continues to do so. Australian 3D printer manufacturer Auroras RMP-1 provides a good example. It can print up to 350kg of material (metal) a day, which is a 2,000 percent increase in speed over its previous model.

Printing speeds could be about to get into warp territory thanks to several ongoing projects.

A group at the University of Michigan is using light and photoreactive resin to 3D print objects at speeds up to 100 times faster than traditional methods. A little further east, MIT professors Jamison Go and John Hart are working on 3D printing hardware called FastFFF (Fast Fused Filament Fabrication). The hardware can print at ten times the speed most 3D printers work at today and can use biodegradable cellulose instead of plastics.

Incidentally, cellulose is just one of an ever-growing multitude of materials 3D printers can use today.

Speed and material flexibility are core to creating new use cases and leading to advances across industries.

One recent project uses a building block approach to creating whole organs. Much-famed Beyond Meat is soon going to have competition from Israeli startup Redefine Meat, who is printing a mix of fat, water, and plant fibers into something that will have the shape, texture, and taste of meat.

Another area where we are seeing rapid advances is 3D printing construction elements, and in some cases whole buildings. Like with boats, the process can be at least as fast as constructing a building by traditional methods. At last years South By Southwest festival, the start-up ICON showcased just that in the form of a 650-square-foot 3D printed house that cost under $10,000 and took under 24 hours to complete.

Although 3D printings advances are impressive, theyre unlikely to become the only way we produce things. Even with their new abilities, 3D printers will likely struggle to compete with traditional productions methods for jobs like printing out 100,000 identical spoons or metal-stamping a million identical parts. However, 3D printing is making it easier to create innovative products faster, tailor and customize products, and lower time-to-market.

As is often the case, its in combination with other exponential technologies that the printers could reach their full potential. For example, if we were to combine 3D printers with robots and let them loose. Imagine, as Danish GXN Innovation, The Danish AM Hub, and Map Architects did, mobile 3D printers capable of autonomous crawling, swimming, or flying, producing necessary parts on spec wherever they go.

If this nutty-sounding vision comes to pass, well be seeing stranger things than boats churning out of 3D printers. But then again, if youd heard just 10 years ago that a 25-foot boat was going to be made by a printer, youd never have believed it.

Image Credit: University of Maine

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Betrayal’s Charlie Cox, Zawe Ashton, and Tom Hiddleston to Appear on the 92Y Stage – Playbill.com

On November 23, Tom Hiddleston, Charlie Cox, and Zawe Ashton of Broadways Betrayal will join Playbills Ruthie Fierberg in conversation on the 92Y stage. The stars will take a deep dive into their experience with the play (which marks each of their Broadway debuts) as they reveal behind-the-scenes insights, the singularity of the production and how it began, and how they balance theatre with megawatt screen careers.

Hiddleston is most famous for his ongoing role as Loki in The Avengers series. Cox made a name for himself with Netflixs Daredevil, and Ashton recently appeared opposite Jake Gyllenhaal in Velvet Buzzsaw and debuted her own play for all the women who thought they were Mad at Soho Rep. And yet, all three are rooted in theatre beginnings. Join the trio as they share revelations about their careers, Pinters play, and each other. Click here for tickets and information.

READ: Betrayals Zawe Ashton Is the Broadway Star You Need to Know Right Now

92Y has also announced a new event tied to Broadways Dear Evan Hansen. On December 8, XYZ Presents a conversation with Broadways current Evan, Andrew Barth Feldman, and Tony-winning producer Stacey Mindich. The even will also feature a performance by Feldman. Click here for tickets and information.

READ: New Dear Evan Hansen Star Andrew Barth Feldman Brings Something Brand-New to Evan

On December 11, Tony winner Billy Porter takes the stage with host Fern Mallis to talk everything from Kinky Boots to Pose to his status as a fashion icon. Click here for tickets and information.

December 16 will feature A Tribute to Ntozake Shange with Hilton Als, Mahogany L. Browne, Toshi Reagon, Anna Deveare Smith, Jacqueline Woodson, and more. The panel, which comes just after the closing of the Off-Broadway revival of Shanges for colored girls..., is sold out but accepting wait list requests.

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Betrayal's Charlie Cox, Zawe Ashton, and Tom Hiddleston to Appear on the 92Y Stage - Playbill.com

Alt Hip Hop Sensation Hobo Johnson is Playing a Sold-Out Concert at Bogart’s This Weekend – Cincinnati CityBeat

Hobo Johnson and the LovemakersBogart'sA millennial on the cusp of Gen Z, Hobo Johnsons sound and style is suggestive of how music is consumed and regurgitated in the current era. The hodgepodge is a hyper-sensory blend of Hip Hop, Emo, Pop, Folk, Jazz and AltRock whipped together and given distinctiveness and singularity thanks to Johnsons colorfully multifaceted personality.

That magnetism comes out in his lyrics, which are a mix of hilarity and more inward-looking emotional honesty. But its his oddly charismatic and actorly vocal delivery that seals the deal. Part rapper, part spoken word poet and part performance artist, Johnsons voice sounds simultaneously as if hes on the verge of both cracking up laughing and breaking down crying. That charming brand of vulnerability the smart ass with a heart of gold makes it hard to hate him, though he has his share of haters, some of whom seemed almost startled and uncomfortable with Johnsons geekily conversational, nakedly confessional and awkwardly confrontational tone.

Johnsons rise is also fairly indicative of our times, where one viral moment can kick off a career that once would have required slogging it out for years. Born Frank Lopes Jr. and raised in Sacramento, California, Johnson self-released music online and worked the YouTube circuit. Cultivating his following DIY-style was working out just fine for Johnson, but last year he truly blew up thanks to his video submission for National Public Radio Musics Tiny Desk Contest. The clip featuring Johnson casually performing with his bandmates in a backyard didnt win the contest, which would have netted him his own Tiny Desk Concert (a hugely popular web series where artists perform intimate sets in the NPR Music offices) and a high-profile tour. But the attention the clip scored separately worked out pretty well for Johnson, who signed a major-label deal, went on large headlining club tours and, yes, was given his own Tiny Desk Concert.

Reprise Records released his third album, The Fall of Hobo Johnson (his last joint was The Rise of Hobo Johnson), in September and its trademark mix of comedy and neuroses didnt disappoint his hardcore fan base, though critics were fairly harsh, seemingly put off more by Johnson as a person than the actual music. Hes definitely a love-him-or-hate-him entertainer theres no Meh - hes OK with Johnson. Thats what happens when you put yourself out there without an Instagram filter hiding your faults.

Speaking of which, Hobo unveiled the best album promo of the decade when in early October he posted a video compilation of celebrities big-upping The Fall. The funny, very on-brand stunt featured testimonials and endorsements from famous/notorious figures like Charlie Sheen, Ron Jeremy, Jose Conseco, Andy Dick and Ice-T, all hired via Cameo, a service where cash-strapped (or just cash-hungry) stars earn a few extra bucks by filming personal messages for fans.

Johnson and his Lovemakers are playing Bogart's this Sunday, Nov. 17 with Mom Jeans, The Philharmonik and Nate Curry, but unless you have a ticket (or $99 for official "resale" ones), you can't go. The concert is sold out.

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Liz Bourke and Amy Goldschlager Review This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone – Locus Online

This Is How You Lose the Time War, Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone (Saga 978-1-5344-3100-3, $19.99, 200pp, hc) July 2019.

A novel or rather a novella that does find me part of its enthusiastic readership is Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstones first traditionally published collaboration, This Is How You Lose the Time War. Holy shit. Holy shit. Holy shit. This is the time-travelling queer epistolary romance I didnt know I needed. This is the time-travelling queer epistolary romance you should definitely read, because while Im not entirely sure I can do it justice in a review, I am entirely sure its an excellent work that if theres any justice in the world well see on awards lists next year.

El-Mohtar (Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author of Seasons of Glass and Iron) and Gladstone (award-nominated author of Ruin of Angels and Empress of Forever) have combined their striking talents in a slender volume thats as impressive and as affecting as it is brief. It starts with a letter marked burn before reading. Out of this unlikely beginning arises a correspondence that should never have existed, between two agents on the opposite sides of a war that stretches throughout time and space: rivals who know each other by their work. Red belongs to the Agency, a post-singularity technological civilisation. Blue belongs to the Garden, a consciousness embedded in organic matter. They have bloody histories and theyre bent on futures where the other is dead, defeated, or never-to-have-existed at all. They have nothing in common.

They have a lot in common. Theyre the best at what they do. Theyre alone. They want to win but they also want to be seen by someone who can understand and appreciate what they have done and can do: they want the acknowledgement of knowing the best of the other side knows theyre better.

At first. It starts as a game. It starts as a battlefield boast. It grows into something stranger, stronger, fiercer, something that can say,

I want to scorch the thousand earths between us to see what blooms from the ash, so we can discover it hand in hand, content in context, intelligible only to each other. I want to meet you in every place I have loved

I write to you in stings, Red, but this is me, the truth of me, as I do so: broken open by the act, in the palm of your hand, dying.

Its an epistolary romance between spies. Of course theres betrayal, heart-breaking betrayal, one used against the other; of course theres striving, there are reversals, theres unexpected triumph, bitter and sweet and hopeful. Gladstone and El-Mohtar between them have built a precisely engineered marvel, cresting to a climax that takes every moment of what came before and infuses it with fresh meaning, gives it more layers.

I often dislike time travel stories. Paradox annoys me. Here the paradox is elegant and inevitable, as inevitable as tragedy but better. Here the paradox is the point, and it turns out that its a glorious thing.

With precise, cut-glass prose poetic and pragmatic at once deeply compelling characters, and a tensely rewarding conclusion, This Is How You Lose the Time War is one of the most striking works of fiction Ive read this decade. Im going to be thinking about it returning to it for months, at least. Read it, because I cant recommend it highly enough.

Liz Bourke

This Is How You Lose the Time War, Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone; Cynthia Farrell and Emily Woo Zeller, narrators (Simon & Schuster Audio 978-1-50828705-6, $17.99, digital download, 4.25 hr., unabridged) July 2019.

Who does not love an epistolary novel? Who does not love an epistolary novel where each end of the correspondence is written by a different author? Who does not love an audiobook production of a two-authored epistolary novel in which each correspondent is voiced by a separate narrator? If you are not sharing in this love, I do not want to know you. The steely but passionate voice of Cynthia Farrell enacts the role of Red, an elite operative of the Agency, an organization from a highly technological potential distant future; Emily Woo Zeller is her opposite number, taking on the role of the warm but ruthless Blue, an operative of the more organically inclined potential distant future of the Garden. Each of these two agents embeds herself in various timelines across time and space in an effort to ensure that her future comes to pass. After eons at odds, Blue follows an impulse and leaves Red a teasing letter, inciting a barbed correspondence that evolves over years into flirtation and love, and kicking off an asynchronous series of events that ouroboruses into an inevitable yet thrilling conclusion. Yes, okay, ouroboros is not a verb, and maybe using it as one gives too much away; but if you cant see whats going to/will have happened fairly early on, then youre really not paying attention. The point of this story is in the journey, which is poetic and lovely with a nicely dark tinge, and voiced in a way that feels true to the text.

Amy Goldschlager

This review and more like it in the October 2019 issue of Locus.

While you are here, please take a moment to support Locus with a one-time or recurring donation. We rely on reader donations to keep the magazine and site going, and would like to keep the site paywall free, but WE NEED YOUR FINANCIAL SUPPORT to continue quality coverage of the science fiction and fantasy field.

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Liz Bourke and Amy Goldschlager Review This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone - Locus Online

What if the Cavs traded Kyrie Irving to the Bulls instead of the Celtics? – ClutchPoints

Fortunes change quickly in the NBA. It may seem like a decade ago, but it was only July 2017 when Kyrie Irving was still a Cleveland Cavalier, patiently awaiting to find out who his second professional franchise would be after requesting a trade from the organization that made him the No. 1 overall pick in 2011.

Irving ultimately was dealt to the Boston Celtics in a move that rocked the core of the league, even if its ramifications are barely being felt in November 2019. The centerpiece of the deal, Irving, has moved on from the Celtics, and Isaiah Thomas, the main cog heading to the Cavaliers, has played for two other franchises since.

But what if the Chicago Bulls had opted not to deal Jimmy Butler on the night of the 2017 NBA Draft? You may not think that these two events are connected, but rarely does the NBA dabble in the singularity of events.

The story goes that Irving, who won the NBA championship in 2016 alongside LeBron James, wanted his own spotlight and chance at superstardom. He got that with his deal to the Celtics and has seen it through during his first year with the Brooklyn Nets.

But at the time, he appeared ready to acquiesce that he would share the spotlight if it meant playing alongside Butler. Another star at a crossroads with the only organization that he had ever known, Butler was moved to the Minnesota Timberwolves in a blockbuster deal. The rewards the Bulls reaped Zach LaVine, Lauri Markkanen, Kris Dunn have not had immediate immense benefits, but with Butler having been on three teams in the past 12 months, its unknown how long they would have been able to retain his services.

Irving reportedly thought joining Butler would be a venture he would be interested in. The duo would have had close proximity to James and the Cleveland squad that Irving was departing from, yet Chicago chose to go in a drastically different direction, winning only 27 games in 2017-18 before accruing just 22 in 18-19. Rather than the duo of LaVine/Markkanen leading the franchise, they could be entering Year 3 of the Irving/Butler experiment.

There have been manufactured superstar tandems popping up all over the league recently James/Anthony Davis with the Lakers, Paul George/Kawhi Leonard with the Clippers, Irving/Kevin Durant with the Nets yet time will tell if any will be able to bring a championship to their squad. Players mingling during the offseason has yielded tenuous results at times and has never been a direct path to the NBA Finals, but it has also given fans the teams of the Heat and Warriors dynasties, respectively.

Now, Kyrie Irving roams the backcourt in Brooklyn, a star on his own for this year while Kevin Durant rehabs a torn Achilles. Jimmy Butler inked a massive deal to become the man in South Beach, years after three stars joined together to create magic in Miami. Invariably, the two will collide in competition as the Bulls watch on and wonder what the franchise could have looked like with both donning red and black.

A City Without A Team Thats About To Take Over The NBA

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What if the Cavs traded Kyrie Irving to the Bulls instead of the Celtics? - ClutchPoints

Is the Second Amendment worth it? – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Opinion By Alan J Chwick & Joanne D Eisen

USA -(AmmoLand.com)- It is without a doubt that our country will elect a Democrat President sometime in the future.

Folks, the Democrats are good at promising cheap trinkets to the lazy and they are great at frightening people into making decisions against their own interests. We know for sure that the Democrats will eventually get back into the White House.

That's the way US politics has worked in the past.

For decades, the Dimwits, aka the Democrats, ignored the benefits and magnified the disadvantages of civilian-owned weapons. They tried to frighten gun owners and non-gun owners alike into making poor choices based on emotion, and not on the facts.

The Dimwits tried to fool us into peaceably giving up our weapons. Instead of giving up our weapons, we gave them Trump.

After Trump, will we peaceably disarm?

Now that the Dimwits realize that their lies failed to stampede us into disarmament, as has occurred in other countries, they are demanding that we sell back our so-called assault weapons, and whatever other classes of guns they fear. The Dimwits claim that our Founders never imagined the effect of technology on personal weapons. But our Founding Fathers did have full knowledge of the arms possibilities. They had knowledge of the Puckle Gun (considered one of the first machine guns ever built-in 1718) and others like it.

Our Founders gave us the Second Amendment fully understanding, and expecting, improvements in firearms and weapons technology. Logic Note: If the Second Amendment does not apply to modern technology, then the First Amendment should NOT either.

Those who wrote the Constitution wanted to limit government; they did not want to hinder technical genius.

The Dimwits plot to pass the Universal Instant Check System. If it were to be signed into law, rest assured that lists of firearms owners would be made, and used to confiscate weapons and ammunition. They are so eager to disarm us, that they can hardly wait for RED FLAG LAWS to accomplish that task one by one. The Dimwits are also too lazy to collect the 4473 documents from FFL Dealers, who must retain the 4473s for not less than 20 years, per 478.129(b) Record retention: Firearms transaction record.

The Dimwits believe that when new gun bans become the law of the land, house to house searches will occur and we, the law-abiding citizens that we are, will quietly and happily disarm.

With all the new rights the Dimwits have normed into our culture, one would think that one has retained the right to safety in the home. So we would not expect government agents to swarm our homes, endangering our families, and take our property.

But that seems to be their plan.

The Dimwits should surely remember that past gun bans have not been fully obeyed.

Crazy Dimwits are finally telling us the truth when they promise voters that the next time they win the White House, forcible disarmament will follow. After all, according to Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA), who not so jokingly reminded us about who would be controlling the atomic weapons, It would be a short war.

If even thinking about nuking our land and our people isn't insane, what is?

Although Swalwell was quickly shushed, the proverbial cat was fully out of the bag. But the Dimwits could no longer restrain from hiding their madness, Beto also made the confiscation claim.

The Dimwits, of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, labeled our NRA as a domestic terrorist organization! Can you imagine that a Civil Rights Organization, who helped train the freed slaves and promotes safety, is a domestic terrorist organization?

Our Second Amendment, and our Constitution, are under attack by lunatics, liars, and idiots. They are mean, nasty, and extremely destructive. They have a selfish streak, and can not be trusted.

Some of these loonies may be family. We may love them! But how can we ever trust them in the future? The political path they chose is not necessarily a peaceful path.

Why have we not seen most of the Democratic party apparatchiks flee their party's massive lies, not only about the benefits of disarmament and socialism but about Republican subversion against the very Constitution we love?

Millions of Dimwits should have renounced the hatred of our country and spoke out against the damage that recent Dimwit policies have done to our Constitution, the country, our Presidency.

How many in the Dimwit Party really believe that we firearm owners are eager to sell out our beloved country to the enemies of freedom?

Our souls are wrapped in the flag of freedom!

Are their souls?

Is the Second Amendment worth it?

Is it all worth it?

And the answers are: No, Yes, and Yes!

About the Authors:

Alan J Chwick has been involved with firearms much of his life and is the Retired Managing Coach of the Freeport NY Junior Marksmanship Club. He has escaped from New York State to South Carolina and is an SC FFL (Everything22andMore.com). [emailprotected] | TWITTER: @iNCNF

Joanne D Eisen, DDS (Ret.) practiced dentistry on Long Island, NY. She has collaborated and written on firearm politics for the past 30+ years. She has also escaped from New York State but to Virginia. [emailprotected]

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Is the Second Amendment worth it? - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Self-proclaimed Second Amendment auditor bonds out of jail after judge refuses bond reduction – KFOR Oklahoma City

OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) The self-proclaimed Second Amendment auditor arrested for allegedly bringing an AR-style rifle into a metro restaurant has bonded out of jail.

Timothy Harper

Timothy Harper bonded out of the Oklahoma County Jail at 7:43 p.m. on Friday, according to a jail official.

Harpers jail exit came hours after Oklahoma County Judge Ray Elliott refused to lower Harpers $100,000 bond. However, the judge did lift the requirement that it be a cash bond.

The judge also added stipulations to the bond, including that if Harper bonds out, he wear an ankle monitor and surrender his weapons.

Harper was arrested for allegedly bringing an AR-style rifle into a Twin Peaks restaurant the day after the new permitless carry law went into effect this month.

The police who arrested him said the law prohibiting rifles in businesses that serve alcohol didnt change.

Harpers attorney argued that the $100,000 bond wasnt appropriate for a crime that carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison and a $1.000 fine, and that it isnt necessary to ensure hell show up in court for future hearings.

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Self-proclaimed Second Amendment auditor bonds out of jail after judge refuses bond reduction - KFOR Oklahoma City

Original intent and the Second Amendment – Post Register

Original intent is a term often quoted in Supreme Court rulings. It means what was actually intended at the time that the Constitution was written. The best way to make this determination posthumously is to examine the historical records of society and technology at the time they were written.

In 1787, when the Constitution was written, the majority of the American landmass was under control of Native Americans, slavery was flourishing and the prevailing weapon was the flintlock rifle. Much of the frontier was lawless, and there were frequent clashes between the natives and the people moving onto their lands. According to historical records, there were frequent groups of armed men used to hunt down runaway slaves.

Under these circumstances, it was entirely understandable that there were constitutional protections for militias and gun ownership since the government clearly had a policy of driving the Native Americans from their ancestral lands, the frontier was often lawless and slaves often either rebelled against brutal conditions or attempted an escape to the north or even Canada. Hence the Second Amendment was written and ratified securing the right to hunt down runaway slaves and to force Native Americans from their lands.

In actual practice, the military had the responsibility for driving Native Americans from their lands, and thus the main use of private armed militias was enforcing slavery. These things are well documented in the historical record.

Fast forward to the present, and these conditions have no relevance. Flintlocks have long since been replaced by weapons with lethality far beyond anything imaginable by the writers of the Constitution. Native Americans have long since been driven from their ancestral lands and confined to reservations. Even though the movies have glamorized the posses of cowboys, by far the greatest use of the militia component of the Second Amendment was for the capture of runaway slaves. Slavery has long since been eliminated, and militias have long since been replaced by city, county, state and federal law enforcement agencies. Yet the Second Amendment still stands as the law of the land in clear violation of the original intent doctrine. Not only is it still the law of the land, but it also has been expanded to allow private ownership of weapons of war that have unleashed mayhem within our cities.

Can anyone claim that this was what our founding fathers anticipated?

If a challenge to the Second Amendment were to be taken to the Supreme Court, the outcome would depend upon whether the justices were to own up to the reality that exists today or vote to stick with the president and Senate that put them onto the court. Often the Supreme Court justices bend to their political base rather than the original intent that they claim.

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Original intent and the Second Amendment - Post Register

Florence County becomes first Second Amendment Sanctuary County in Wisconsin – UpperMichigansSource.com

FLORENCE COUNTY, Wisc. (WLUC) - Florence County is the first county in Wisconsin to become a Second Amendment Sanctuary County. The Florence County Board of Supervisors passed their resolution Tuesday night.

Florence County has made history.

"We are the first county in Wisconsin to be a second Amendment Sanctuary County which I think is huge, said Mark Kerznar, a Florence County Citizen.

This is push-back to the red-flag legislation supported by the governor and several lawmakers. The red flag law gives power to the sheriff to confiscate a person's weapons if they're deemed dangerous.

By being a Second Amendment Sanctuary County, the citizens would follow the laws that are deemed constitutional, given and set by the county.

"You can tell tonight we had a full county board room, which usually is not the case, so there is a lot of support here, said Florence County Sheriff, Dan Miller.

The resolution, which has a number of reasons why Florence County decided to become a Second Amendment Sanctuary County, was passed by the board unanimously.

Florence County's Board Chair, Jeanette Bomberg said she has heard no opposition to the resolution from members of Florence County.

"What this means is we listen to our residents and we feel very strongly in the right to bear arms, the Second Amendment, she said.

This resolution will now be sent to the state capitol."This is what we should do is send a message to Madison, and it's going to be out to the other counties in the state of Wisconsin and you know they can do the same thing if they want, said Sheriff Miller.

The full resolution is in the related documents section.

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Florence County becomes first Second Amendment Sanctuary County in Wisconsin - UpperMichigansSource.com

Kaufman, Palo Pinto, and Stephens Counties Become Second Amendment Sanctuaries – The Texan

On a busy Tuesday, three county commissioners courts met and passed resolutions declaring themselves to be Second Amendment sanctuaries.

All passed the measure unanimously.

With the approval of resolutions in Kaufman, Stephens, and Palo Pinto, the number of such sanctuaries in Texas grows to a total of eleven.

The expanding list signals frustration with the increased discussion about stricter firearm regulations and gun control measures, including red flag laws, expanded background checks, and firearm confiscation.

Prior to Tuesday, Edwards, Hudspeth, Presidio, Mitchell, Hood, Parker, Smith, and Ellis counties had passed the pro-Second Amendment resolutions.

Get started today for free and become the most informed Texan you know after your first month, it's just $9.00.

In the resolutions, all counties have said that they will support the county sheriff and will not enforce any unconstitutional firearm restrictions.

As in many of the previous cases, all three sheriffs in the most recent counties to become sanctuaries voiced their support for the measure.

I dont actually get to sign resolutions, said Sheriff Will Holt of Stephens County, but I do want yall the court to know and (to put it) on record with the media and with the folks here that I support this resolution 100 percent.

Sheriff Brett McGuire of Palo Pinto County noted on a social media post how many people have expressed concerns about what certain politicians have spouted off hoping that they could get a sound-bite on the 5 oclock news.

Quite frankly, most of these politicians probably dont know the difference between an AR-15 and a leaf blower (and most of them have never used either one of them), said McGuire. Truth be told, the Sheriffs of Texas are some of your biggest supporters of the 2nd Amendment and the remaining rights afforded to you under the Constitution. You see, we have to be. And none of us would have taken this job if we werent.

The practical consequences of the Second Amendment sanctuary resolutions whether potential unconstitutional firearm restrictions will be protected against if current restrictions are left untouched has been questioned.

Regardless of how effective the resolutions might be in the future, those enacting them and those calling for them see the resolutions as a commitment to their belief in and defense of the constitutionally protected right for an individual to keep and bear arms.

A free bi-weekly commentary on current events by Konni Burton.

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Kaufman, Palo Pinto, and Stephens Counties Become Second Amendment Sanctuaries - The Texan

Readers sound off on New York Health Act, the Second Amendment and the Mets – New York Daily News

Manhattan: Re Warrens Rx, and ours (editorial, Nov. 7): A universal, state-funded health care plan would benefit every New Yorker. Surely the residents of the richest state in the richest nation on Earth can afford the right to health care that residents of every other advanced country already enjoy. As a board member of the Campaign for New York Health, I know that many studies conducted by us and others have shown that the taxes to fund New York Health Act would, in fact, be substantially less than what private insurance premiums, co-pays, and deductibles now cost us, and they would be fairer, based on ability to pay. We should demand that our Legislature take this opportunity to do something wonderful for the residents of this state and make universal, comprehensive, affordable health care available to all of us. Leonard Rodberg, research director, NY Metro Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program

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Readers sound off on New York Health Act, the Second Amendment and the Mets - New York Daily News

The Nightmare Scenario: Trump Loses in 2020 and Refuses to Concede – Broadly

WASHINGTON Democrats pulled off an upset win to take back Kentuckys governorship earlier this month. So Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin tore a page out the Republicans playbook by insinuating voter fraud, refusing to concede, and claiming a number of irregularities cost him the election.

Call it the sore loser strategy, one that has become commonplace in the Trump era. Trump has long promoted conspiracy theories and made sweeping and baseless claims about voter fraud, which raises a question for 2020: What if President Trump loses and refuses to concede?

Experts fear at minimum it would further damage voters trust in democracy and at worst lead to a constitutional crisis.

There are reasons to be concerned, said Ned Foley, a constitutional law professor at the Ohio State University who specializes in the history of American contested elections. Trump has talked about voter fraud in a way thats not really reality based. That creates a reasonable fear that he might want to reject numerical results that are objectively [correct].

Trump has hinted before that hed reject any election loss.

In 2016, he repeatedly claimed a rigged election was being stolen from him, asked his supporters to monitor urban voting booths and suggested that the Second Amendment people take matters into their own hands if Hillary Clinton won the election. During the final debate, he refused to say hed accept the results if he lost. I will keep you in suspense, Trump said.

READ: Trump gave Democrats their made-for-TV moment on impeachment

Even in victory, Trump obsessively and falsely insisted that hed carried the popular vote as well if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally. He even set up a bogus, taxpayer-funded voter fraud commission to back up his claim. That commission turned up nothing and quietly disbanded after more than a year of controversy.

That didnt stop Trump.

In 2018, he claimed electoral corruption when GOP Senate nominee Martha McSally fell behind in Arizona after leading on election night and election fraud when now-Sen. Rick Scotts (R-Fla.) lead shrank as late votes were counted. Last August, Trump claimed he should have won New Hampshire in 2016 if thousands and thousands of people coming in from locations unknown hadnt shown up to vote.

In recent weeks hes called the House impeachment investigation a coup, accused his opponents of treason, and tweeted a comment made on Fox News by a controversial pastor that his removal from office would cause a Civil War like fracture.

Experts are worried about where Trump is headed. Duke University Professor Peter Feaver, a former member of the National Security Council under President George W. Bush, is concerned enough that hes organized a Nov. 25 conference to discuss best practices for administrations to simultaneously campaign to win reelection and prepare to hand over power in case you lose. Former Obama White House Chief of Staff Dennis McDonough and former Bush 43 White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten are the featured speakers.

Feaver said Trumps rhetoric is at the very least deeply irresponsible, and warned that foreign actors who seek to damage America will look to amplify any claims of fraud, as Russia did in 2016. His worst-case scenario is a genuine constitutional crisis where a states results are in dispute, either because of foreign interference or because one partys nominee simply refuses to concede and seeks to work outside the constitution to hold power.

READ: Trump Tried to Intimidate Marie Yovanovitch as She Testified About His Intimidation

Were not there yet and were not particularly close to it, but were at a stage where its reasonable to just say calm down, folks. This kind of rhetoric leads in a bad direction, Feaver warned.

Bevin, for his part, threatened to fight on, but he ended up quietly conceding after more than a week when a statewide recanvass of ballots showed almost no changes in the vote count. But rather than congratulating his opponent, he instead left with a parting shot, casting doubt on the democratic process.

If the people lose confidence in their ability to actually know that the vote they cast is the one that was tabulated for the person they intended it to be for we lose something in America, he said.

Trump, mysteriously, didnt go to war for Bevin the way he has for other allies. He declined to boost Bevins claims of fraud and instead argued without evidence that his last-minute campaign rally for the governor helped Bevin close a 19-point gap in the polls (no such deficit ever existed in public polling).

That may be because Bevin, as governor, cant help him directly the way that senators can. He also wasnt particularly close to Bevin, and his aversion to losers may have turned him off from helping more Trumps team notably left Bevin off their list of honorary reelection co-chairmen when they included almost every other Kentucky elected official. Or maybe he was just too busy worrying about impeachment.

But other conservative activists stepped up. A wealthy conservative Bevin ally funded robocalls in the state asking voters to report suspicious activity and suspected voter fraud. Judicial Watch President Tom Fittons tweet that Kentucky has weak voter id and dirty election rolls got more than 10,000 retweets. Right-wing Twitter activists and bots amplified an obvious fake account that claimed to have destroyed GOP ballots in the state.

Bevin conceded only after his party refused to stand with him. Republicans have a super-majority in both chambers of the state house and could have stepped in to overturn the election, but they didnt. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who Bevin ran against in 2014, said Bevin should concede if the recanvass didnt go his way.

But Bevin is widely disliked within his own party. Trump, meanwhile, has a firm grip on the Republican base in 2019.

The presidents margins in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan were all less than one percentage point when he won in 2016, and recent polls show tight contests there once again. Arizona, another potential tipping-point state, is notoriously slow at counting votes because of its reliance on mail-in ballots. It often takes days or even weeks to know whos won in close elections there.

The worst-case scenario would be a real constitutional crisis where a key states results are legitimately in question. Floridas 2000 election results are the closest modern analogy, but things could get even worse than that. If both sides dig in a state with split political control, there could be two different, competing certified election results one signed by the secretary of state and another backed by the state legislature.

The last time that happened was in the 1876 presidential election, which ended in controversy and a deal with the devil where Republican Rutherford B. Hayes traded away reconstruction for the White House. If a similar thing happens where a state submits two competing vote certificates, Congress determines which one they accept and if the Senate stays in GOP control and the House in Democrats hands, its unclear how theyd solve anything.

The kind of thing that happened in 2018 in Arizona could spin out of control and take a dispute all the way to Congress. If the Senate went one way and the House goes the other way it could get very ugly, said Foley.

If Trump has clearly lost and refuses to concede, its less likely that his whole party would rally around him to try to upend the election results. Bevin isnt the only recent case where this happened Alabama Republican Roy Moore and Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams are two other recent examples (though Abrams had much more legitimate complaints than the others).

But any claim from Trump that the election is rigged could prove unusually dangerous even if his party doesnt go along. Theres been an uptick in white supremacist violence in recent years and a spike around 2018 elections with the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting and the mail bombs a Trump supporter sent to a bevy of Democrats and media outlets.

If its close, where Trump refuses to accept results... the [white supremacist] movement will be riled up and the possibility for violence will be high, said Heidi Bierich, an expert in white supremacist violence at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Cover: Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, right, looks out at the crowd as President Donald Trump watches during a campaign rally in Lexington, Ky., Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)

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The Nightmare Scenario: Trump Loses in 2020 and Refuses to Concede - Broadly

Navy Beginning Tech Study to Extend Trident Nuclear Missile Into the 2080s – USNI News

An unarmed Trident II D5 missile launches from the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine USS Rhode Island (SSBN-740) off the coast of Cape Canaveral, Fla. on May 9, 2019. US Navy Photo

ARLINGTON, Va. The Navys Strategic Systems Program this fiscal year will begin looking at what new technologies it will need to develop to sustain and modernize its nuclear weapons so they can operate on the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines through the 2080s.

After the Trident D5 missiles underwent an original life extension effort (D5 LE), the office determined they would undergo a D5 LE2 effort that would insert new technologies where possible, find new ways to replace old parts that can no longer be manufactured, and otherwise keep the missiles reliable as a strategic deterrent for more than six more decades.

We are starting this year for the first time in our budget we have a line in [Fiscal Year 2020], and the real crux to that is looking at all of those new technologies that we need to go think about on how were going to take what we have today, how were going to modernize it and how were going to get it to last the entire life of the Columbia, which is we all know about 2084, SSP Director Vice Adm. Johnny Wolfe said last week at the Naval Submarine Leagues annual symposium.

Wolfe said the original life extension effort has gone well, with five flight tests in the last year showing the missiles can still fly the tracks theyre supposed to. In fact, three motors involved in a test that were about three decades old performed like new during the test, he said.

However, this first life extension effort wont get the missiles through the end of the Columbia SSBNs life.

For example, Wolfe said, the Navy decided about six years ago to end production on the post-boost control system, and unique materials are used in that system. With industry knowledge now lost, the Navy needs to develop a new post boost control system with new materials, based on what industry can provide today.

The way we did it then were not going to be able to exactly do it in the future, he said, and SSP needs to build in a learning ramp for industry as they reconstitute this capability.

With this second life extension effort, the plan is, if you look at some of the critical technologies weve got today, and Ill just talk about rocket motors: I would tell you, were the only people right now that use a 1.1 propellant and we have to do that because of volume constraints that weve got. Theres no need to change that, and as we talk about how were going to do this, we are going to continue on producing those rocket motors because, quite frankly, if you look from a reliability perspective, that is the biggest contributor and I would tell you theres nothing better than what weve got in the submarine force today with those motors. So were not going to change that. Were going to continue with that, the vice admiral said.What we are going to start to do is start to look at what are those technologies and I talked about post-boost control, things like nose bearings things we know we wont be able to produce anymore.

The government is currently operating under a continuing resolution that does not allow new programs to start. The current CR expires next week and it remains to be seen what funding mechanism Congress will be able to pass, and therefore how it will affect SSPs ability to get started on this early work on the Trident D5 LE2.

Additionally, Wolfe said SSP has been involved in modernizing the legacy Ohio-class SSBNs and using those modernization and upgrade efforts as risk-reduction measures for the Columbia class.

For example, the Ohio class used an Electrostatically-Supported Gyro Navigator (ESGN) as the inertial navigator for the Trident D5 missile. Wolfe said that, in his modernization portfolio, the biggest program right now is making sure we get the next strategic navigator on the Ohio, which is a risk-mitigator for Columbia because, as we make this change from ESGNs to fiber optics, theres a lot of learning weve got there.

He added that several modernization efforts on shipboard systems such as the fire control system are taking place, and that their installation on the Ohio SSBNs will ease the fleets transition to Columbia as sailors on the new subs will already know how to operate and maintain these systems.

Its not just modernizing the triad; its making sure that we can sustain what we have today until we get to all those modernization programs, he said of the importance of these Ohio upgrade efforts.

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Navy Beginning Tech Study to Extend Trident Nuclear Missile Into the 2080s - USNI News

Future analysis and scope of Soy Isoflavones Market by 2019 to 2025 | leading Companies- NOW Foods, InVite Health, ADM, DHC, GNC and Life Extension -…

A new report entitled Global Soy Isoflavones Markets was recently added to the CMFE Insights database. It has allowed marketers to understand the key attributes that can help investors capitalize effectively on market dynamics, providing a market definition, product description, competitor analysis, and more.

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Chapter 1 Soy Isoflavones Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

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Future analysis and scope of Soy Isoflavones Market by 2019 to 2025 | leading Companies- NOW Foods, InVite Health, ADM, DHC, GNC and Life Extension -...

Soup-To-Nuts Podcast: What might the 2020 dietary guidelines for the first 1,000 days include? – FoodNavigator-USA.com

Until now, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans has provided dietary advice for people 2 years and older, prompting caregivers and healthcare practitioners to turn to a disparate set of resources to figure out the best diet for pregnant women, infants and young children. These include famous books, such as What to Expect When Youre Expecting, and guidelines from various organizations, such as the American Heart Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

And while these are influential and well-researched recommendations, by bringing this group under the purview of the broader Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the US government will for the first time take ownership of them a move that will provide a consistency that so far has been lacking.

The move also is a double-edged sword for the CPG industry. Some hope that including this group in the broader Dietary Guidelines for Americans will protect them undue corporate influence, while others see potential opportunities for innovative manufacturers creating solutions to help Americans meet the recommendations.

While we wont know for sure what the guidelines will include until the recommendations are released and vetted, this episode of FoodNavigator-USAs Soup-To-Nuts podcast explores some of the themes, suggestions and questions that dietitians and industry players would like to see addressed and how these issues might impact CPG manufacturers.

[Editors Note: Never miss another episode of FoodNavigator-USAs Soup-To-Nuts Podcast subscribe to us on iTunes.]

Even though the Dietary Guidelines for Americans are designed with health care professionals in mind and, therefore, are not very consumer-friendly, Amy Kimerlain, a registered dietitian who specializes in childrens nutrition and a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, explained at the Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo in Philadelphia last month that the inclusion of recommendations for the first 1,000 days of life is a critical first step to improving the lives of women and children in the US.

The dietary guidelines allow for general recommendations for healthy Americans across the population, and so now with the introduction of looking at the first 1,000 days, were obviously going to pay closer attention to now not only infants and toddlers, but also prenatally as well, Kimerlain said. She added, these guidelines ultimately will allow for people to look and reflect to see what changes they may need to make in order to improve their health over the long run.

With that in mind, Kimerlain said she hopes the recommendations look not only at the nutrients that are critical to a childs development, but also on what and how much pregnant women need to consume to keep themselves healthy. This includes advice around how many extra calories do women actually need when eating for two, guidance on how much weight they should expect to gain and remain healthy and how diet can help manage potential complications.

Drilling deeper into what the guidelines might include for expecting women, Kristi King who is also a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and the senior pediatric dietitian at Texas Childrens Hospital in Houston, says she hopes the guidelines will include specific recommendations about choline intake.

She explained that choline is a underrated nutrient, that were just now starting to figure out that within that first 1,000 days is so incredibly important for infants and brain development.

She added that this could be an opportunity for supplement manufacturers as well as select food marketers.

An early mover on this from the supplement side is Life Extension, which is a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., based company that launched at FNCE its Prenatal Advantage multivitamin. Like most other prenatal supplements, Life Extensions Prenatal Advantage includes folic acid and DHA, which have long been recognized as essential for developing infants. But it also is one of the few prenatal supplements that includes choline.

On the food side, one of the best sources of choline are eggs, one of which provides 25% of the recommended daily value.

Mickey Rubin, the executive director of the American Egg Boards Egg Nutrition Center explained the importance of the eggs in providing choline as well as more generally supporting maternal and infant health.

Despite the importance of choline to developing infants, he noted only about 25% of expecting mothers are familiar with it, compared to 90% who know about folic acid. In addition, little more than half of health professionals currently are aware of choline.

Beyond choline, Rubin says the high amount of lutein in eggs also can help support developing infants cognitive development by increasing their macular pigment which has been linked to cognition.

Fiber is another necessary nutrient for expecting mothers, infants and young children that King says she wants the upcoming dietary guidelines to highlight. Not only does she say she wants to see stronger recommendations around how much should be consumed, but also guidance clarifying how best to get it including, of course, fresh fruits and vegetables, but also canned and frozen produce as well.

Related to fiber and gut health, King says she would also like to see in the recommendations advice around probiotics, including if they are appropriate for children and expecting women and if so which ones and how much.

Scientifically-based guidance in the dietary guideline recommendations around breastfeeding versus the use of formula also likely will have a significant impact on the CPG industry, predicts King.

Like many dietitians, King advocates that breastfeeding is best, but also acknowledges it is not always an option. In those cases, she says, she would like to see the dietary guidelines recommend the use of FDA approved formula, which is held to a higher safety and nutrition standard than many others from around of the world.

In addition to addressing infant formula, King predicts, the recommendations will tackle toddler milks, for which there is not the same nutritional standard as infant formula but about which much confusion and controversy swirl.

Beverages more broadly also will likely be a hot button topic in the recommendations, with experts predicting the dietary guidelines will call for significantly reduced consumption of sugary drinks, potentially including juice. It likely also will expand or include recent guidelines to restrict drinks for children under five to breast milk, water and dairy milk with only occasional consumption of 100% fruit juice if whole fruit is not an option.

These likely are only a small sample of the issues that will be addressed in the guidance. While the upcoming guidance likely wont make everyone happy or be perfect, as Kimerlain notes, it is a first step.

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Soup-To-Nuts Podcast: What might the 2020 dietary guidelines for the first 1,000 days include? - FoodNavigator-USA.com

Jobs, cancer-fighting isotopes and nuclear innovation highlight Bruce Power update – Shoreline Beacon

In an update to Saugeen Shores councillors Nov. 11, Christopher Mercanti, Bruce Power's Manager of Community and Indigenous Relations, said when the Major Component Replacement program begins in January there will be an immediate need for 500-plus additional workers.

When Bruce Power begins the $13 billion private investment Major Component Replacement (MCR) program in January, a good 500- plus people will be needed immediately according to Christopher Mercanti, Bruce Powers Manager of Community and Indigenous Relations in a Nov. 11 update to Saugeen Shores councillors.

Bruce Power said the MCR, a $13 billion private investment in the Life Extension program, will create and sustain 22,000 direct and indirect jobs annually, and inject $4 billion into the Ontario economy.

Saugeen Shores Coun. Jami Smith, a Bruce Power Corporate Services employee, said they are looking forward to welcoming the new workers, and asked when the peak demand for labour may be..

Mercanti, counting down 66 days to the MCR, said in January there will be several hundred more workers on site doing prep work, but the real influx doesnt really start until next spring into next summer 2020 he said, adding there would be at least 500 more people on site immediately when they start in January.

Mercanti said continued improvements in operational performance included a record-setting 361 of continuous operation for Unit 1, additional megawatt production, and a historic agreement with Saugeen Ojibway Nation (SON) to collaborate to market medical isotopes.

This medical isotope is used in the treatment of prostrate cancer, and were looking at other isotopes that can be exposed to our neutron fields, and get to market and help treat others cancers such, as breast cancer Mercanti said.

Mercanti said community engagement efforts included awarding 100 Grey-Bruce-Huron students each with $500 scholarships; scholarships to 12 local Indigenous students in partnership with Indspire; the record-setting 6,200 visitors who took the Bruce Power bus tour this past summer; and continued support to Saugeen Memorial Hospital which included $50,000 annually in the past four years; and the Gran Fondo

Saugeen Shores Deputy Mayor Don Matheson thanked Bruce Power for all it does.

The world is an oyster and it is going to open up to us in January with the MCR, so I look forward to all the great wonderful things that will come out of that. he said.

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Jobs, cancer-fighting isotopes and nuclear innovation highlight Bruce Power update - Shoreline Beacon

Some thoughts on Scott Frosts extension: Why now, and what it means – Saturday Tradition

Twelve days removed from Willie Taggart getting fired with a 9-12 record at Florida State, 8-13 Scott Frost got a 2-year extension at Nebraska.

Two programs in different places made completely different decisions on the future of their respective head coaches. One didnt believe in the vision, the other bought in even more.

On the surface, it evokes an interesting discussion as to why certain coaches have more leverage than others. Some will use that as a reason to question why Frost got an extension, especially considering how underwhelming 2019 has been. For starters, different people are making that decision.

Lets pick the brain of the person who did make that decision on the Nebraska side, athletic director Bill Moos.

He was pretty candid about that decision when it was announced before Saturdays game against Wisconsin:

Do you speak athletic director? Dont worry, I do. Id be happy to translate that quote for you.

We gave him the extension because we were desperate for some momentum going into the home stretch of the recruiting cycle.

That, in my opinion, is at the forefront of a decision like that.

Nebraska entered the day at No. 33 in the 2020 class rankings (247sports). Thats roughly 5 weeks out from the Early Signing Period. Thats behind the likes of Northwestern, Iowa, Wisconsin, Purdue and just 1 spot ahead of Minnesota. The Huskers have just 13 verbal commits. Only Rutgers and Illinois have fewer total commits than Frosts program.

You dont need me to translate that. Thats not great for Frosts third recruiting class. Thats why in his mid-week press conference, Frost was asked about the on-field struggles carrying over to the teams recruiting.

People see where this is going and were not going to lose sight of that, Frost said, in a video captured by Matt Reynoldson of KLKN. This group has done an unbelievable job of getting the program turned. Its certainly not happening as fast as I want it to. But were gonna get it done. Thats why Im here. [We] knew this thing wasnt in great shape when we took it over and we knew we had a lot of things to fix. Were in the process of doing that.

I think theres a tremendous opportunity for recruits to come in and try to make an impact early. That vision and opportunity is going to help us on the recruiting trail a lot.

Combine that with the ESPN story that came out this week that quoted Tom Osborne saying he thinks Frost feels the weight of this thing.

That explains the timing. As Moos said, he planned on doing it anyway. He picked Saturday morning ahead of a 3-game stretch to end the season in which Nebraska had matchups against Wisconsin and Iowa, both of whom are teams currently ranked in the Top 25. If Frost cant win his first game against a ranked foe at Nebraska, the Huskers will spend bowl season at home for the third straight year.

You bet Moos wanted to make sure Nebraska wanted to get some offseason momentum.

So theres another question that many are probably asking, and understandably so Frost wasnt going anywhere so why did the Huskers compete against themselves with the extension? Its a fair question.

Its one that The Athletics Andy Staples threw out there:

(Andy and I actually had a bit of a back and forth about it. You can see that exchange here.)

Recruiting is a fickle business. Negative recruiting happens everywhere.

If Im a B1G West coach and I know a kid is strongly considering Nebraska, Im telling him sure, Frost is under contract. But do you really think that fanbase with those expectations are going to give Frost 5 years?

Its easy to convince people that a coach is on the proverbial hot seat, even if Nebraska fans would sooner give up Runza for life than they would bail on Frost. The last thing Nebraska wants is a recruit even thinking about wait, could Frost be on the hot seat by the time Im a sophomore?

By extending Frost, thats not in question. Instead, he can walk into any living room for the next month and say, I started off 8-13 and they still gave me a 2-year deal. The administration has my back. They have patience. Come be a part of a program on the rise and I promise you wont be hung out to dry.

If Frost wants to use that pitch, Im on PayPal.

I know what you might be thinking that might make sense in theory, but didnt Nebraska just become more financially committed to Frost just in hopes of finishing the recruiting cycle strong?

Yes and no. We dont know the buyout numbers of the new deal just yet, but if thats still relatively unchanged, not much will change in terms of the financial commitment. Frost isnt going to simply coach out the remainder of his contract on his current deal. Athletic directors never do that anymore because of the recruiting impact. Theres no such thing as a lame-duck coach. Why? Its too easy to negatively recruit against a lame-duck coach.

From an ADs standpoint, Moos knows his tenure is going to be defined by the Frost hire. If Frost fails, his job is on the line, too. He wont even be around to deal with the ramifications of that buyout. Thats why it might be viewed as hedging to be anything but aggressive with Frosts contract.

So now, we know more than ever that Moos is all in with Frost. There wasnt ever any doubt of that. While the results havent been what he hoped for yet, theres logic behind a move that some mightve waited to make.

Its Frost or bust for Nebraska, just as we always thought.

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Some thoughts on Scott Frosts extension: Why now, and what it means - Saturday Tradition

Feleshia Thompson promoted to Family and Community Health County Extension Agent – The Light and Champion

The Shelby County Extension Offices Feleshia Thompson was promoted from her two-and-a-half year position as the Better Living for Texans Extension Educator - to the Family and Community Health County Extension Agent.

Thompson, a local resident of Shelby County, said she is excited to carry out the duties of her new title.

I was born and raised in Shelby County, Thompson said. I graduated from Steven F. Austin State University with a bachelors in science and health science; with a concentration in community health - and also a minor in psychology.While she has been with the Shelby County Extension Office for more than two years, she just started her new position on Oct. 14.

Thompson plans to keep the classes and previous community opportunities offered by the extension office alive and available as the new extension agent. She also plans to add new fitness and health classes for the community.

She replaces Jheri-Lynn McSwain, who was promoted earlier this year to a regional position with the Texas AgriLife Extension Service based in Overton.

I plan to continue most of the programs that Jheri-Lynn did in the county; the Women on the Go, Freezer Pleaser classes - and just add to those programs and more - like with chronic disease, cardiovascular disease, diabetes - more fitness programs in the community, Thompson said.

With all of these new plans and ideas to better help the community and community health, Thompson has an all-year-long fitness program idea she is also working on.

Im also going to try to start a year-round fitness program, Thompson said. Using different volunteers that are certified to teach classes and fitness.

She was approved by the Shelby County Commissioners Court for her new position.

Ive been here my whole life, Thompson said. I appreciate the County Judge and the County Commissioners for allowing me the opportunity to be the County Extension Agent-Family for Shelby County and I look forward to working with all the businesses and all the people here in Shelby County.

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Feleshia Thompson promoted to Family and Community Health County Extension Agent - The Light and Champion