The US government is asking tech giants to build a new supercomputer that’s 50 times more powerful – Fast Company

Facebook is unquestionably the largest social network the world has ever seen. Every month, 1.94 billion people use the service. Every day, 1.28 billion peopleabout one in seven on the entire planetuse it. With that scale comes all kinds of responsibilities.

That's why Facebook has decided to formally address what it calls the "hard questions," the things that it feels will most govern what it does, and how it should be governed, going forward.

In a blog post, Elliot Schrage, Facebook's vice president for public policy and communications, wrote that the company wants to talk "openly" about these "complex subjects:"

* How should platforms approach keeping terrorists from spreading propaganda online?

* After a person dies, what should happen to their online identity?

* How aggressively should social media companies monitor and remove controversial posts and images from their platforms? Who gets to decide what's controversial, especially in a global community with a multitude of cultural norms?

* Who gets to define what's false news and what's simply controversial political speech?

* Is social media good for democracy?

* How can we use data for everyone's benefit, without undermining people's trust?

* How should young internet users be introduced to new ways to express themselves in a safe environment?

Facebook recognizes that not everyone will be in lock-step with it on how it addresses those questions, and it knows people will think there are other hard questions that need to be looked at as well. So the company is inviting users to suggest additional questions at hardquestions@fb.com.

Meanwhile, the folks at TechCrunch have annotated Facebook's list with their thoughts on the context behind each of the seven initial questions. DT

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The US government is asking tech giants to build a new supercomputer that's 50 times more powerful - Fast Company

Fujitsu Receives Order from Kyushu University for Top-Class … – HPCwire (blog)

TOKYO, June 15, 2017 Fujitsu today announced that it has received an order from the Research Institute for Information Technology at Kyushu University for a new supercomputer system, which will steadily ramp up operations starting in October 2017.

This system will consist of over 2,000 servers, including the Fujitsu Server PRIMERGY CX400, the next-generation model of Fujitsus x86 server. It is expected to offer top-class performance in Japan, providing a theoretical peak performance of about 10 petaflops(1). This will also be Japans first supercomputer system featuring a large-scale private cloud environment constructed on a front-end sub system, linked with a computational server of a back-end sub system through a high-speed file system.

The Research Institute for Information Technology will use this system as computational resources for JHPCN(2) and HPCI(3), as well as a variety of user programs. By making this system available to users both inside and outside of the university, it will enhance the platform for academic research in Japan and contribute to the development of new academic research including AI. Fujitsu will use the technology and experience it has developed as Japans top supercomputer maker to strongly support the activities of the Research Institute for Information Technology.

Background of the New System Implementation

As a center for education and research, Kyushu University is the largest public university in the Kyushu region, and the Research Institute for Information Technology is a nationwide joint-use facility visited by professors, graduate students, and researchers across Japan for academic research.

Currently, the Research Institute for Information Technology operates three systems: a supercomputer system (consisting of the Fujitsu Supercomputer PRIMEHPC FX10 system), a high-performance computational server system (made up of Fujitsu PRIMERGY CX400 x86 servers), and a high-performance applications server system. The three systems will be integrated as part of the new supercomputer system, creating an environment that can meet an even wider variety of needs, extending beyond the current large-scale computation and scientific simulations, to include usage and research that require extremely large-scale computation, such as AI, big data, and data science.

Features of the New System

1. Server System

The server system of the new supercomputer system will consist primarily of a back-end subsystem, a front-end subsystem, and a storage subsystem.

Back-end subsystem The computational nodes will be made up of 2,128 PRIMERGY CX400 systems, the next-generation model of Fujitsus x86 server, equipped with Intel Xeon processor Scalable family (codename: Skylake). 128 of these servers will be equipped with four NVIDIA Tesla P100 GPU computing cards each (a total of 512 cards/ NVIDIA NVLink (4) used to connect GPUs).

Front-end subsystem This system will consist of 160 basic front-end nodes featuring Intel Xeon processor Scalable family (codename: Skylake) and NVIDIA Quadro P4000 graphics cards, as well as four high-capacity front-end nodes featuring 12 terabytes of memory each, and other servers.

Storage subsystem Fujitsu will deploy a disk array system with an effective capacity of over 24 petabytes.

2. Interconnect

Using the latest high-speed interconnect EDR InfiniBand to connect between the servers, this system offers high parallel computation performance and availability.

3. File System

This supercomputer system will be built using FEFS(5), Fujitsus high capacity, high performance, high reliability distributed file system with a proven track record both inside and outside Japan.

4. Power Saving Feature

This will incorporate a system to monitor electricity usage. By using the Fujitsu Software Technical Computing Suite(6), the HPC middleware, this system will flexibly control electricity usage through such functions to limit the maximum electricity consumption for each system user.

Overview of the New System

(1) Petaflops Short for peta floating-point operations per second. Peta is an SI prefix indicating one quadrillion, or ten to the power of 15, so this indicates performance of one quadrillion floating point operations per second. (2) JHPCN Joint Usage/Research Center for Interdisciplinary Large-scale Information Infrastructures. A network of joint use and research locations made up of supercomputer facilities at Hokkaido University, Tohoku University, the University of Tokyo, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Nagoya University, Kyoto University, Osaka University, and Kyushu University, with the Information Technology Center at the University of Tokyo serving as the core location. (3) HPCI High performance computing infrastructure. A computing environment that connects the K computer and major supercomputers located in universities and laboratories across Japan in a network to meet the diverse needs of users. (4) NVIDIA NVLink A high-bandwidth interconnect with high energy efficiency. The next-generation model of PRIMERGY CX400 is equipped with the maximum of four GPU computing cards per server and by connecting them with NVIDIA NVLink, provides ultra-high-speed communications. (5) FEFS A high performance distributed file system that can be shared on the scale of a hundred thousand of nodes. (6) Fujitsu Software Technical Computing Suite HPC middleware that offers high execution performance for massively parallel applications through system management and job operation functionality, compilers, libraries and so forth.

About Fujitsu Ltd

Fujitsu is the leading Japanese information and communication technology (ICT) company, offering a full range of technology products, solutions, and services. Approximately 159,000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. We use our experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with our customers. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702; ADR:FJTSY) reported consolidated revenues of 4.7 trillion yen (US$41 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2016. For more information, please see http://www.fujitsu.com.

Source: Fujitsu

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Fujitsu Receives Order from Kyushu University for Top-Class ... - HPCwire (blog)

Super computer predicts Premier League table after five games and it’s great news for promoted duo Newcastle and … – The Sun

Tottenham well outside the European places, with Stoke, Swansea and Crystal Palace sitting in the relegation spots

A SUPER computer has predicted the Premier League table after five games and its great news for promoted duo Newcastle and Huddersfield.

While the jury remains out on those two sides and Brighton after they broke into the top flight for 2017-18, the powerful machine has suggested theyll get off to a strong start.

Rex Features

Brighton, while only winning one of their opening five, only lose twice to reach 14th in the table in their debut Premier League season.

Keep up to date with ALL the football news, gossip, transfers and goals on our page plus fixtures, results and live match commentary.

Its even better news for Huddersfield also tasting the Prem for the first time who crack the top ten.

David Wagners side win two and lose two of their opening five games to squeeze above Southampton, Everton and West Hamin ninth place.

Meanwhile, Rafa Benitezs Newcastle are flying high in sixth spot, with two wins and two draws from their first five fixtures.

Reuters

Check out the full list of every Premier League side's fixtures, here.

In fact, the Toon are above last season's title challengers Tottenham - who sit only in seventh, also with eight points from their first handful of fixtures.

Arsenal are good for fifth with three wins and just the one loss from their first few games - level on points with fourth-placed Chelsea.

Manchester United are unbeaten according to the super computer with three wins and two draws for 11 points.

Getty Images

Rex Features

According to the machine, Liverpool and Manchester City are the teams to beat in 2017-18, both of whom win four of their opening five games for 13 points.

The game the duo draw in the simulation is the game against each other on September 9 - with Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp set for a titanic battle in the upcoming season.

Reuters

Action Images Via Reuters

At the bottom of the table, Stoke are the only side yet to register a win, with FOUR losses in their opening five games.

Swansea and Crystal Palace are also in the bottom three, with Bournemouth, Watford and Burnley just a point above the drop zone.

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Super computer predicts Premier League table after five games and it's great news for promoted duo Newcastle and ... - The Sun

Atos Wins Contract for GENCI Supercomputer – HPCwire (blog)

PARIS, June 15, 2017 Atos, through its technology brand Bull, has won a contract with GENCI (Grand quipement National de Calcul Intensif) to deliver one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world, planned for the end of 2017. A successor of the Curie system installed at the TGCC (Trs Grand Centre de Calcul of the CEA in Bruyres-Le-Chatel), the Bull Sequana supercomputer has an overall power of 9 petaflops and can carry out 9 million billion operations per second. It will be used for research purposes in France and Europe. The announcement was formalised yesterday at the Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation.

A supercomputer to speed up academic and industrial research

The new supercomputer will be made available to French and European researchers for use in academic and industrial fields that require extremely high computing and data processing power.

The applications for intensive computing are many and varied, such as climatology, where the supercomputer will help to model past, present and future meteorological conditions with incredible accuracy within the framework of international activities carried out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)[1]. When applied to life sciences, the high-performance computer will make it possible to work on the scale of basic chemical processes in molecular systems, thus paving the way for major advances in the personalisation of medicine. In the energy industry, the supercomputer will not only optimise the process of combustion in motors and turbines, but also develop alternatives based on electricity with new-generation batteries in the wind, tidal and, in future, fusion power sectors. In astrophysics, only a supercomputer with this kind of power is capable of simulating the entire universe, thus putting us in a position to better understand its origin and evolution.

The equivalent of 75,000 PCs connected together

Based on the platform of the latest generation of the Bull Sequana X1000, which will eventually be capable of achieving an exaflop (a billion billion operations per second), the first instalment of this supercomputer will have a peak computing power of 8.9 petaflops and a distributed memory capacity of almost 400 terabytes. An extension of its configuration is planned for 2019, when its computing capacity is set to increase to more than 20 petaflops.

Consisting of more than 124,000 computing cores, the supercomputer will benefit from the patented direct liquid cooling (DLC) technology used to cool the system down to room temperature, creating an energy saving of up to 40% compared to air cooling.

The design of Curies successor illustrates the expertise of Atos engineers, confirming Atos European leadership in the supercomputer domain. Following on from the Curie supercomputer, deliveredin 2011 and already amongst the most powerful in the world, we are proud of the renewed trust that GENCI has placed in us to accompany them each day in their development of academic and industrial research states Philippe Vannier, Group Advisor for Technology at Atos

GENCI welcomes the acquisition of a new Atos supercomputer, which will actively help us to maintain the scientific competitivity of our French researchers. This highly anticiapted acquisition indeed marks an acceleration in French investment in research organisations. This will also be of great advantage to f industrial companies, especially SMEs and start-ups. This high-performance equipment spearheads our commitment in the European research infrastructure PRACE (PartneRship for Advanced Computing in Europe) in which GENCI is highly involved in representing France says Philippe Lavocat, CEO of GENCI.

The Atos group, leader of the supercomputer in Europe, has 22 supercomputers in the TOP500 of the most powerful machines in the world.

Specifications of the new supercomputer:

Atos at ISC

Atos is a Platinum Sponsor at the ISC High Performance Annual Conference that takes place in Frankfurt from 19th-22nd June 2017, and will exhibit the full breadth of its High Performance Computing offer on booth #D-1126. Follow the developments online at @Atos, @Bull_com

About Atos

Atos is a global leader in digital transformation with approximately 100,000 employees in 72 countries and annual revenue of around 12 billion. The Europeannumber onein Big Data, Cybersecurity, High Performance Computing and Digital Workplace, The Group provides Cloud services, Infrastructure & Data Management, Business & Platform solutions, as well as transactional services through Worldline, the European leader in the payment industry. With its cutting-edge technologies, digital expertise and industry knowledge, Atos supports the digital transformation of its clients across various business sectors: Defense, Financial Services, Health, Manufacturing, Media, Energy & Utilities, Public sector, Retail, Telecommunications, Transportation. The Group is the Worldwide Information Technology Partner for the Olympic & Paralympic Games and operates under the brands Atos, Atos Consulting, Atos Worldgrid, Bull, Canopy, Unify and Worldline. Atos SE (Societas Europaea) is listed on the CAC40 Paris stock index.www.atos.net

Bull is the Atos brand for its technology products and software, which are today distributed in over 50 countries worldwide. With a rich heritage of over 80 years of technological innovation, 2000 patents and a 700 strong R&D team supported by the Atos Scientific Community, it offers products and value-added software to assist clients in their digital transformation, specifically in the areas of Big Data and Cybersecurity and Defense.www.bull.com| Follow @Bull_com Atos expertise in HPC:

Atos has an ambitious exascale program that aims to develop a new generation of supercomputers capable of achieving a performance of the exaflops by 2020, meaning more than one billion billion operations per second, while considerably reducing electricity consumption. A total of 22 Atos supercomputers worldwide are ranked in the TOP500. In Nov 2016 18 supercomputers by Atos are listed on the Green500 list (of which 6 in the TOP 50).

Spokespersons present during ISC:

Atos presentations:

About Atos

Atos is a global leader in digital transformation with approximately 100,000 employees in 72 countries and annual revenue of around 12 billion. The European number one in Big Data, Cybersecurity, High Performance Computing and Digital Workplace, The Group provides Cloud services, Infrastructure & Data Management, Business & Platform solutions, as well as transactional services through Worldline, the European leader in the payment industry. With its cutting-edge technologies, digital expertise and industry knowledge, Atos supports the digital transformation of its clients across various business sectors: Defense, Financial Services, Health, Manufacturing, Media, Energy & Utilities, Public sector, Retail, Telecommunications and Transportation. The Group is the Worldwide Information Technology Partner for the Olympic & Paralympic Games and operates under the brands Atos, Atos Consulting, Atos Worldgrid, Bull, Canopy, Unify and Worldline. Atos SE (Societas Europaea) is listed on the CAC40 Paris stock index.

Source: Atos

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Atos Wins Contract for GENCI Supercomputer - HPCwire (blog)

Texas has sanctioned unapproved stem cell therapies. Will it change anything? – Science Magazine

Texas Governor Greg Abbott just signed a law making it easier for unproven stem cell therapies to be given to patients in his state.

Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Bob Daemmrich Photography/Alamy Stock Photo

By Kelly ServickJun. 15, 2017 , 11:15 AM

Texas Governor Greg Abbott yesterday signed a bill allowing clinics and companies in the state to offer people unproven stem cell interventions without the testing and approval required under federal law. Like the right to try laws that have sprung up in more than 30 states, the measure is meant to give desperately ill patients access to experimental treatments without oversight from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

In a state where unproven stem cell therapies are already offered widely with little legal backlash, bioethicists and patient advocates wonder whether the states official blessing will maintain the status quo, tighten certain protections for patients, or simply embolden clinics already profiting from potentially risky therapies.

You could make the argument thatif [the new law] was vigorously enforcedits going to put some constraints in place, says Leigh Turner, a bioethicist at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, who last year co-authored a study documenting U.S. stem cell clinics marketing directly to consumers online, 71 of which were based in Texas. But it would really be surprising if anybody in Texas is going to wander around the state making sure that businesses are complying with these standards, he adds. Either way, Turner says theres powerful symbolic value in setting up this conflict between state law and federal law.

The law, effective 1 September, will allow people with severe chronic or terminal illness to be treated at a clinic that purports to isolate therapeutic stem cells from adult tissuesuch as a patients own fatif their doctor recommends it after considering all other options, and if its administered by a physician at a hospital or medical school with oversight from an institutional review board (IRB). It also requires that the same intervention already be tested on humans in a clinical trial. The law sanctions a much broader set of therapies than federal rules, which already exempt certain stem cell interventions from FDAs lengthy approval process, provided the cells are only minimally manipulated and perform the same function they normally have in body.

The Texas bills clinical trial and IRB requirements seem to weed out some dubious therapies, but the language is too nebulous to protect patients, says Beth Roxland, a bioethicist at New York Universitys Langone Medical Center in New York City. The bill doesnt specify that a trial be conducted in the United States or that the therapy get clearance from FDA for human testing. You could gain access to something [as long as its] being studied in a human somewhere on the planet, she says, which in the stem cell area makes it really very scary.

Awareness about the risks of unproven stem cell therapies is growing. A case report published in The New England Journal of Medicine earlier this year documented three women who lost their vision after receiving purported stem cell injections meant to treat age-related degeneration of the retina. Such risks are also the subject of a news conference today at the annual meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research in Boston.

Roxland is also unnerved by a provision in the Texas law that would prevent any state government entity from interfering with a patients access to treatment. Hypothetically, if a state officially gets wind of nefarious doings at a for-profit clinic the state officials are now restrained from doing anything. She notes that that language mirrors a proposal in a federal bill known as the Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act, introduced in the Senate in January, which would prevent the federal government from interfering with a terminally ill patients access to an experimental drug outside of a clinical trial, and would prevent FDA from considering those patients outcomes in its drug approval decisions. Vice President Mike Pence signaled his support for the law in February and met with the family of Trickett Wendler, who advocated for right to try laws before her death from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in 2015.

Others also believe that the Texas laws approval might signal a coming thaw in federal regulation of stem cell clinics. The FDA obviously doesnt have the manpower to watch over these people, says David Bales, chairman of the advocacy group Texans for Cures in Austin, which pushed for more patient protections in the new bill. We really feel like theyre trying to open up the floodgates.

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Texas has sanctioned unapproved stem cell therapies. Will it change anything? - Science Magazine

Lab-created antibody could hold the secret to making stem cell … – Phys.Org

June 15, 2017 Researchers from the A*STAR Bioprocessing Technology Institute involved in the study. Credit: A*STAR Bioprocessing Technology Institute

Stem cells have paved the way for a new era in regenerative medicine, but their use is fraught with risk. Now, A*STAR scientists have developed an antibody that could make stem cell therapy safer.

Human pluripotent stem cells that can differentiate in a petri dish to become any cell needed to repair tissues and organs, hold great promise. Since the first human embryonic stem cells were isolated in 1998, scientists have edged closer to developing 'cell therapy' for humans. In early 2017, a Japanese man became the first patient to receive a retina transplant made of reprogrammed pluripotent stem cells to treat macular degeneration.

These potential rewards come with great risk. Differentiating stem cells into other cell types is an imperfect process, and any stem cells that remain in a culture of transplanted cells can form dangerous by-products, including tumors, such as teratomas.

"If stem cells become a cell therapy product there will be the question of safety," Andre Choo, from the A*STAR Bioprocessing Technology Institute, explains.

Choo and his team are working to make stem cell treatments safer by creating antibodies that 'clean up' the pluripotent stem cells which fail to differentiate.

In 2016, the researchers used a whole-cell immunization strategy to generate different antibodies by injecting mice with viable embryonic stem cells. They then isolated the antibodies and tested their ability to search and destroy pluripotent stem cells in a culture dish.

One antibody, tagged 'A1', was discovered which destroyed pluripotent stem cells in minutes but left other cells unharmed.

Choo's team then focused on how the antibody destroyed its target. The scientists discovered that A1 docks to sugar molecules that are only present on the surface of embryonic stem cells, setting off a signaling cascade that ruptures the stem cell.

"That was quite exciting because it now gives us a view of the mechanism that is responsible for the cell-killing effect," says Choo.

Understanding this mechanism could allow Choo's team to combine the A1 antibody with other treatments to clean stem cells from a mixture of differentiated cells even more effectively.

The finding could also pinpoint how best to target antibodies against sugar molecules on other unwanted cells, including cancer cells.

"We hope that in the near future regenerative medicine will have a place in the clinic," says Choo, who wants this antibody to be part of that process.

The A*STAR-affiliated researchers contributing to this research are from the Bioprocessing Technology Institute. For more information about the team's research, please visit the Stem Cell 1 group webpage.

Explore further: New tools to study the origin of embryonic stem cells

More information: Ji Yun Zheng et al. Excess reactive oxygen species production mediates monoclonal antibody-induced human embryonic stem cell death via oncosis, Cell Death and Differentiation (2017). DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2016.164

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Lab-created antibody could hold the secret to making stem cell ... - Phys.Org

New Law Opens Door for Stem Cell Therapy in Texas – Spectrum News

AUSTIN, Texas -- The legal battle to get patients access to stem cell therapy in Texas is closer to reality.

Gov. Greg Abbott signed such legislation into law this week, and itmeans some patients will be heading into uncharted medical territory.

Come Sept. 1, patients with terminal illnesses or severe chronic diseases will be allowed to access experimental stem cell treatments in Texas.

MORE |Governor Signs Law to Allow Chronic, Terminally Ill in Texas to Get Stem Cell Treatments

Currently, mostpatients who want stem cell therapy have to travel outside the United States to do it, and stem cell re-injections are only allowed here within a 24-hour window.

"This is going to protect patient health, and provide for the treatments to be done here locally at home," saidMike Byrom, the Chief Science Officer at Austin stem cell bankBioEden.

Byrom said the new lawwill keep patients in the country, and will provide renewed hope for those with serious ailments.

This hope resulted in anemotional fight this session.

Texas State Rep. Drew Springer, R-Gainesville, gave an impassioned speech for the legislation as the deadline to read new bills approached, urging lawmakers to keep it from dying.

"I'll be damned if we don't get the chance tonight to hear the very next bill that opens up the doors of medical science," saidSpringer, whose wife is wheelchair-bound."It might give somebody like my wife a chance to walk."

But not everyone's convinced this is the right way to go.

"We want access for patients to the best drugs, but we think they ought to go through the FDA approval process," saidTexans for Cures Chairman David Bales.

Bales was one of the few people who testified against the bill. While he supports more stem cell research,hearguesthe state should fund it, rather than letting for-profit businesses lead the way.

"You run the risk of medical fraud because a lot of these guys, a lot of these patients, are paying a lot of money, to physicians and drug manufacturers who haven't gone through the right process,"Balessaid.

Patients who will be participating in stem cell therapy procedures will give up their right to take legal action if something goes wrong.

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New Law Opens Door for Stem Cell Therapy in Texas - Spectrum News

Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram – Evening Standard

All exposed brickwork and piping, on first impression Marcus Wainwrights office might seem just like any other Meatpacking District loft. Look a bit closer, though, and you soon start to see the spoils of 15 very successful years spent in fashion. There are framed letters of congratulations from former President Barack Obama, from American Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and from Ralph Lauren. There is a handwritten card in which Cate Blanchett gushes that she is such a devotee. On the floor, among stacks and stacks of books (to be honest its a bit of a tip), is the Royal typewriter that provided Wainwrights label, Rag & Bone, with its signature lowercase font.

Wainwright himself is sitting behind his heavyset dark wood desk having his photo taken. Until last year, there was another desk just like his in here, and these photos would also have featured another man his business partner David Neville, a fellow Brit who he first met aged 14 at Wellington College (a boarding school near Reading), and who joined the company in 2005 as co-director. But although Neville still retains his shares and seat on the board, in mid-2016 he left the building to invest in other ventures (including one with his wife, renowned make-up artist Gucci Westman, who is launching her own skincare line).

Thus Wainwright has now taken on the commercial side of Rag & Bone as well as the creative, heading up a team of 300 and a global empire of 36 stores. He is now both the creative director and sole CEO of a brand that reportedly generated more than $300m (235m) in revenue last year, and which is still growing all the time. Witness the huge new flagship store that has opened this week on the corner of Beak Street and Great Pulteney Street in Soho: a five-storey late-Victorian building that will serve as its European HQ, and in which Wainwrights friend Stanley Donwood the British artist best known for creating Radioheads album covers has painted a vast black and white London skyline mural.

Its a bit of a headf***, he admits when asked how hes coping day to day with overseeing such big steps alone. He used to run the business side of things, I always used to run the creative side of things. Now I have to run everything. That took a bit of getting used to. Im getting the hang of it I think, although I still cant really read a spreadsheet. Why did the band split up? It was the end of an era. We achieved a lot together and it was just one of those things, Wainwright shrugs. David decided that he wanted to go off and do some other stuff and I felt like I could take Rag & Bone in a singular direction. To illustrate the duality of his new position, there is a drawing table off to one side lined up with his sketchbooks containing years of ideas, designs and doodlings, some of which have been embellished in places by his kids. So Wainwright can literally roll between the two roles on his swivel chair.

The nonchalant air of artful dishevelment about Wainwright and his workspace is very much the pervading Rag & Bone aesthetic. Born in Greece before moving to Bangladesh and Switzerland with his diplomat parents, he had no formal training as a fashion designer but grew up with an appreciation for bespoke tailoring. From the age of 16, his grandmother would pay for him to have a suit made each year for his birthday. Later he spent more than a year in a denim factory in Kentucky learning the rudiments from lifelong artisans before the place went out of business. All this is weaved into Rag & Bones various lines: ready-to-wear womens, mens, jeans, shoes, accessories. We ended up with a lot of American workwear with English tailoring details; general construction points that are taken from English cues and applied to American clothes.

It was love that originally brought Wainwright to America. He had quit a lucrative but soul-destroying telecoms job in London, rented out his flat in Stockwell and gone backpacking to Mexico where he met his now wife, Glenna Neece, who was working there as a model. He followed her back to New York. Today they live in a $6.75m (5.3m) house in Cobble Hill Historic District, a family-friendly part of brownstone Brooklyn, with their three kids, Noah, 10, Henry, eight, and Cate, five, who are all at a local private school. Neece is now a herbalist who practises reiki. Is he into all that too? Not per se, but I drink what she gives me, he says. And Im getting spiritual in my old age. I meditate.

To complete the idyll, the family also has a weekend retreat in the Hamptons: a converted barn with a pool in Bridgehampton. I have a Land Rover that I drive on the beach, which I love, he says. We used to go every weekend until my kids starting playing sport. Weekend soccer kills you! Just recently, however, Wainwright enjoyed a rare weekend. I took time for myself, he says. He went to Seattle for a business meeting and then stayed on his own. I just drew, walked around, ate sushi, drank beer. Then I went to a Radiohead concert. Hes friends with the band. I get to go and sit in the dressing room, so its pretty fun.

For someone who claims to not be a social guy, Wainwright certainly rubs shoulders with an interesting set of creative types with whom he collaborates on various projects. Hes made short conceptual films using parkour or interpretive dance and held portrait photo exhibitions in place of runway shows. His latest enterprise was to fund a quirky short film called Hair, which debuted at Robert De Niros Tribeca Film Festival in April a five-minute two-hander set in a Williamsburg barbershop between Hollywood actors Bobby Cannavale (Vinyl) and John Turturro (The Night Of). The entire wardrobe is Rag & Bone. It was completely ad-libbed, there was no script and they could wear whatever they wanted, says Wainwright. Its pretty funny.

Wainwright says he hates Instagram and has never been on Facebook. Its just a way of communication that I dont think is healthy, he says. [Other designers] seem very focused on the Instagram crowd. Im not going to spend a million dollars in eight minutes, which is what a show costs. Its a disgusting waste of money when no one gives a s***. Ill think, How can I spend that million dollars in a really authentic and inspiring way? Film is perfect for that.

Sounds like a smart business decision. It seems life as a solo artist is treating Wainwright just fine thus far. And how is Neville getting on? I dont know how he is doing with his venture. I spoke to him last week but I didnt ask. He was skiing hes been skiing twice, which isnt very fair. I can imagine its quite a big change for him. Its a big change for me, he laughs.

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Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram - Evening Standard

Photos, Text: Bawumia’s first ever public iftar – MyJoyOnline.com – Myjoyonline.com

In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful, Praise be to Allah, and prayers and peace be upon our Messenger Muhammad (S.A.W) the Messenger of peace and Prophet of Islam and Allah"s Mercy to the worlds, and peace be on his family, companions and followers .

It is a pleasure to welcome you, my noble guests, on behalf of President NanaAkufo-Addo and governmentI would like to express my gratitude for accepting my invitation to this Ramadan Iftar (Breakfast) gathering, hoping that such religious meeting will continue to reach common principles to achieve reforms for our nation as a whole, and our beloved country, Ghana, in particular.

One of the cardinal tenets of Islam has to do with the devotion of the self to a month of abstinence. The month of Ramadan, which we are yet to conclude, is a month when Muslims around the world are constantly reminded of values that are crucial to leadership driven by public morality and targeted at effective governance.

These values include: tolerance, patience, fairness, forgiveness, charity, sacrifice, truthfulness and so on. Ramadan is a period of contemplation, reflection, compassion and reconciliation for the benefit of self and society, both materially and spiritually.

The observance of Ramadan should be a means to bring strength and the earnest will to live in peace together with fellow humans. It is a month when we extend our hands to all of humanity in genuine brotherhood.

This quest for perfect peace was an inherent attribute of the great Founders of various faiths, who practiced fasting and self-denial as the path to spiritual enlightenment and the promotion of Peace, Love, Mercy, Justice and Forgiveness.

Any leader should imbibe these basic tenets which Islam and other religions promote as the bedrocks of ethical living in society.

Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is a man of peace. He is a man of tolerance, and he is a man that wants to see Ghanaians living peacefully together. Christians, Muslims and all Ghanaians living peacefully together.

He doesnt want to see any group in Ghana left out. We want to have a Ghana where everybody is included in our development, and this is why he has put together a Zongo Development Fund, the first in our history. He has also appointed a Minister for Zongo and Inner City Affairs, the first in our history.

This is to make sure that all of us feel included and participate in the development of our country.

As we break bread and break fast to day, I would like to thank Allah for giving us all our leaders, led by His Eminence the Chief Imam himself, Sheikh Osman Nuhu Sharubutu. He is the embodiment of our religion in Ghana today, and may Allah continue to give him long life and blessings.

I thank you all for your attention.

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Photos, Text: Bawumia's first ever public iftar - MyJoyOnline.com - Myjoyonline.com

Transparent Season 4: Maura Snacks On an Edible in First Teaser Trailer – TVLine


TVLine
Transparent Season 4: Maura Snacks On an Edible in First Teaser Trailer
TVLine
The minute-long tease would also seem to suggest that Sarah and Len continue to be on good terms, while Aly is seeking spiritual enlightenment. Maura, on the other hand, is high on life or at the very least is about to be high after eating a gummy ...

and more »

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Transparent Season 4: Maura Snacks On an Edible in First Teaser Trailer - TVLine

NAMI Peer Support Group extends open invitation – Centerville Daily Iowegian

Have you ever thought that you needed support from other people with mental illness when you are experiencing mental health issues? National Alliance For The Mentally Ill, (NAMI ) peer support group would like to have you attend meetings because we can relate to you. NAMI members have been there. They have firsthand knowledge on what it feels like to suffer with a mental illness. Living with mental illness for me is often challenging.

I sometimes have a focusing problem because of a brain imbalance. I live each day trying to overcome and defeat mental illness. Although, schizophrenia is often colorful and creative, its opposite is dark and stormy. I have spent most of my adult life with mental illness. I was diagnosed with schizophrenia at 19 years of age. I had never experienced anything like this overwhelming disease in my childhood and teenage years. I started hearing voices and having visual hallucinations in my mind. Some of these experiences were not very friendly.

I was hospitalized in a psychiatric unit and put on intense drug therapy that was as overwhelming as the disease itself. From then on I had to deal with dark depression on and off for three years from medication. I have accepted my mental illness as a chemical imbalance. I have worked with so many wonderful people in the psychiatric field. However, in my belief and experience, schizophrenia is more complicated than a simple scientific analysis. It involves spiritual and ESP enlightenment. With psychiatric medication and spiritual guidance, I have earned a bachelors degree in psychology and have published three books.

Now that I have NAMI meetings I am not alone anymore. We talk openly about our lives and help each other in recovery. We share stories and we all seem to have a connection with each other. One member shared that the first time she attended a meeting she felt at home within a few minutes. Open up with us!

NAMI Peer Support Group meets the first and third Thursdays of the each month from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church located at 410 N. Main St., Centerville.

We have group leaders who guide the meeting. We want to inform others how to end the stigma of mental illness and we will not tolerate discrimination. We meet together in a realistic way and desire to be productive members of our communities. We have a way of humor in this group. We would love to have you come join us if you need some new friends to communicate with.

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NAMI Peer Support Group extends open invitation - Centerville Daily Iowegian

Cheating Death – ChicagoNow (blog)

It is highly unlikely that my likeness will ever be photo shopped sitting serenely in front of the Bodhi tree. As for living up to my spiritual name, Hari Jiwan Singh, I can barely pronounce it never mind be the kind, creative and prosperous Lion who understands that God is his life, and who walks with grace and courage throughout his life. Im guessing if the GPS could track me on the path to enlightenment it would show me at the toll gates with a long road ahead.

What frustrates me from making more progress toward the goal of walking with grace is the difficulty of letting go of the past. I want to be complete with a number of regretful events that go back decades, but I continue to berate myself for not having done things differently. Im the lead actor in a scenario that points to me as the villain responsible for having hurt the people who were close to me by not protecting them from the travails that came their way as a result of my divorce and career ambitions.

But little by little Im learning to give myself a break and to shift the focus toward regarding the events of the past as lessons learned rather than a shirt made of steel wool that Im condemned to wear forever. Forgiving myself is a process long past due and on occasion, when Im feeling the spirit of Hari Jiwan Singh, it helps to do a form of meditation called Tonglin, a yoga that transforms pain into forgiveness.

I start with visualization, seeing the beauty of who I am and the pain that keeps me out of touch with that inner beauty. I imagine the pain as black smoke that I inhale into my heart and then exhale as the peace and love of my own true nature. As long as I can, I continue to breathe in pain and breathe out happiness. Its a difficult practice. Half the time I choke on the smoke before it gets filtered.

I know its not enough to see the light while the incense is burning and the harmonium is playing. I recognize that what I do in the harsh light of day is the measure that determines if behavior mechanisms ingrained in childhood have truly been altered.

So I remain patient. I know the sad truth about even the best of intentions; lasting change rarely happens in the sudden glow of epiphany. No guru is going to tap my shoulder with a peacock feather and instill me with enlightenment like a frizzy-haired cartoon cat hit by a lightning bolt. Change, the kind of long lasting alteration to behavior that we strive for, is a gradual and often wearisome process.

True learning rarely takes place in a sudden breakthrough. It takes focus and practice to override the conditioned responses ingrained in our childhood experience. The shift comes from identifying what activates us, recognizing the trigger as a reflex reaction, the alarm, so to speak, not the fire. Within that split second of recognition there is opportunity to alter behavior from rote to choice.

It takes determination but like the muscle memory that develops from continued repetition, over time change will occur. The habitual behavior of the past will give way to a new feedback loop connected to your commitment to becoming the person you are determined to be.

Type your email address in the box and click the "create subscription" button. My list is completely spam free, and you can opt out at any time.

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Cheating Death - ChicagoNow (blog)

Space Station – blogs.nasa.gov

NASA astronaut Jack Fischer checks out science gear inside Japans Kibo laboratory module.

Russias Progress 67 (67P) cargo craft is orbiting Earth and on its way to the International Space Station Friday morning carrying over three tons of food, fuel and supplies. Meanwhile, the three member Expedition 52 crew researched a variety of space science on Thursday while preparing for the arrival of the 67P.

Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Flight Engineer Jack Fischer will monitor the automated docking of the 67P to the Zvezda service module Friday at 7:42 a.m. EDT. NASA TV will broadcast live the resupply ships approach and rendezvous beginning at 7 a.m. The 67Ps docking will mark four spaceships attached to the space station.

Fischer spent the morning photographing mold and bacteria samples on petri dishes as part of six student-led biology experiments that are taking place inside a NanoRacks module. In the afternoon, he removed protein crystal samples from a science freezer, let them thaw and observed the samples using a specialized microscope.

Flight Engineer Peggy Whitson tended to rodents Thursday morning cleaning their habitat facilities and restocking their food. In the afternoon, she moved to human research swapping out samples for the Cardiac Stem Cells study that is exploring why living in space may accelerate the aging process.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The Russian Progress 67 cargo craft launch ascends to space after a flawless launch Wednesday from Kazakhstan. Credit: Roscosmos

Carrying more than three tons of food, fuel, and supplies for the International Space Station crew, the unpiloted ISS Progress 67 cargo craft launched at 5:20 a.m. EDT (3:20 p.m. local time in Baikonur) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

At the time of launch, the International Space Station was flying about 258 miles over the south Atlantic southeast of Uruguay.

Less than 10 minutes after launch, the resupply ship reached preliminary orbit and deployed its solar arrays and navigational antennas as planned.The Russian cargo craft will make 34 orbits of Earth during the next two days before docking to the orbiting laboratory at 7:42 a.m. Friday, June 16.

Beginning at 7 a.m. on Friday, NASA Television will provide live coverage of Progress 67s arrival to the space stations Zvezda Service Module.

Watch live on NASA TV and the agencys website.

To join the conversation about the space station and Progress 67 online, follow @space_station on Twitter.

The Progress 67 cargo craft rests atop the Progress MS-06 rocket at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Credit: Roscosmos

Russias Progress 67 (67P) cargo craft stands at its launch pad in Kazakhstan ready for liftoff Wednesday at 5:20 a.m. EDT. NASA TV will broadcast the launch live from the Baikonur Cosmodrome including the docking of the 67P Friday at 7:42 a.m. to the Zvezda service module.

Two external experiments have been extracted from the trunk of the SpaceX Dragon resupply ship and attached to the outside of the International Space Station. Ground controllers commanded the Canadarm2 to reach inside Dragon, grapple both experiments and install them on EXPRESS logistics carriers.

The first experiment, MUSES, or Multiple User System for Earth Sensing, was removed June 6 the day after Dragons arrival. It was installed two days later on the starboard side of the stations truss structure. MUSES is an Earth-imaging platform that may improve navigation, agriculture and benefit emergency responders and the petroleum industry.

NICER, or Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer, was extracted Sunday afternoon and will be installed this evening. It will search for new insights into the physics of neutron stars and help scientists develop a pulsar-based, space navigation system.

A third experiment will be extracted June 17 to test a new advanced solar array. The roll-out solar array, or ROSA, rolls out like a tape measure with solar cells on a flexible blanket. The ROSA, which could power future NASA spaceships and communication satellites, will be stowed back inside Dragons trunk after seven days of data collection while attached to the stations robotic arm.

Get weekly video highlights at:http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The Progress 67 rocket rolls out Sunday to its launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Credit: Roscosmos

The Expedition 52 crew of two NASA astronauts and one Roscosmos cosmonaut is in its second week aboard the International Space Station. Also, as one station resupply ship completed its mission in space on Sunday another rolled out to its pad for a launch this week.

Flight Engineer Peggy Whitson started Monday measuring her shoulders, back, chest and hips for the Body Measures experiment. Scientists are researching how living in space changes body shape and size which may influence the design of future crew suits.

Jack Fischer of NASA studied how plants sense light and grow in space for the Seedling Growth-3 experiment. He also worked on removing and replacing a bolt that jammed after the last SpaceX Dragon cargo craft left the station back in March. The maintenance work is being done ahead of the departure of the newest Dragon which arrived June 5. Dragon will remain attached to the Harmony module until July 2.

The Orbital ATK Cygnus cargo craft deorbited into Earths atmosphere Sunday at 1:12 p.m. EST after its release from the station a week earlier. The same day, Russias Progress 67 (67P) cargo ship rolled out to its launch pad in Kazakhstan where it will liftoff Wednesday at 5:20 a.m. EDT. The 67P will dock Friday at 7:42 a.m. to the Zvezda service modules aft port.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The SpaceX Dragon cargo craft is pictured in the grips of the Canadarm2 robotic arm moments after it was captured early Monday.

The three-member Expedition 52 crew is settling down with science and cargo transfers this week after a trio of space ships arrived and departed at the International Space Station. NASA also introduced 12 new astronaut candidates Wednesday who could fly farther into space on newer spacecraft than any astronaut before them.

NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson looked after a student experiment today that is exploring how molds and bacteria adapt to microgravity. Afterward, she measured the lighting in the Destiny and Kibo lab modules to help engineers understand how light affects the habitability of spacecraft.

Flight Engineer Jack Fischer of NASA installed and activated new science hardware delivered aboard the latest SpaceX Dragon cargo craft. Fischer also joined Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin to prepare the station for the departure and arrival of a pair of Russian cargo ships next week. The Progress 66 resupply ship will depart June 13 followed three days later with a new space delivery aboard the Progress 67 cargo craft. Both spaceships are uncrewed.

On Wednesday, NASA celebrated the introduction of 12 new astronaut candidates. The 2017 class will officially report for duty in August and begin training for potential missions aboard NASA spacecraft as well as SpaceX and Boeing commercial spaceships.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The SpaceX Dragon resupply ship is installed to the Harmony module. The Progress 66 cargo craft is docked to the Pirs docking compartment and the Soyuz MS-04 crew vehicle is docked to the Poisk module.

A little over two hours after it was captured by Expedition 52 Flight Engineers Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson, the unpiloted SpaceX Dragon cargo craft was attached to the Earth-facing side of the Harmony module of the International Space Station. Ground controllers at Mission Control, Houston reported that Dragon was bolted into place at 12:07 p.m. EDT as the station flew 258 statute miles over central Kazakhstan.

Earlier, the Dragon was grappled by Fischer and Whitson using the Canadarm2 robotic arm at 9:52 a.m. EDT at the completion of a flawless two-day journey for the resupply vehicle following its launch atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center, Florida on Saturday.

The station crew expects to open Dragons hatch later today to begin transferring time-critical scientific experiments. Dragon will remain attached to the complex until July 2, when it will be detached from Harmony and robotically released for its deorbit back into the Earths atmosphere and a parachute-assisted splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The SpaceX Dragon is seen seconds away from its capture with the Canadarm2 robotic arm. Credit: NASA TV

While the International Space Station was traveling about 250 miles over the south Atlantic ocean east of the coast of Argentina, Flight Engineers Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson of NASA captured Dragon a few minutes ahead of schedule at 9:52 a.m. EDT.

Following its capture, the SpaceX Dragon cargo ship will be maneuvered by ground controllers operating the International Space Stations robotic arm for installation onto the Earth-facing port of the Harmony module. For updates on installation and more information about the SpaceX CRS-11 mission, visit http://www.nasa.gov/spacex.

To join the online conversation about the International Space Station and Dragon on Twitter, follow @Space_Station and use #Dragon.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The Cygnus cargo craft, with its prominent Ultra Flex solar arrays, is pictured moments after being released from the International Space Station. Credit: NASA TV

Expedition 52 Flight Engineer Jack Fischer of NASA commanded the International Space Stations Candadarm2 robotic arm to release the Cygnus spacecraft at 9:10a.m. EDT while the space station was flying above the south Atlantic Ocean. Earlier, ground controllers detached Cygnus from the station and maneuvered it into place for its departure.

The spacecraft spent 44 days at the station after delivering approximately 7,600 pounds of supplies andscience experiments to the orbiting laboratory and its Expedition 51 and 52 crew members for Orbital ATKs seventh NASA-contracted commercial resupply mission.

Dubbed the SS John Glenn after the iconic Mercury and shuttle astronaut and U.S. Senator from Ohio, Cygnus will remain in orbit for a week in support of theSAFFIREexperiment and the deployment of four small Nanoracks satellites before Orbital ATK flight controllers send commands June 11 to deorbit the spacecraft for its reentry into the Earths atmosphere, where it will burn up over the Pacific Ocean. NASA TV will not provide a live broadcast of the Saffire experiment or the Cygnus deorbit burn and reentry, but imagery from Saffire will be posted onNASA.govas it becomes available.

As Cygnus departs, the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft launched yesterday will close in on the station for its capture by Fischer and Whitson Monday, June 5. Using the Canadarm2 robotic arm, they will grapple the SpaceX cargo spacecraft at 10 a.m. NASA TV coverage will begin at 8:30 a.m.

Get more information about the International Space Station at:http://www.nasa.gov/station

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, with the Dragon spacecraft onboard, launches from pad 39A at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, Saturday, June 3, 2017. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

The Falcon 9 rocket lifted off at 5:07 p.m. EDT, and Dragon has begun its journey to the International Space Station with an arrival scheduled for June 5. Dragon separated from Falcon 9 about 10 minutes after launch, and solar arrays successfully deployed shortly after separation from the second stage. A post-launch news conference is scheduled to begin on NASA TV at approximately 6:30 p.m.

Before Dragon arrives at the space station, the Orbital ATK Cygnus cargo spacecraft will depart the station Sunday, June 4. Expedition 52 Flight Engineers Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson of NASA will be at the controls of the Canadarm2 robotic arm to release Cygnus at 9:10 a.m. NASA TV coverage of the spacecrafts departure will begin at 8:30 a.m.

For more information on the SpaceX CRS-11 mission, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/spacex. For more information about the International Space Station, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/station.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

The Expedition 51 crew descends to a parachuted landing inside the Soyuz MS-03 spacecraft. Credit: European Space Agency

After spending 196 days in space, Expedition 51 crew members Oleg Novitskiy of Roscosmos and Thomas Pesquet of ESA (European Space Agency) landed their Soyuz MS-03 spacecraft in Kazakhstan at approximately 10:10 a.m. EDT. Russian recovery teams are helping the crew exit the Soyuz vehicle and adjust to gravity after their stay in space.

The duo arrived at the International Space Station on Nov.19, 2016, along with NASAs Peggy Whitson, who will remain on the space station and return home with NASAs Jack Fischer and Roscosmos Fyodor Yurchikhin. That landing is targeted for September.

At the time of undocking, Expedition 52 began aboard the station under Yurchikhins command. Along with Whitson and Fischer of NASA, the three-person crew will operate the station until the arrival of three new crew members. Randy Bresnik of NASA, Sergey Ryazanskiy of Roscosmos, and Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli of ESA are scheduled to launch July 28 from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

For more information about the International Space Station, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/station.

You can follow the crews activities in space on social media. Follow space station activities via Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Get weekly video highlights at: http://jscfeatures.jsc.nasa.gov/videoupdate/

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Space Station - blogs.nasa.gov

Falcon 9 launch scheduled for Monday after hold-down engine firing – Spaceflight Now

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, without its payload, is test-fired Thursday at pad 39A at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Credit: SpaceX

The launch of a commercial Bulgarian television broadcast satellite from NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida is set for Monday after SpaceX ran through a mock countdown Thursday and test-fired a previously-flown Falcon 9 rockets Merlin main engines.

The rockets recycled first stage, which first flew on a satellite deployment flight Jan. 14 from California, ignited its nine Merlin 1D main engines at 6:25 p.m. EDT (2225 GMT) Thursday for several seconds while restraints kept the two-stage Falcon 9 firmly grounded at launch pad 39A.

A cloud of exhaust erupted from the launch pads flame trench, and SpaceX later confirmed on Twitter that the so-called static fire test went according to plan.

The static fire is a customary milestone in all of SpaceXs launch campaigns, used as a rehearsal for the companys launch team and as a test of the rockets readiness for flight.

SpaceX pushed back the launch of the BulgariaSat 1 communications satellite two days from Saturday to Monday earlier his week after preparations for the static fire ran behind schedule.

Thursdays test was conducted without a payload on-board the booster, standard practice for SpaceX after a Falcon 9 rocket exploded on a nearby launch pad at Cape Canaveral last September, destroying the launch vehicle and an Israeli-owned communications satellite in the final minutes of the countdown before a hold-down firing.

Ground crews planned to drain the Falcon 9 of its RP-1 kerosene and liquid oxygen propellants Thursday night, then lower the rocket horizontal and return it to a hangar on the southern perimeter of pad 39A, a historic facility leased by SpaceX from NASA that was originally built in the 1960s for the Apollo moon program.

BulgariaSat 1, already encapsulated inside the Falcon 9s fairing, will be attached to the Falcon 9s upper stage this weekend before the rocket rolls back up the ramp to pad 39A ahead of Mondays launch attempt.

Built by Space Systems/Loral of Palo Alto, California, the BulgariaSat 1 satellite is Bulgarias first communications spacecraft.

BulgariaSat 1, which weighs nearly 9,000 pounds (4 metric tons ) at launch, will broadcast television channels to homes in Bulgaria, Serbia and elsewhere in Europe for BulgariaSat, an affiliate ofBulsatcom, Bulgarias largest digital television provider, during a 15-year mission.

Nearly 12 years in the making, the $235 million satellite project is a big step for Bulgaria, according to Maxim Zayakov, BulgariaSats CEO.

The satellite is a huge thing, Zayakov said in a May 5 interview with Spaceflight Now. Its a big milestone and gives us a chance for regional development as well as throughout Europe, where we have our main coverage. And for the country, definitely, its the first geostationary communications satellite.

Space Systems/Loral arranged for BulgariaSat 1s launch with SpaceX in a turnkey contract with BulgariaSat, and the satellite manufacturer ultimately decided to place the spacecraft on a flight with a reused Falcon 9 first stage booster. SSL will hand over the satellite to BulgariaSat once it is ready for operations in orbit.

SSL and SpaceX started working on a deal to launch BulgariaSat 1 on a previously-flown rocket before the first partially-reused Falcon 9 took off March 30 on a widely-watched mission to deliver an SES communications satellite to orbit. But officials only finalized the agreement after the SES 10 launch, and the parties announced the decision to put BulgariaSat 1 on a previously-flown booster last month.

SpaceX says recovering and re-flying parts of its rockets will cut the cost of space transportation, but customers can expect only minor discounts for the first lot of reused rocket flights as the launch company recoups $1 billion in capital expenditures to allow the Falcon 9s first stages to make multiple flights.

The investment included modifications to the booster, such as aerodynamic grid fins, landing legs, a heat shield, and descent guidance algorithms capable of handling supersonic retro-propulsion. SpaceX also outfitted two barges for rocket landings at sea, and built landing pads at Cape Canaveral and Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

Engineers are working on retrieving the Falcon 9s clamshell-like payload fairing, which jettisons from the rocket in two halves, with the help of a steerable parafoil, but SpaceX has so far not recovered one of the nose cone components undamaged.

SpaceX intends to recover the first stage on Mondays launch on one of its landing platforms stationed in the Atlantic Ocean east of Cape Canaveral, the company said.

Mondays mission is the first of three Falcon 9 flights planned in three weeks from Florida and California.

A static fire of another Falcon 9 rocket at Vandenberg Air Force Base is scheduled as soon as Tuesday, the day after BulgariaSat 1s launch, in preparation for a liftoff June 25 with the second batch of 10 next-generation Iridium mobile voice and data relay satellites.

The next Falcon 9 mission from Kennedy Space Center is set for early July with the Intelsat 35e high-throughout communications satellite.

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Falcon 9 launch scheduled for Monday after hold-down engine firing - Spaceflight Now

SFI Live: QM-1 Launch Abort Motor test fire – SpaceFlight Insider

Jason Rhian

June 15th, 2017

NASA, Orbital ATK and Lockheed Martin are preparing to conduct the QM-1 static test fire of the Orion spacecrafts Launch Abort Motor at Promontory, Utah, on June 15, at 1 p.m. MDT. Photo Credit: Orbital ATK

PROMONTORY, Utah Orbital ATK and NASA are planning to conduct a static test fire of the Orion spacecrafts Launch Abort Motor. The Qualification Motor 1 test is set to begin at 1 p.m. MDT (3 p.m. EDT / 19:00 GMT) and last for approximately five seconds. SpaceFlight Insider will be on hand providing you with exclusive coverage from the T-97 viewing site about a half-mile away. Tune into our live webcast starting at 12:30 p.m. MDT (2:30 p.m. EDT / 18:30 GMT).

Tagged: Launch Abort Motor Lead Stories NASA Orbital ATK Orion Promontory QM-1 Utah

Jason Rhian spent several years honing his skills with internships at NASA, the National Space Society and other organizations. He has provided content for outlets such as: Aviation Week & Space Technology, Space.com, The Mars Society and Universe Today.

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SFI Live: QM-1 Launch Abort Motor test fire - SpaceFlight Insider

Orbital ATK OA-8E Cygnus cargo mission slated for late summer – SpaceFlight Insider

Jerome Strach

June 15th, 2017

Orbital ATKs horizontal integration hangar at Wallops with multiple Antares rockets inside. Photo Credit: Patrick Black / NASA

On the heels of Orbital ATKs successful OA-7 Cygnus cargo run, teams at Virginias Wallops Flight Facility are preparing for the OA-8E mission. The 139-foot (42.5-meter) tall Antaresrocket is slated to take an enhanced Cygnus and several tons of science and cargo to the International Space Station on Sept. 12, 2017.

Kurt Eberly, the program manager for Antares, said that the company would haveOA-8E ready to travel as early as late July and certainly in August if necessary. Regardless of when it does get off the ground, the mission will send 7,385 pounds (3,350 kilograms) of cargo packed inside an enhanced Cygnus spacecraft. Liftoff will take place from Pad 0A at Wallops Island, Virginia.

The OA-8E mission is part of the Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) 1 contract. The E signifies the CRS-1 contract extension, enabling NASA to cover space station resupply needs until the CRS-2 contract begins in 2019. Orbital ATK was awarded at least three additional Cygnus flights.SpaceX was also awarded additional flights.

MARS Pad 0A. Photo Credit: Patrick Black / NASA

After OA-8E will be OA-9E, which is currently scheduled to launch in March 2018 atop an Antares 230 rocket. TheAntares rockets for both of these missionscan be seen in the companys horizontal integration facility.

The last Cygnus mission, OA-7, launched atop an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida. While the spacecraft can be sent to space using either launch vehicle, there are currently no more plans for Orbital ATK to use the Atlas V.

Eberly said that by improving the performance of Antares, utilizing the pair ofRD-181 engines, Orbital ATK is expected to achieve 13percent higher thrust with 10 seconds ofadditional specific impulse (ISP). This should net 2025 percent more mass to be delivered to orbitresulting in increased payload delivered to the ISS.

It is expected that, by OA-11E, Orbital ATKshould be able to achieve its designed mass of 7,716 pounds (3,500 kilograms) of cargo andprobably beyond in the CRS-2 missions.

For Antares second stage, there is a large Castor 30XLmotor which is manufactured by the Propulsion Systems Division of Orbital ATK located in Utah.

Dale Nash, executive director at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) on WallopsIsland, indicated that Pad 0A should be ready for OA-8E by end of July.

Nash briefed themedia that with the last Antares launch, in October 2016, the rocket lifted off quickly and, as a result, therewas much less damage to the launch pad, thereby improving turnaround times between launches to about 30 days.

Wallops has a fairly wide open azimuth between 38 to 60 degrees inclination which the ISS is right in the sweet spot for that, Nash said, talking about the advantages of Wallops over Cape Canaveral. Additionally, he said that there are far fewer scheduling conflicts at the Wallops Flight Facility and less chance ofgetting bumped.

Moreover, improvementsto the design of Cygnus itself, including strengthened internal infrastructure and an improved powersupply, allows for better support of science payloads. Additionally, procedural protocolsallowing for later cargo insertion into the Cygnus have proven to have significant advantagesallowing for easier accommodation of NASA cargo requests.

On June 12, 2017, Orbital ATK and NASA gave members of the media, including SpaceFlight Insider, a review of the current operations of Wallops Flight Facility Pad 0A and the nearby horizontal integration hangar.

Tagged: Antares Cygnus Lead Stories NASA OA-8E Orbital ATK Wallops Flight Facility

Jerome Strach has worked within the Silicon Valley community for 20 years including software entertainment and film. Along with experience in software engineering, quality assurance, and middle management, he has long been a fan of aerospace and entities within that industry. A voracious reader, a model builder, and student of photography and flight training, most of his spare time can be found focused on launch events and technology advancements including custom mobile app development. Best memory as a child is building and flying Estes rockets with my father. @Romn8tr

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Orbital ATK OA-8E Cygnus cargo mission slated for late summer - SpaceFlight Insider

New tanning drug darkens skin, could reduce incidence of skin-cancer – NEWS.com.au

A new skin-darkening drug spells good news for redheads. Picture: istock

MOST fair-skinned redheads will know the pain of achieving a golden glow without harmful exposure to UV radiation or walking out of a salon looking like an oompa loompa.

But there still might be hope yet researchers in the US have successfully darkened human skin cells grown in a petri-dish, providing an artificial tan that lasted for days.

The Boston team have now tested the treatment on human skin and hope that it will one day be used with traditional sunscreens, potentially decreasing the incidence of skin cancer.

Researchers hope the drug will one day replace sunbeds. Picture: ThinkstockSource:ThinkStock

The drug, which is applied as a cream to the skin, generated a deep, cancer-protecting tan in red-haired mice. It worked by stimulating cells to produce more UV-absorbing pigments.

When applied to the red-haired mice, they could become almost jet black in a day or two with a strong enough dose, researchers observed.

The colour fades away over time as normal skin cells slough off the surface, and skin tone gets back to normal within a week or so.

Like pale-skinned redheads, red-haired mice are also extremely susceptible to skin cancer through UV radiation.

Scientists from Massachusetts General Hospital developed the new skin treatment using a class of small molecules.

The treatment of human breast skin explants with topical drug that induces pigmentation. Picture: Nisma Mujahid and David E. FisherSource:Supplied

David E. Fisher, dermatology chief at Massachusetts General Hospital and professor of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, said it was difficult to get the drug to penetrate human skin as a result of having tougher skin than mice.

But ten years later, we have come up with a solution. Its a different class of compounds, that work by targeting a different enzyme that converges on the same pathway that leads to pigmentation, he said.

The research team is continuing to test the safety of small molecules in animals before carrying out toxicity studies in humans.

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New tanning drug darkens skin, could reduce incidence of skin-cancer - NEWS.com.au

Changes at UC San Diego Emphasize New Role as Innovation Engine – Xconomy

A new program intended to teach engineering and business students how to drive innovations from concept to commercialization reflects a new imperative at UC San Diego. The business of tech transfer, which generates revenue by licensing technologies invented at UC San Diego, is giving way to a broader mission for the university as an engine of innovation and as a training ground for entrepreneurs and startup leaders.

One example of the changes underway can be found with the Institute of the Global Entrepreneur (IGE), a program UC San Diego created about a year ago, just as the von Liebig Entrepreneurism Center was unwinding its longtime operation as a tech transfer hub for the Jacobs School of Engineering. But the IGE is only the latest in a series of recent initiatives that are focused on boosting innovation and entrepreneurship at UC San Diego, which sees itself increasingly as a kind of farm club feeding the regional startup ecosystem with people and ideas.

How well these changes play out remains to be seen. The IGE only recently enrolled its first five teams (including one team led by nanoengineering doctoral candidate Rajan Kumar, pictured above.) As part-incubator and part-accelerator, the institute provides each team with as much as $50,000 in financial support over the course of a 12-month program, which could eventually become the curriculum for a masters degree in entrepreneurship. The state of California provided $2.2 million last year to bankroll IGE programs throughout the University of California system, with funding for UC San Diego amounting to $300,000. The San Diego Legler Benbough Foundation provided an additional $500,000.

In some ways, the IGE represents a reboot of the von Liebig centers mission to help commercialize innovations conceived in the engineering school. But the new program is casting a broader net, according to Sujit Dey, a professor of computer science at UC San Diego who also serves as IGEs founding director.

For one thing, Dey said the IGE is seeking collaborators and innovations beyond the engineering school, particularly in health sciences and at the Rady School of Management, which oversees the IGE program in collaboration with the Jacobs School of Engineering. Dey, who founded the San Diego video technology company Ortiva Wireless, said he also wants IGE to encourage fundamental changes in the way scientists approach their research at UC San Diego by encouraging them to look at the market first, and to provide students with the kind of training in management, leadership, and entrepreneurship skills that startups require.

To avoid the trap of developing cool technology that has no market, Dey said IGE teams will be required to test their prototypes with would-be customers and potential strategic partners to make sure their innovations are relevant and have strong commercial appeal.

In this respect, the IGE and other recent programs at UC San Diego reflect a broader trend that has been under way for years at American research universities. As Xconomy Seattle Editor Benjamin Romano has explored in depth at the University of Washington, big research universities have been working to revamp their offices of technology transfer and moving to take a much more active role in fostering innovation and entrepreneurship beyond the traditional enclaves of engineering, computer science, and the life sciences.

At UC San Diego, this means being very much engaged in the economic development of this region, according to Paul Roben, who was named associate vice chancellor for innovation and commercialization at UC San Diego two years ago. To Roben, the university is an economic engine of talent and technologies, people and ideas.

Beyond the traditional academic mission of providing education and conducting basic research, Roben said UC San Diego has been expanding its mission to encompass innovation and entrepreneurship, primarily because so many people out there are creating their own jobs.

While UC San Diego has long served as a hotbed for local innovation and entrepreneurship (the Connect program in innovation and entrepreneurship started in 1985 as part of UCSD), Roben and Dey said many of the changes began after Pradeep Khosla was named Next Page

Bruce V. Bigelow is the editor of Xconomy San Diego. You can e-mail him at bbigelow@xconomy.com or call (619) 669-8788

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Changes at UC San Diego Emphasize New Role as Innovation Engine - Xconomy

Moore’s Law Meet Darwin – JWN

Image: Pixabay

It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change. We must, however, acknowledge, as it seems to me, that man with all his noble qualities ... still bears in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowly origin. Charles Darwin, Origin of the Species

Our species and technology are at a crossroads. Our amazing human ingenuity has created amazing machines andfor the first time in our species existencethose machines are starting to create other smarter machines at scale. The changes are exponential and combinatorial. It is a phenomenon with which many non-nerds are now becoming familiar called Moores Law.

Simply stated, we have observed over many decades that the price/performance of computation is doubling approximately every two yearswhat is commonly called an exponential function. The scary / exciting thing is that it is happening not only to computation power (i.e. speed of computers, phones, etc) but to other technologies like the capacity of solar power, the capabilities of Gene Sequencing technologies and the like. In addition, these technologies are are starting to combine in the many companies of the new global entrepreneurial economy. Most worrisome, is that these exponential technologiesonce inventednever disappear. These genies are never placed back in the bottle. Good or evil.

But the human animalboth physically and culturallyis still evolving at Darwins pace. Our foundational structures of governance and education (for example) have to date only been able to respond in linear waysat best. At a more atomic level, perhaps the most linear of all of our systems is our ability as individual humans to adapt to new ideas, people and cultures. This resulting gapcalled disruption by manyis growing and is unsustainable. Left unchecked, it will likely not end well.

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The answer it seems to me is that the human species needs to figure out how to adaptexponentially.

There are many ways of thinking that can help us move forward. Heres one:

Complex Adaptive Systems: Sustainability & Capacity before Velocity

In Alberta, we have adopted a concept for our innovation ecosystem that is based on the lessons of Complex Adaptive Systems called the Rainforest Framework. Centered on the seminal book by Victor Hwang and Greg Horowitz, the book and its research informs us that the key to advancing an ecosystemsmall or largeis to start with Culture. The authors note that if we are able to create a culture of trust, pay-it-forward and the likeand make it an explicit prerequisite of participationthen we can step on the gas with great effect. Velocitywhether linear or exponentiallycan only happen when individuals are acting in a way that eliminates the friction of mistrust, winner-take-all philosophies and lack of diversity.

So how does this ecosystem experiment we are conducting in Alberta relate to the broader challenges of Darwin and Moores Law? The answer we believe is to change the way we understand and define our primary adaptive strategynamely innovation. We are experimenting with a new definition of innovation that meets hyper-disruption head on. This new definition suggests that we cannot move forward as a species unless we move technology and governance together.

In short our new definition of innovation is:

The advancement of the human condition through changes in technology matched by equal or greater advancement in social governance.

Simply advancing the technologies that make our world easier and comfortable for an unbalanced few is not enough. As we measure technical advancement we also must include measures of how we are progressing socially. Our ability to sustain and capacity to absorb technological change MUST be present to increase the velocity otherwise we will continue our march to inequality and unsustainable growth. In a previous blog I called it the Innovation of Ways versus the Innovation of Things.

We can see this everywhere in our history. The environmental movement of the 60s, for example, coming on the heels of three decades of uninterrupted post war growth is no longer possible in an era of exponential change. This is a critical difference: The speed of change today is exponential and combinatorialmeaning we cant wait for social movements and institutions to catch up.

Here in Alberta we are adopting a new social contract and creating a common, collective voice that is beginning to bridge economic, political and cultural silos. Our belief is that once established, we willif we continue to embrace its philosophiesbe able to push harder and move faster. We will be able to overlay a culture of entrepreneurship within this full definition of innovation and create significantly increased velocity and change.

I recently watched an excellent TED talk by Dan Pollata called The Dreams We Havent Dared to Dream. In his talk, Dan eloquently notes that while human ingenuity has exponentially increased the transistors on a chip for the past 40 years, we have not applied the same exponential thinking to our dreams nor human compassion. As he says, we continue to make a perverse trade-off between our future dreams and our present state of evolution.

Some describe this ethical stasis as the tyranny of the OR

As the great Stephen Hawking said:

If machines produce everything we need, the outcome will depend on how things are distributed. Everyone can enjoy a life of luxurious leisure if the machine-produced wealth is shared, or most people can end up miserably poor if the machine-owners successfully lobby against wealth redistribution. So far, the trend seems to be toward the second option, with technology driving ever-increasing inequality.

It begins with a new definition of Innovation that matches Darwin to the relentless march of Moores Law.

About Jim Gibson

Jim Gibson is a Calgary-based serial entrepreneur, an active leader in the Alberta innovation ecosystem, author and founder of the Rainforest Movement (www.rainforestab.ca) that seeks to move the needle forward in the culture of innovation in Alberta and Canada. His blog on innovation is here at http://thespear.co and his upcoming book, The Tip of the Spear: Our Species and Technology at a Crossroads, will be available in the fall.

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Moore's Law Meet Darwin - JWN