New systemic psoriasis treatments keep raising bar – ModernMedicine

Dr. LeonardiThe ongoing rush of safe, highly effective systemic agents for psoriasis has created a new era in which substantial numbers of patients may achieve complete clearance, said an expert at the American Academy of Dermatology 75th Annual Meeting, held here.

In the year 2000, said Craig Leonardi, M.D., two authors called complete skin clearance an unrealistic expectation for patients with psoriasis.1

The fact is that right now, we have many drugs that are so far different from what we used to use even five years ago that complete clearance is a realistic possibility in many of our patients, says Dr. Leonardi. He is adjunct professor of dermatology at St. Louis University and a St. Louis, Missouri-based dermatologist in private practice.

As a reference point, he says, Finally, we have numbers for how methotrexate performs in modern measurement systems. In a well-designed 120-patient trial with modest dose escalation, 41% of patients achieved psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) 75, and 66% achieved PASI 50 at week 16.2 This settles the issue of how well methotrexate indeed performs, Dr. Leonardi says. Although no study patients developed pancytopenia, Its always an issue in the back of my mind. At any one time Ill have hundreds of patients on methotrexate. Based on research in rheumatoid arthritis, he says, risk factors include renal disease, hypoalbuminemia, infection, age and concomitant medication use.

New targets

Since the demise of T-cell inhibitors such as alefacept and efalizumab, Dr. Leonardi says, Weve been concentrating on cytokines and cytokine inhibitors. And its been a very busy time in the pharmaceutical industry and for those of us who do this research.

Among tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFa) inhibitors that dermatologists may not have heard much about, Certolizumab is one you should definitely remember. It is a pegylated TNF-alpha inhibitor, not a monoclonal antibody. In trials, it is a high-performance skin-clearing drug. In phase 3 testing, 81% and 82% in separate cohorts achieved PASI 75.3 Thats functionally equivalent to infliximab. This is a drug you might be able to reach for. You can prescribe it currently for psoriatic arthritis its approved. And based on phase 3 results in psoriasis, We expect it to sail through the approval process.

Recent approvals in the TNF inhibitor category include biosimilar versions of infliximab, etanercept and adalimumab. And there are others in the pipeline.

New indications for existing drugs include hidradenitis suppurativa and uveitis (adalimumab) and pediatric psoriasis (etanercept). Physicians use golimumab mainly for psoriatic and rheumatoid arthritis, he says. It offers very modest results in psoriasis.

We know that psoriasis is a significant cardiovascular risk factor. Patients with severe psoriasis have a marked increased relative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) compared to mild psoriasis4 and, in another analysis, control subjects.

More recently, research analyzing cardiovascular risk in various treatment groups has shown that TNF inhibitors and methotrexate reduce risk of MI around 50%.5 This is the first time we are seeing evidence that treatments can reduce the risk of myocardial infarction, Dr. Leonardi says.

Additionally, an analysis of cardiovascular risk in patients on TNF inhibitors showed a statistically significant, marked decrease of MI risk, starting at around month 12 and lasting several months thereafter, versus patients on methotrexate.6 Even more amazing, cumulative use of TNF antagonists serially reduced the risk of myocardial infarction. Predicted hazard rate reductions at one, two and three years were 21%, 38% and 51%. And theres probably more to be gained beyond three years. What a wonderful story. Were treating their skin and joints and giving them an increased benefit from a cardiovascular risk perspective, he says.

Among interleukin (IL)-23 inhibitors, he says, a straightforward phase 3 study of tildrakizumab (two doses, versus placebo or etanercept) showed that the higher dose outperforms the lower dose 66% versus 61% in terms of both PASI 75 and physician assessments, without noteworthy safety issues.7 With regard to severe infections, malignancies, major adverse cardiovascular events and drug hypersensitivity reactions, all of these issues are comparable to placebo or to etanercept. This drug appears to be safe and well tolerated.

The phase 3 study of guselkumab did not even consider PASI 75 a primary endpoint, Dr. Leonardi says. Rather, 73% of patients reached PASI 90 at 16 weeks, versus 2.9% of placebo-treated patients.8 This is a significant drug. It distinguishes itself quite clearly from adalimumab in terms of efficacy, with comparable safety findings.

In phase 2 testing, a single dose of risankizumab allowed 87% of patients to reach PASI 75, and 58% to reach PASI 90, at 12 weeks.9 And one-third of these patients remained clear for more than 66 weeks. James Krueger, M.D., Ph.D., has called the drug and immunologic disruptor, says Dr. Leonardi, because its pharmacodynamic effect far exceeds its pharmacokinetic effect. Dr. Krueger is D. Martin Carter Professor in Clinical Investigation at Rockefeller University.

IL-17 inhibitors

In secukinumab four-year data, Efficacy whether its PASI 75 (88.5%), PASI 90 (66.4%) or PASI 100 (43.5%) seems to be maintained.10 The caveat is that this is an as-observed analysis. In other words, the denominator is dropping over time as patients achieving lesser efficacy and tolerability drop out. For most patients, Its not surprising that the efficacy should seem stable over time. It would have been a real problem if we saw efficacy dropping off. Regarding serious adverse events, he adds, There are a lot of zeros in the table, including for Crohns disease. There were two cases of ulcerative colitis. This issue of ulcerative colitis and its association with IL-17 antagonists is ongoing, and were going to have to see how that plays out. Its a rare event less than one in 1000 patients in the secukinumab data.

Unpublished five-year data for ixekizumab, in an analysis which accounted for dropouts over time, shows stable PASI 75, 90 and 100 results (approximately 80%, 70% and 47%, respectively), he says. As for AEs that led to drug discontinuation (13), There were many one-off events that dont seem to have any pattern. All adverse events also appear uncommon and stable over time, he added.

The IL-17 receptor antagonist brodalimumab showed efficacy similar to that of ixekizumab in phase 3 trials (86%/85% PASI75, and 37%/44% PASI 100).11 But early in these trials, he says, concerns for depression, suicidal ideation and behavior appeared. There were six suicides in these trials four in the skin trials and two in psoriatic arthritis trials. The FDA remarked that this was an unprecedented collection of serious issues for any psoriasis trial to date. I would take that to heart.

Amgen abandoned the products development in 2015, and Valeant took it to an FDA hearing in July 2016, at which all 18 FDA reviewers recommended approval although 14 advised implementing a strong risk management program. So this drug has a boxed warning for depression and suicide coming out of the gate, and a risk-management system reminiscent of iPLEDGE, he said.

We must wait and see how our specialty reacts to this, how onerous this will be in our offices and whether or not this drug will gain any traction given that equally efficacious drugs with fewer hassles already exist. Moreover, Dr. Leonardi noted that patients with psoriasis have elevated baseline levels of suicidal ideation and depression versus the general population.12

Development of tofacitinib in dermatology has stopped, said Dr. Leonardi. The FDA has returned the application to Pfizer. The problem with this drug is that patients needed a big dose 15 mg twice a day to have outstanding efficacy. But there was a hard safety signal that occurred much earlier at lower doses. FDA officials noted that in rheumatoid arthritis trials, 14 of the 15 patients who died were on tofacitinib. And there were 34 opportunistic infections, he added, all in tofacitinib-treated patients. In the psoriasis trials, there were more than 1,000 cases of herpes zoster.

However, he said, tofacitinib can be useful off-label for indications including alopecia areata, alopecia-associated nail dystrophy, vitiligo and severe atopic dermatitis. When he prescribed 5 mg of tofacitinib twice-daily for a patient with a 15-year history of alopecia universalis and steroid induced adrenal suppression, One year later, she had more hair than I did.

Disclosures: Dr. Leonardi has been a consultant, researcher and/or speaker for Abbvie, Amgen, Celgene, Coherus, Dermira, Eli Lilly, Galderma, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Leo, Merck, Merck-Serono, Novartis, Pfizer, Sandoz and Vitae. He also provides phototherapy and has an infusion center.

References

1. Al-Suwaidan SN, Feldman SR. Clearance is not a realistic expectation of psoriasis treatment. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2000;42(5 Pt 1):796-802.

2. Warren RB, Mrowietz U, von Kiedrowski R, et al. An intensified dosing schedule of subcutaneous methotrexate in patients with moderate to severe plaque-type psoriasis (METOP): a 52 week, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2017; 389(10068):528-537.

3. http://www.ucb.com/stories-media/press-releases/article/CIMZIA-certolizu... http://www.ucb.com/stories-media/press-releases/article/CIMZIA-certolizu.... Published October 3, 2016. Accessed April 7, 2017.

4. Gelfand JM, Neimann AL, Shin DB, Wang X, Margolis DJ, Troxel AB. Risk of myocardial infarction in patients with psoriasis. JAMA. 2006;296(14):1735-41.

5. Wu JJ, Poon KY, Channual JC, Shen AY. Association between tumor necrosis factor inhibitor therapy and myocardial infarction risk in patients with psoriasis. Arch Dermatol. 2012;148(11):1244-50.

6. Wu JJ, Gurin A, Sundaram M, Dea K, Cloutier M, Mulani P. Cardiovascular event risk assessment in psoriasis patients treated with tumor necrosis factor- inhibitors versus methotrexate. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017;76(1):81-90.

7. Reich K, et al. Tildrakizumab, selective IL-23p19 antibody, in the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis: results from two randomized, controlled, Phase 3 trials (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2) [abstract]. Presented as a late breaking abstract at the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology 2016. October 1, 2016.

8. Blauvelt A, Papp KA, Griffiths CE, et al. Efficacy and safety of guselkumab, an anti-interleukin-23 monoclonal antibody, compared with adalimumab for the continuous treatment of patients with moderate to severe psoriasis: Results from the phase III, double-blinded, placebo- and active comparator-controlled VOYAGE 1 trial. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017;76(3):405-417.

9. Krueger JG, Ferris LK, Menter A, et al. Anti-IL-23A mAb BI 655066 for treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis: safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and biomarker results of a single-rising-dose, randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled trial. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2015;136(1):116124; e117. 29.

10. Bissonnette R, et al. Secukinumab maintains high levels of efficacy through 4 years of treatments: Results from an extension to a phase 3 study (SCULPTURE). Paper presented at: European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology Annual Meeting.; October 01, 2016; Vienna, Austria.

11. Lebwohl M, Strober B, Menter A, et al. Phase 3 studies comparing brodalumab with ustekinumab in psoriasis. N Engl J Med. 2015;373(14):1318-28.

12. Gupta MA, Schork NJ, Gupta AK, Kirkby S, Ellis CN. Suicidal ideation in psoriasis. Int J Dermatol. 1993;32(3):188-90.

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New systemic psoriasis treatments keep raising bar - ModernMedicine

Deccan Odyssey Crowned Asia’s Leading Luxury Train at the World … – PR Newswire (press release)

(Photo: http://mma.prnewswire.com/media/521424/Deccan_Odyssey_Leading_Luxury_Train_World_Travel_Awards.jpg )

On receiving the award, Arup Sen, Director, Special Projects said, "The Deccan Odyssey gives you an unhurried and intimate introduction to the grandeur of India.The World Travel Award bestowed upon Deccan Odyssey for the 7th time stands as a testimonial of our dedication to redefine luxury through innovation. This recognition motivates us to further redefine our services for our esteemed guests."

Maharashtra Splendor, Maharashtra Wild Trail, Hidden Treasures of Gujarat, Jewels of the Deccan, Indian Odyssey and Indian Sojourn are the magnificent trips that Deccan Odyssey embarks on showcasing the rich and diverse landscape of India. The luxury train recently underwent refurbishment before its services resume from October this year.

World Travel Awards celebrates its 24th anniversary this year and is acknowledged across the globe as the ultimate travel accolade. It serves to acknowledge, reward and celebrate excellence across all sectors of the global travel and tourism industry.

About Deccan Odyssey

Deccan Odyssey has 21 coaches, out of which 12 are passenger cars that can accommodate 8 people per coach (10 passenger/deluxe cars, 4 coupes per coach - 2 presidential suite cars, 2 coupes per coach), 1 conference/entertainment car, 2 dining cars, 2 generator cars with luggage store, 2 staff cars, 1 spa car and 1 bar car. The capacity of the train is 88 passengers. In 2016, Deccan Odyssey won a string of awards and amongst them are the World Travel Award for Asia's Leading Luxury Train, TTJ Jury Choice Award for Excellence and Innovation and North India Travel Award for Best Luxury Train in India in 2015.

For further media details, contact: Thomas C. Thottathil Cox & Kings Ltd. Head - Corporate Communications T: +91-22-22709100 E: thomasct@coxandkings.com

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Cox & Kings Wins Big at the 24th Annual World Travel Awards – PR Newswire (press release)

Mr. Peter Kerkar, Group CEO, Cox & Kings stated, " The awards are an endorsement on the innovative and unique travel experiences that we offer. We are as passionate as our discerning clients to explore and create the most splendid journeys. We thank our customers whose support played a key role in us securing these awards."

Cox & Kings has been a consistent winner at the World Travel Awards since years. The title of Asia's Leading Luxury Tour Operator was bagged for the 3rd consecutive time this year. It won India's Leading Tour Operator for the 4th time and India's Leading Travel Agency for the 5th consecutive time.

World Travel Awards (WTA) was established to seek out and reward the very best travel organisations in the world - those brands pushing the boundaries of excellence and implementing ground-breaking ideas. It has been acclaimed as the Oscars of the Travel Industry. Each World Travel Awards Gala Ceremony offers unrivalled networking opportunities to members of the travel and tourism industry.

About Cox & Kings Ltd: (BSE: 533144 | NSE: COX&KINGS)

Cox & Kings Ltd. ('C&K') is a leading leisure and education travel group with operations in 22 countries across four continents. It is one of the most experienced travel companies in the world, having been in operation since 1758. Headquartered in India, C&K has over the last three decades transformed itself into a diversified, multinational travel conglomerate with a focus on the new-age global consumer. C&K operates in three key verticals; Leisure, Education, Hybrid Hotels.

For further media details, contact: Thomas C. Thottathil Cox & Kings Ltd. Head - Corporate Communications T:+91-22-22709100 E:thomasct@coxandkings.com

SOURCE Cox & Kings Ltd.

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Cox & Kings Wins Big at the 24th Annual World Travel Awards - PR Newswire (press release)

Coppola family brings glitz and glamour to Auction Napa Valley – World Travel Guide

Padding around in a white suit, Francis Ford Coppola injected a dose of Hollywood glitz into this years Auction Napa Valley, which raised $15.7 million for local charities in the California wine region.

The Godfather director and owner of Inglenook, one of Napas most venerable and iconic wineries co-chaired the event with members of his family. Fresh from her best director win at the Cannes Film Festival for The Beguiled, Sofia Coppola hosted a small dinner for the highest bidders at last years auction.

Sofia and Roman Coppola / Napa Valley Vintners

Her mother, Eleanor Coppola, who has just released her first feature film, Paris Can Wait, starring Diane Lane and Alec Baldwin, catered for 2,000 guests at the barrel auction held at the Inglenook Estate on Saturday, where cases of wine from 108 producers were up for grabs and could be sampled fresh from the barrel, with the 10 highest bidders for each of the wines winning a case.

Speaking to World Travel Guide, Eleanor confirmed that Coppola would be cooking the post-auction meal at the three-Michelin-star Meadowood. Everyone thinks he isnt going to do it but hes preparing gnocchi for 800 as we speak.

Among the top selling lots in the barrel auction were The Mascot a Cabernet made from the younger vines of Harlan Estate, Bond and Promontory, which raised $73,550; and Melka Wines Mtisse Martinez Cabernet, which netted $62,600, while Shafers 2015 Hillside Select Cabernet went for $52,600. Napa has come of age on the world stage and the wines are now world class. The region is perfect for Cabernet its not too hot and not too cold, like the Goldilocks fairytale. Our Cabs are rich and concentrated but I dont think theyre too ripe theres a lot of luscious fruit there, Shafer Vineyards CEO, Doug Shafer, told WTG.

Inglenook on ice / Napa Valley Vintners

Rita Rae Fontenot, a podiatrist from Louisiana, got so caught up in the barrel auction bidding that she left with 10 cases of wine. I walked out with 10 cases as I bid early and was expecting to be out-bid but ended up winning them all, she confessed to WTG.

Dressed in a red linen suit, Coppolas son Roman was master of ceremonies at the live auction, which took place on Saturday night at Meadowood, a hotel-resort of unparalleled luxury set in acres of woodland. Women dripping with diamonds and men in pastel-coloured blazers arrived en masse, weaving their way through the parasol-dotted lawn to a giant white tent where they were enticed to bid on some of the 38 vintner-sponsored lots.

Drinking flutes of Schramsberg and nibbling on fennel arancini, wine trade luminaries like French consultant Michel Rolland and Petrus president Christian Moueix rubbed shoulders with Gina Gallo and her flamboyant husband Jean-Charles Boisset of Raymond Vineyards, wearing a pair of blue velvet slippers emblazoned with seahorses.

Mary Miner and Jean-Charles Boisset / Napa Valley Vintners

Boissets lot, which went under the hammer for $400,000, was one of the most glamourous of the evening a four-night stay on Marlon Brandos private island Tetiaroa, near Tahiti, where Obama recently wrote his memoirs and Pippa Middleton, the sister of the Duchess of Cambridge, honeymooned. French Polynesia was Gauguins dream and this magical island is the most luxurious place Ive ever been, he said.

The auction got off to a strong start with the first lot, which included three nights at Coppolas Niebaum Mansion and the chance to arrive in style at his Palazzo Margherita in Basilicata in his Falcon 7X private jet. Whipping bidders into a paddle-waving frenzy, the lot went for $460,000. Hoping for a higher sum, Coppola took to the stage and grabbed the mic. Just to let you know, the Falcon can seat 16 not six, he announced, then exited stage right.

While bidders got giddy on Krug, a brass band blasted out Hey Big Spender and flapper girls dressed in gold shimmied across the stage after a Balthazar of Screaming Eagle 2014 fetched $440,000. The top lot of the night came from Colgin Cellars. Featuring dinner at Alain Passards LArpge in Paris and lunch at Krugs Clos du Mesnil vineyard, auctioneer Fritz Hatton incited a bidding war that saw the lot won by three people, who paid $700,000 each for the experience, raising $2.1 million.

Rather than mingling with guests, Coppola slaved over a hot stove perfecting his pomodoro basilico peperoncini sauce for his signature gnocchi dish, which he served at an Italian-themed al fresco dinner after the auction. Hurry up, the food cant wait were on a schedule, he teased, as bidders fled the tent to dine under the stars. With a string band playing on the lawn and guests gorging on steak Fiorentina, Coppola had created a scene that could have come straight out of one of his films. I half expected a young Al Pacino to turn up with a shiner. In the end, wine and food is really all about show business, he said.

Francis Ford Coppola directs the cooking / Napa Valley Vintners

And if Auction Napa Valley is beyond your means, Adam Lechmere has 8 great affordable California wines

California and especially Napa has a reputation for excessive prices and overblown wines. The stereotype is true to an extent: cult wines like Harlan and Screaming Eagle do sell for up to thousands of dollars a bottle, and at every price point there are some pretty hefty wines, loaded with alcohol, oak and ripe fruit. But the pendulum has swung, and restrained Californian wines are now easy to find.

Heitz Cellars Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, California 2012 Heitz Cellars is Napa aristocracy: Joe Heitz was making wine in the Valley in the 1940s. Now his daughter Kathleen Heitz Myers runs the operation, and style has changed very little: its still fresh, modest, with hints of luscious perfume but above all soft tannins, mineral acidity and fine blackcurrant fruit. Finesse and power. Average 40 Justerini & Brooks

Lang and Reed North Coast Cabernet Franc, Napa Valley, California 2014 One of the best Cab Francs in Napa. Fresh hay on the nose, damson, lots of juice, violet perfume, bright gripping tannins, delicate structure with excellent weight and balance. Restrained and delicious 20 average Reid Wines (Tel: 01761 452645)

Smith-Madrone Cabernet Sauvignon Napa Valley, California 2013 From an estate high on Spring Mountain (brothers Charlie and Stuart Smith are pioneers from the 1970s). Bordeaux-like cassis and coffee with a layer of violet perfume. Fine acidity and silky tannins. One of the best Napa Cabernets youll taste 40 average Roberson Wine

Au Bon Climat Sanford & Benedict Pinot Noir, Central Coast, California 2012 Sanford & Benedict is a vineyard with the oldest Pinot Noir vines in Santa Barbara: winemakers across California clamour for its grapes. Au Bon Climats Pinot is delicate, perfumed, with dark raspberry fruit and suave, silky tannins. A gorgeous wine for a great price 40 average. Noel Young, Hedonism

Saintsbury Chardonnay, Carneros, Napa Valley, California 2012 From one of Napas most-respected producers. This is old-fashioned (ie youll taste the oak) but by no means overblown. Carneros is just north of San Francisco Bay so benefits from cooling ocean winds. Flavours of pear and white stone fruit held up by brisk acidity. Fine & classic 19 Majestic Wine

Robert Mondavi Napa Valley Fum Blanc, Napa Valley, California USA 2103 Robert Mondavi called his Sauvignon Blanc Fum to give it edge in the market. This is a lovely example of Napa opulence, with an acidic backbone for structure. Lots of tropical lychee and guava, citrusy notes, very nice weight on the palate. A really seductive mid-level Napa Sauvignon Blanc. 17 average Drinks Direct.co.uk

Twomey Cellars Sauvignon Blanc, Napa Valley, California 2015 The fruit is from Napa and neighbouring Sonoma. Fresh and perfumed with grapefruit, apple and honeyed flavours. Fine acidity and great persistence. 31.00 The Wine Treasury

Moobuzz Chardonnay, Monterey, California, USA 2014 Cool, old-fashioned nose with easy peachy sweetness, very open though and fresh on the palate, interesting hints of lanolin. Excellent 17 Roberson Wine

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Supercomputer Organized by Network Mining (SONM) announces ICO Platform – The Merkle

New York, June 9, 2017 SONM (Supercomputer Organized by Network Mining), the universal fog supercomputer powered by blockchain technology, has announced its Initial Coin Offering, commencing June 15, 2017 and concluding July 15, 2017. By modifying the algorithms behind conventional cloud and grid networks, SONM will be the first distributed supercomputer for general purposes, from site hosting to DNA analysis to scientific calculations. SONM will issue tokens of the same name on the Ethereum blockchain.

SONM CEO Sergey Ponomarev said: Market demand for computing power is rising exponentially across a range of industries. SONMs unique offering directly responds to this demand by making use of idle standing computing power to solve non-deterministic tasks like hosting websites, the backend for mobile apps, and massively multiplayer online gaming (MMO instances). Any miner with a smartphone or supercomputer cluster can become a part of SONMs fog network and generate computing power to be used by others.

Fog computing with its greater innate potential, is widening the scope of what cloud computing can achieve by bringing solo miners, private datacenters, public clouds, and IoT into the network. The SONM platform, based on BTSyncs data transmission software and Yandex Technologies open source code for decentralized computation, is an integration of the most advanced solutions in the field of fog and cloud computation, he added.

By hybridizing fog computing with an open-source PaaS technology, the SONM platform will offer a full spectrum of services, including app development, scientific calculations, website hosting, video game server hosting, machine learning for neural networks, video and CGI rendering, augmented reality location-based games, and video streaming services.

SONM also offers an opportunity for miners to earn tokens efficiently by serving calculations for everyone in the network. Any smart device located anywhere in the world can take advantage by joining the fog network and selling computing power peer-to-peer via the SONM Application Pool.

Sergey Ponomarev said: In recent years, being a part of a pool has been the only way to profit from mining, but this method often doesnt even cover electricity costs associated with Proof-of-Work (PoW) mining. SONM will reduce miners costs by eliminating the need for PoW mining and by suggesting the most profitable applications and tasks for each miners hardware.

SONM tokens will be used by buyers of computing power to pay for the calculations executed via the smart contracts-based SONM platform. Tokens will be created exclusively during the crowdfunding period. No token creation, minting or mining will be available after the crowdfunding period. The funding cap will be confirmed according to the ETH/USD conversion rate before the ICO begins. A progressive bonus structure will exist for the first 70% of tokens sold in the ICO.

The funds raised in the crowdsale will be distributed as follows: 33% is reserved for marketing promotion, market growth, community, and expansion; 30% for research and development including team expansion, and advisers; 20% for the original SONM team; 7% for complementary technologies; 6% for technology infrastructure; and the remaining 4% for other indirect costs such as legal and office expenses.

Sergey Ponomarev said: The SONM platform can also be used for providing decentralized services in a heterogenous computing environment, which is expected to be a cornerstone of the future of computing. Given SONMs reputation system and intelligent agents, we expect SONM to be the smartest, cheapest, and largest decentralized computing system with strong rules regarding morality and loyalty.

Investors can participate in the SONM ICO using BTC, ETH and other major cryptocurrencies. The SNM token basic price is 1 ETH = 606 SNM. The amount of SNM tokens to issue for the other cryptocurrencies (except Ethereum) deposits will be calculated according to the current exchange rate of this cryptocurrency in Ethereum.

More information, the SONM whitepaper and business overview are available at sonm.io/.

SONM CEO Sergei Ponomarev is available for interview.

SONM (Supercomputer Organized by Network Mining) is a decentralized worldwide fog supercomputer for general purpose computing from site hosting to scientific calculations. SONM company is an effective way to solve a worldwide problem creating a multi-purpose decentralized computational power market. Unlike widespread centralized cloud services, SONM project implements a fog computing structure a decentralized pool of devices, all of which are connected to the Internet.

Disclaimer: This is a paid press release, the product / service mentioned is not endorsedby The Merkle, always do your own independentresearch. If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

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Supercomputer Performs Largest-Ever Virtual Universe Simulation – R & D Magazine

Researchers from the University of Zurich have simulated the formation of our entire Universe with a large supercomputer. A gigantic catalogue of about 25 billion virtual galaxies has been generated from 2 trillion digital particles. This catalogue is being used to calibrate the experiments on board the Euclid satellite, that will be launched in 2020 with the objective of investigating the nature of dark matter and dark energy.

Over a period of three years, a group of astrophysicists from the University of Zurich has developed and optimised a revolutionary code to describe with unprecedented accuracy the dynamics of dark matter and the formation of large-scale structures in the Universe. As Joachim Stadel, Douglas Potter and Romain Teyssier report in their recently published paper, the code (called PKDGRAV3) has been designed to use optimally the available memory and processing power of modern supercomputing architectures, such as the "Piz Daint" supercomputer of the Swiss National Computing Center (CSCS). The code was executed on this world-leading machine for only 80 hours, and generated a virtual universe of two trillion (i.e., two thousand billion or 2 x 1012) macro-particles representing the dark matter fluid, from which a catalogue of 25 billion virtual galaxies was extracted.

Studying the composition of the dark universe

Thanks to the high precision of their calculation, featuring a dark matter fluid evolving under its own gravity, the researchers have simulated the formation of small concentration of matter, called dark matter halos, in which we believe galaxies like the Milky Way form. The challenge of this simulation was to model galaxies as small as one tenth of the Milky Way, in a volume as large as our entire observable Universe. This was the requirement set by the European Euclid mission, whose main objective is to explore the dark side of the Universe.

Measuring subtle distortions

Indeed, about 95 percent of the Universe is dark. The cosmos consists of 23 percent of dark matter and 72 percent of dark energy. "The nature of dark energy remains one of the main unsolved puzzles in modern science," says Romain Teyssier, UZH professor for computational astrophysics. A puzzle that can be cracked only through indirect observation: When the Euclid satellite will capture the light of billions of galaxies in large areas of the sky, astronomers will measure very subtle distortions that arise from the deflection of light of these background galaxies by a foreground, invisible distribution of mass - dark matter. "That is comparable to the distortion of light by a somewhat uneven glass pane," says Joachim Stadel from the Institute for Computational Science of the UZH.

Optimizing observation strategies of the satellite

This new virtual galaxy catalogue will help optimize the observational strategy of the Euclid experiment and minimize various sources of error, before the satellite embarks on its six-year data collecting mission in 2020. "Euclid will perform a tomographic map of our Universe, tracing back in time more than 10-billion-year of evolution in the cosmos," Stadel says. From the Euclid data, researchers will obtain new information on the nature of this mysterious dark energy, but also hope to discover new physics beyond the standard model, such as a modified version of general relativity or a new type of particle.

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Is HP Labs’ supercomputer the new hope for supersized data? – SiliconANGLE (blog)

With practically limitless data and applications demanding microseconds-fast insight, its poor timing that Moores law of perpetually increasing processor power is now AWOL.

How do we get back exponential scaling on supply to meet this unending, exponential demand? askedKirk Bresniker (pictured, right), fellow, vice president and chief architect at HP Labs, at Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co.

We will not regain it through the familiar technologies of the past three decades, nor a single point solution, Bresnikerstated in an interview duringHPE Discover in Las Vegas, Nevada.

This is borne out each day in HP Labs generally and in the companysongoing work on The Machine, its memory-driven compute program, according toAndrew Wheeler (pictured, left), fellow, vice president and deputy director of HP Labs.

Bresniker and Wheeler spoke withJohn Furrier (@furrier) andDave Vellante (@dvellante),co-hosts of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Medias mobile live streaming studio, during HPE Discover.(* Disclosure below.)

After some mixed press for The Machine last December, HPE has been doggedly pushing it closer to prime time production, Wheelerexplained.

There are a lot of moving parts around it, whether its around the open-source community and kind of getting their head wrapped around, what does this new architecture look like? Wheeler said.

The Machine will require a chain of partners and ancillary parts to yield real use-cases, Wheeler added.

We had the announcement around DZNEas kind of an early example, he said, referring to the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases use of The Machine in analyzing massive medical data.

The Machine has also materialized what HPE calls the Computer Built for the Era of Big Data, a massive system running on a single memory.

Internet of Things data and, specifically, the intelligent edge are calling out for data training abilities like those in this supercomputer, according toBresniker.Presently, almost all data ingested at the edge is thrown away before its analyzed, let alone monetized, he added.

The first person who understands, OK, Im going to get one percent more of that data and turn it into real-time intelligence, real-time action that will unmake industries, and it will remake new industries, Bresniker concluded.

Watch the complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLEs and theCUBEs independent editorial coverage of HPE Discover US 2017.(* Disclosure: TheCUBE is a paid media partner for HPE Discover US 2017. Neither Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. nor other sponsors have editorial control on theCUBE or SiliconANGLE.)

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Is HP Labs' supercomputer the new hope for supersized data? - SiliconANGLE (blog)

Joslin Diabetes Center Creates Center for Cell-Based Therapy for Diabetes (CCTD) – Newswise (press release)

Newswise BOSTON, MA (June 8, 2017) Researchers and clinicians at Joslin Diabetes Center have established a Center for Cell-Based Therapy for Diabetes (CCTD), the goal of which is to lead the development and translation of cell-based interventions to treat and cure diabetes and its complications. This opportunity has been created by recent groundbreaking discoveries in converting stem cells into functional insulin-producing beta cells, the identification of new growth factors that stimulate beta cell regeneration, novel insights on improving treatments of diabetic complications, and evolving technologies for detection, modulation and protection against the immune responses.

A major part of CCTD, led by its interim director Dr. Gordon Weir, is the participation and coordination of program activities with the Boston Autologous Islet Replacement Therapy (BAIRT) program. This large consortium consists of Joslin, the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and Semma Therapeutics. BAIRT aims to perform autologous stem cell derivation to clinical-grade beta cells that can provide personalized therapy for people with diabetes. The program is expected to provide the clinical proof of principle that such a stem cell therapy will be safe and effective in regulating blood sugar levels. We hope the collaboration of these leading Boston institutions with Joslin will soon result in the first demonstration of using patients own cells to correct diabetes, said Dr. Weir.

Complementing this work are recent advances at Joslin identifying new islet growth in patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes, as well as identifying potential islet growth factors, which occur in situations of insulin resistance, that could be used to stimulate the growth of the patients own beta cells. Additional early stage research is also ripe for further development at CCTD.

Findings from Dr. George Kings laboratory at Joslin point to novel pathways to treat skin fibroblasts from diabetes patients to improve wound healing. Discussions with collaborating partners at BWH and Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital are underway to translate the findings into viable therapeutic approaches. CCTD is also planning stem cell-based research for diabetic eye disease, for which a variety of stem cell-based therapies have been evaluated in clinical trials. There have been substantial advances made in stem cell research and regenerative medicine, said Dr. King, Chief Scientific Officer at Joslin. We would like to harness the potential of cell therapy to treat and reverse diabetes and its complications.

Regardless of the targeted organ for cell replacement or regeneration, the shared challenges in cell therapies for diabetes such as transplant procedure and immune rejection will be well- served by the collective expertise within CCTD. Other researchers at Joslin are conducting large scale genetic screening for novel therapeutic targets to control autoimmunity, which will complement the effort of BAIRT to extend autologous beta cell replacement to patients with type 1 diabetes.

Joslin has a long history of providing cutting-edge diabetes clinical care and research, said Dr. Peter Amenta, President and CEO of Joslin Diabetes Center. With the addition of the CCTD, Joslin will continue to accelerate the rate of diabetes research and its ability to benefit patients as early as possible.

About Joslin Diabetes Center

Joslin Diabetes Center is world-renowned for its deep expertise in diabetes treatment and research. Joslin is dedicated to finding a cure for diabetes and ensuring that people with diabetes live long, healthy lives. We develop and disseminate innovative patient therapies and scientific discoveries throughout the world. Joslin is an independent, non-profit institution affiliated with Harvard Medical School, and one of only 11 NIH-designated Diabetes Research Centers in the U.S. For more information, visit http://www.joslin.org.

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Joslin Diabetes Center Creates Center for Cell-Based Therapy for Diabetes (CCTD) - Newswise (press release)

Spirituality in War Time – Borglobe

ByPeter Majak Garang

I was as young as seven years old when the 2nd and the longest Civil war broke out in the Sudan 1983. The effects of the war were felt by all people without sparing children. The environment was not allowing normal running of social activities such as schools, hospitals, churches to mention few of which some became a target of air and ground attacks. As a result, they were forcefully closed down: making teachers, health workers, farmers etc to vacating or deserting their posts or professions and joined the struggle or the movement for independent (SPLA/SPLM), which was based in Ethiopia (1983-1991). Few years later, I left my village after the living condition as well as security situation in my village deteriorated, making it hard for everybody including children to survive. The journey took me thousands of miles/km, trekking from Sudan to Ethiopia and then to Sudan and finally to Kenya, hoping to get safe environments which would guarantee security and access to basic needs. Formal education was not dropped from the needs but was a last priority. I was not a Christian and I knew nothing about Christianity. Spirituality was not a vocabulary. However, during the Xmas of 1988, I came to understand Christianity as a religion because on that day, I saw Christians marching on the streets of Fugnido Refugee Camp singing and praising God. I got admired and followed them until they reached a big tree, which they called a church. The Christians finally stopped under the tree and worshiped for an hour before they dispersed homes. I was moved by the songs, and the worshiping. And on the following Sunday, I was baptized with the name Peter. From that day, I became a devoted Christian and had been attending church services on every Sunday. My regular Sunday services are important and usually remind me about the spirituality. During the war, spirituality helped and guided me in understanding what was right and wrong in my life during the toughest times when father and mother were not there with me. Making decision was not easy but because of spirituality, I always prayed and asked God to guide me in decisions making. I remember one accusation, I made a risk decision of crossing River Gilo by swimming when forces from Ethiopia attacked our camp; forcing us to leave Ethiopia. Before I jumped into the river, believe to be full of crocodiles, I prayed to God, asking HIM to send me HIS angels & spirit to guide me while crossing the river. In few minutes, I was on the other side of River Gilo safely.

Peter Majak Garang, A member of Lost Boys Groups, Bor, South Sudan

Comments, feedback etc can be forwarded or sent to: majakgarang@gmail.com

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Spirituality in War Time - Borglobe

How depression can be a journey to self-discovery and spiritual healing – South China Morning Post

We used to romanticise everything love, work, war, even death. It was the 1970s, a time of regional conflicts, protests, the Vietnam war and, in China, the Cultural Revolution. The headlines were as gloomy as those today. But for a developing teenage mind, it was heaven for exploration, offering endless possibilities to experiment with the world without and engage with our changing selves deep within.

Part of growing up involves experiencing the blues various kinds of depressive moods. It was a sign of maturity, a rite of passage into the adult world. But soon, we learnt that the blues, in their severe form, can take a toll. A close friend decided to end his life when he was about to graduate from university. In a restaurant, he had talked to me about his troubled family and his love life. It was deep stuff.

Psychological distress may be a necessary junction in the path of personal growth

That meeting was our last. A day later, I saw his name in the papers. The blues took on a new meaning. My friend suffered from depression, later thought to be the result of a prolonged family feud.

But the blues are a part of life. Later that year, my relationship issues were followed by bouts of depression and sleepless nights. I also started to suffer panic attacks: the fear so intense, uncontrollable, and unpredictable that you can doubt your own sanity.

That made me see a clinical psychologist for the first time. Just being told these attacks are quite common for people my age was almost half the cure.

The panic attacks returned later. But this time, I got to know them. I could name them and knew their shapes and sizes, and learned to live with them. Those sessions were important. I came to see that psychological troubles can be managed, at times with the help of someone. I also came to see that psychological distress may be a necessary junction in the path of personal growth, depression included.

Twenty years ago, scientists still hoped to find a simple biological marker underlying depression. Some researchers pointed to serotonin levels, believing the poor regulation of this neurotransmitter was responsible for the mood disorder. Antidepressants were developed as an attempt to regulate serotonin uptake by neurons. But the picture that has emerged is not that simple.

These days, we know that the use of antidepressants without psychotherapy is ineffective. Not only that, there is talk of side effects that could be particularly damaging to the well-being of young patients. The dream of a cheap and effective treatment for depression is gone.

Many who have gone through depression often say their life orientations have changed with recovery

To recognise that depression is not purely a biological phenomenon is a good sign. It opens up a new window of understanding. A more recent conception of depression describes it as a continuum with a variety of symptoms with different intensity. In this sense, depression is not a diseased psychological state that can be separated from a normal state. Depending on events that trigger it, its intensity, and other personality factors, it may be experienced as grief, sadness, melancholy or severe depression.

Depression is one of the many psychological issues that accompany adolescence. In the past, research focused on emotional problems at this stage of life and on ways of coping with these challenges. Less discussed, though, is whether these negative moods have any role to play in an individuals growth and development.

Many who have gone through depression often say their life orientations have changed with recovery, for some with the help of psychotherapy. If this is true, then depression can possibly play a certain role in the development of a fuller, deeper, more resilient human being. Perhaps consistent with this is a recent study conducted at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, which found that participants with a history of depression exhibited greater character strengths than a comparison group with no depression history.

Depression is a genuine and deep response to a complicated world

The relationship between depression and personal growth may not be accidental. Religious literature is littered with authors whose faith was deepened by their episodes of depression. I am thinking of C.S. Lewis and John Bunyan, who wrote about their journey in their Christian faith.

It would not be hard to find similar depression-mediated enlightenment patterns in Eastern religions. If so, then depression is a genuine and deep response to a complicated world and may serve as a catalyst, in this particular case, for spiritual growth.

Recently, an interesting line of research suggests that there may be purposes to depression. Studies have shown that for some, ruminations associated with depression can be self-reflection that may serve to solve problems, or enhance creativity. For others, however, it could just be brooding which may lead back to depression.

Our relationship with depression is more than that. The blues cannot be separated from the world of art. In literature, we have Frost, Dickinson and Hemingway, and in Chinese literature, Qu Yuan and Li Bai. And in painting and music, the works of Van Gogh, Tchaikovsky and Schumann, to name a few.

A recent study by Simon Kyaga and colleagues in Sweden also shows a link between depression and specific creative professions, although the functional relationship is unclear. It is as if, without these different shades of sadness, humanity is not complete.

However, these cultural norms are no longer in vogue. In a practical, no-nonsense society such as ours, we are obsessed with the pursuit of quick wealth and happiness, thus depriving young people of the chance to reflect on the darker side of life.

But for young people, the blues of life continue to scream to be heard, tasted, explored and understood. Warmly received by a young audience was the film Mad World, which juxtaposes the manic pursuit of financial power and depressing living conditions perfectly mirrored in the main character of the film an individual suffering from bipolar disorder.

About the same time that the movie was released, another dark tale Shakespeares King Lear, played by a youth group, came to theatres. One young actor who played one persona of Lear explained Lears shadows and that we all have our own shadows things we dont want to face or think about, and are not conscious of. If we do not want to be ruled by our shadows, we have to be conscious of them.

Studies have shown that self complexity, or the degree to which we know ourselves, is negatively related to depression it is as if self knowledge can ameliorate the severity of depression.

Young people are romantic. This is a phase when people still possess the power to experience in a fresh way, to be conscious of the shadows of humanity, of ourselves and learn from it. This can be healing.

Depression is a complex phenomenon. Here in Hong Kong, we desperately need multiple narratives to address the issue, that go beyond the over-institutionalised and medicalised lines.

Depression is not simply a disease in a strong or weak form, waiting to be cured. It is a part of us. We need to understand it more.

Elbert Lee is an adjunct member of the faculty at Upper Iowa University, Hong Kong campus, where he teaches cognition and human development

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How depression can be a journey to self-discovery and spiritual healing - South China Morning Post

Chinese Experiment Reaches Space Station in Historic First – Space.com

SpaceX's Dragon cargo craft is pictured in the grips of the International Space Station's Canadarm2 robotic arm on June 5, 2017. A Chinese DNA experiment rode to the station aboard the Dragon.

A Chinese experiment is now on the International Space Station (ISS), having reached the orbiting lab Monday (June 5) aboard a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft.

NanoRacks, a Houston-based company that helps other companies and institutions make use of the ISS, worked with the Beijing Institute of Technology to fly Chinese DNA research to the orbiting outpost.

No commercial Chinese payload had ever flown to the orbiting lab before.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency reported Sunday (June 4) that the 8-lb. (3.5 kilograms) experiment is designed to answer questions such as: Do "space radiation and microgravity cause mutations among antibody-encoding genes, and how does it happen?"

The experiment will be installed on the U.S. side of the ISS. Xinhua noted that astronauts there will conduct studies using the device in about two weeks, and data from their studies will be sent back to the Chinese researchers on Earth.

"There is a U.S. law in place, known as the Wolf amendment, that bans cooperation between the U.S. space agency NASA and Chinese government entities, but this [DNA experiment] deal is purely commercial and therefore considered legal," Xinhua said.

Deng Yulin, who is leading the Chinese research, said that this is the first time an ISS experiment has been independently designed and fabricated in China.

"This cooperation does not violate any laws and regulations, including the Wolf amendment. We do it in an open and visible way," Deng told Xinhua. "This is a new model of cooperation that we can follow in the future."

"We were careful to honor not only the Wolf Amendment, but [also] the spirit of the concerns of some towards working with the Chinese," NanoRacks CEO Jeff Manber told Inside Outer Space. "But via the commercial pathway, we are able to craft a world-class research project that demonstrates the leadership of NASA and the space station in low-Earth orbit."

Manber said he was pleased to have this first commercial project from China underway and that he "looks forward to carefully building a program that enhances the commercial competitiveness of American companies in space. I also look forward to one day soon working on board the Chinese space station," he added.

Leonard David is author of "Mars: Our Future on the Red Planet," published by National Geographic. The book is a companion to the National Geographic Channel series "Mars." A longtime writer for Space.com, David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. This version of this story was posted on Space.com.

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Chinese Experiment Reaches Space Station in Historic First - Space.com

NASA Television to Cover International Space Station Cargo Ship Launch, Docking – PR Newswire (press release)

WASHINGTON, June 9, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- NASA Television will provide live coverage of the launch and docking of a Russian cargo spacecraft delivering almost three tons of food, fuel and supplies to the International Space Station beginning at 5 a.m. EDT Wednesday, June 14.

Launch of the unpiloted Russian Progress 67 is scheduled for 5:20 a.m. Wednesday (3:20 p.m. Baikonur time) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

The spacecraft is set to dock to the aft port of the Zvezda Service Module at 7:42 a.m. on Friday, June 16. NASA TV coverage of rendezvous and docking will begin at 7 a.m. Progress 67 will remain docked at the station for almost six months before departing in December for its deorbit into the Earth's atmosphere.

Check out the full NASA TV schedule and video streaming information at:

NASA TV Live

Keep up with the International Space Station, and its research and crews at:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

Get breaking news, images and features from the station on Instagram and Twitter:

http://instagram.com/iss

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nasa-television-to-cover-international-space-station-cargo-ship-launch-docking-300471634.html

SOURCE NASA

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NASA Television to Cover International Space Station Cargo Ship Launch, Docking - PR Newswire (press release)

Astronauts on the International Space Station set to bake in space for first time using new crumb-free bread – The Sun

Normal bread banned from the ISS because it could ruin delicate instruments and start fires

ASTRONAUTS aboard the International Space Station will soon be baking their own loaves using new crumb-free bread.

A German space firm is preparing to test a new dough mixture and baking oven that are specifically designed to make typical weekend German bread rolls on the ISS.

Alamy

Bread is banned from the ISS because of the risk of stray crumbs clogging up sensitive instruments or starting a fire.

Nasa first introduced a baked goods ban after itssecond manned space flight in 1965, when an astronaut smuggled a contraband corned beef sandwich onto the Gemini 3 mission.

When John Young whipped out the sarnie, the zero gravity conditions caused bread crumbs and beefy bits to spread through the spaceship.

Cover Images

Astronauts are allowed to munch on tortillas, but bread is strictly prohibited- until now.

A firm called Bake In Space will test out its new dough and oven aboard the ISS in April 2018.

As space tourism takes off and people spend more time in space we need to allow bread to be made from scratch, founder Sebastian Marcu told New Scientist.

His firm is working to build a small oven which maintains heat well.

They will test a variety of approaches, but it is likely that the oven will bake bread without needing much human interference and cook at a low pressure, which could make rolls extra fluffy.

If the technique is successful, it could be used during trips to Mars.

Jennifer Levasseur of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum said: The comforts of home, like the smell of freshly baked bread, could energise astronauts physically and psychologically."

Nasa recently published a terrifying video showing asteroids circling Earth after it spotted 10 "potentially hazardous" space rocks which could smash into Earth one day.

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Astronauts on the International Space Station set to bake in space for first time using new crumb-free bread - The Sun

ISRO readying GSLV-Mk III for human space flight: Kasturirangan – Economic Times

HYDERABAD: ISRO is in the process of further improving the capability of its GSLV-Mk III so that it can use this heaviest rocket for human space flight mission once government approval comes, a top scientist said here.

GSLV-Mk III is really the vehicle that will be the workhorse in the coming years for primarily launching geo-synchronous missions and also very heavy spacecraft in near-earth missions, K Kasturirangan, former chief of ISRO, told PTI.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) earlier this week successfully launched from the Sriharikota spaceport, the first developmental flight of GSLV-MK III, capable of launching four-ton class satellites.

"ISRO is in the process of further improving the capability of this vehicle. It could go up to a ten-ton kind of capability," said Kasturirangan.

It was during his tenure as ISRO Chairman the GSLV-Mk III was configured and the programme secured approval by the Space Commission in the early part of the previous decade.

"So, this will be a level of vehicle which India will use for most of the requirements of geo-synchronous missions. It can take to up to four tons and, hopefully with improvements in some of the areas, one can go even beyond four tons," he said.

"With this we want to build our communication satellites. So, it's very tailored for future communication satellites to be launched by India. We will not have to depend on any other foreign launch agency," according to him.

Kasturirangan said ISRO is trying to do a "man-rating sort of thing" (or human rating), which is a certification of a spacecraft or launch vehicle as worthy of transporting humans.

So as and when there is a need and the country takes a decision on going for human space flight, it would have an "autonomous ability" to access the space through this vehicle in those missions, he said

"Certainly, it's a very elegantly-configured system (GSLV-Mk III). I am sure this will certainly serve us for a long time to come in the context of a variety of missions and also make us much more self-reliant in respect to accessing space," he said.

On opportunities for ISRO to tap into the market of launching four-ton class satellites from foreign customers, Kasturirangan said: "I am sure India will be one of the important contenders for taking some share of the market. India can provide a competitive market for that kind of launches with GSLV Mk III".

But he was quick to add that New Delhi would have competitors from (launch vehicle providers in) France, (some other parts of) Europe, the United States, China and Russia.

"There are contenders...many of them are established over the years. At this stage, we have to explore the market and slowly get into it," Kasturirangan said.

He, however, added that foreign customers find working with Indians for launch services a "very good experience" given their culture and attitude, which are appreciated by many countries.

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ISRO readying GSLV-Mk III for human space flight: Kasturirangan - Economic Times

Silicon Valley Is Letting Go of Its Techie Island Fantasies

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Silicon Valley Is Letting Go of Its Techie Island Fantasies

NASA – Ozone Hole Watch: Latest status of Antarctic ozone

On 13 March the OMI instrument entered survival mode. There are no ozone data between 11 March and 17 March. The instrument is now back online.

View the latest status of the ozone layer over the Antarctic, with a focus on the ozone hole. Satellite instruments monitor the ozone layer, and we use their data to create the images that depict the amount of ozone.

Click any map image to bring up a new page with a high-resolution image.

Ozone is a colorless gas. Chemically, ozone is very active; it reacts readily with a great many other substances. Near the Earths surface, those reactions cause rubber to crack, hurt plant life, and damage peoples lung tissues. But ozone also absorbs harmful components of sunlight, known as ultraviolet B, or UV-B. High above the surface, above even the weather systems, a tenuous layer of ozone gas absorbs UV-B, protecting living things below.

The Dobson Unit (DU) is the unit of measure for total ozone. If you were to take all the ozone in a column of air stretching from the surface of the earth to space, and bring all that ozone to standard temperature (0 Celsius) and pressure (1013.25 millibars, or one atmosphere, or atm), the column would be about 0.3 centimeters thick. Thus, the total ozone would be 0.3 atm-cm. To make the units easier to work with, the Dobson Unit is defined to be 0.001 atm-cm. Our 0.3 atm-cm would be 300 DU.

Each year for the past few decades during the Southern Hemisphere spring, chemical reactions involving chlorine and bromine cause ozone in the southern polar region to be destroyed rapidly and severely. This depleted region is known as the ozone hole.

The area of the ozone hole is determined from a map of total column ozone. It is calculated from the area on the Earth that is enclosed by a line with a constant value of 220 Dobson Units. The value of 220 Dobson Units is chosen since total ozone values of less than 220 Dobson Units were not found in the historic observations over Antarctica prior to 1979. Also, from direct measurements over Antarctica, a column ozone level of less than 220 Dobson Units is a result of the ozone loss from chlorine and bromine compounds.

Link:

NASA - Ozone Hole Watch: Latest status of Antarctic ozone

Want to Hire the Best? Copy How NASA Narrowed 18300 Applicants Down to 12 – Inc.com

On Thursday, NASA announced its astronaut class for 2017. Only 12 individuals out of 18,300 applicants made the cut. (And you thought your applicant pool was out of control!)

In a process spanning 541 days, NASA has determined how to select the very best of the best. (That for a civilian astronaut with a pay grade of less than $114,578 a year.)

Few organizations will need as extensive an accounting of background and psychological testing as NASA does. But how it conducts its onsite interviews is a lesson for any business wanting to hire the best.

NASA astronaut candidates have very little time to prepare for their in-person interview.

NASA prefers this -- presumably -- so that it gets the honest and raw interviewee, the unpolished, but still talented applicant, the applicant who becomes a co-worker after the "best foot forward" falls by the wayside.

Tip: Next time you bring your candidates in for an interview, shorten the notice window to see who is naturally prepared for the position.

Astronaut candidates arrive at the Johnson Space Center for initial interviews as a group.

They each interview individually, but many activities center around how the new group will work together.

Tip: If you are hiring multiple individuals at a time, bring them in together. See how this new crop of individuals will work together.

Astronaut recruits have a couple of opportunities to socialize with existing astronauts and staff. This gives them the ability to let their hair down (as always happens after a few weeks on the job).

This also allows NASA to determine how the batch of new recruits will get along with the existing organization.

Tip: Culture is key when hiring. Try and incorporate some socializing -- formal or informal -- with the existing team. Better to spot culture problems now, rather than in the future, when it will be costly.

The formal candidate interview is before a board and lasts only an hour. Each candidate is asked to prepare three to five reasons why he or she wants to be an astronaut.

And the interview goes from there, focusing mainly on what makes the applicant the person he or she is, rather than rehashing a written resume.

What is remarkable, at least according to first person accounts of Chris Martin and Sian Proctor, is how friendly and welcoming the process is. And this, for a very important position.

Tip: There is no room for aggressive interviewing. When people are in their most natural state, it shows how they will be on a daily basis.

Its true that much, much more goes into the hiring of an astronaut candidate (each still has two more years of interviewing to come). But you'd do well to follow NASA's in-person interviewing tactics to find your next best candidate.

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Want to Hire the Best? Copy How NASA Narrowed 18300 Applicants Down to 12 - Inc.com

From Adult Security Blankets To NASA’s New Astronauts: This Week’s Top Leadership Stories – Fast Company

This week, we learned how a $200 adult security blanket perfected a formula most startups struggle with, what it really takes to hire and keep great developers, and the skills required for NASAs futureastronauts class.

These are the stories you loved in leadership for the week of June 5:

Two hundred dollars might seem like a lot to pay for a blanket, but thats what Gravity, the self-described blanket for sleep, stress, and anxiety plansto charge its customers.The product recently raked in over $4.7 million in Kickstarter funding. How?According to BrianScordato, who heads an accelerator for early-stage founders, Gravity successfully got customers excited about an idea nobodys ever heard of. Thats something lots of startups fail at, and this week Scordato shared why.

In todays tech-centric workforce, its more crucial than ever for businesses to hire and retain talented programmers. Yet outside of Silicon Valley, theyre often treated like glorified typists, according to Stack Overflow COO JeffSzczepanski. This week he shared what steps companies can take to improve that state of affairs and make sure the best developers stick around for longer.

Is aliberal arts degree usefulin the modern job market or a waste of money? For three liberal arts graduates, it led to positions at a company that isntknown for hiring art history or English majorsMicrosoft. From developing communications for social chatbots to translating complicated AI concepts into simpler language, heres how those new hiresare using theirhumanities trainingin the tech world.

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From Adult Security Blankets To NASA's New Astronauts: This Week's Top Leadership Stories - Fast Company

NASA aims to get its technology off the shelf, out of the agency and into the marketplace – Virginian-Pilot

HAMPTON

Bill Fredericks knew NASA had a good thing going in a battery-powered drone that could take off and land like a helicopter but fly like an airplane.

Dubbed Greased Lightning, the prototypes test flights were a success, but the space agency had only so much money to spend. Fredericks, a NASA engineer at the time and the drones 35-year-old lead inventor, thought it could do more, especially with hybrid power that might keep it airborne for 24 hours without a charge.

We develop technologies, and whether they work or they dont, you put them on the shelf and move on to the next one, he said.

So Fredericks licensed the technology and branched out on his own, making the switch from NASA researcher to full-time entrepreneur, starting Advanced Aircraft Co. in Hampton.

In an effort to help more people like Fredericks make the leap from the lab to the boardroom, the space agency has developed two new options:

One, the Entrepreneur Opportunity Program, will give NASA researchers a crash course in turning their technology into a business.

The other, the Entrepreneur in Residence program, will essentially embed a businessperson in the space agency who could dust off research otherwise relegated to a shelf and help find a commercial life for it off campus.

Either way, NASA hopes to put its technology to good use.

For Larry Thomsen III, a senior materials research engineer with NASA Langley for 16 years, the entrepreneurial opportunity program was the first time hes had to think about potential profits and costs for what hes making. Thomsen has spent half his years at the agency developing material to shield small satellites, or CubeSats, from atmospheric radiation.

Now hes just months away from sending a prototype into space. Radiation that might have ruined electronics inside a satellite within a couple of months might function for years with his shield, valuable time for missions that can cost up to $2 million in some cases. He said his shield material would cost a fraction of that, up to $30,000.

Thomsen has seen estimates that 500 small satellites are expected to be launched into space between now and 2019 satellites that might want his shield.

The agency has great technologists and researchers, but we dont know a daggone thing about business development, said Richard Antcliff, chief strategist at NASA Langley.

Plus, if MIT and Stanford can spin off a company, why cant NASA? Lets send the incredibly smart people with it, he said.

Those people are going to want customers, Antcliff said. And if the business doesnt work out, theres nothing preventing NASA from re-hiring them.

Outside the military, its a first-of-its-kind effort for a federal lab.

Its a trailblazing initiative, said Christie Funk, the programs coordinator at NASA. We are not only just trying to commercialize technologies, but were trying to commercialize them for the benefit of society.

The state has agreed to contribute $100,000 to the Entrepreneur in Residence programs first year. Virginia Technology Secretary Karen Jackson said that for her department to be involved, she wanted a focus on unmanned vehicle technology that could benefit the outside world.

She said the state also wanted someone who had been inside NASA and successfully started businesses outside of it to be involved. Douglas Juanarena, a graduate of Virginia Tech, fit the part.

He wasnt ready to move back to the Peninsula after 17 years in Blacksburg, so he wont be in residence, but hell be working with someone who will be: Jeff Johnson with the Virginia Tech Center Research Park in Newport News.

Theres a ton of technology inside NASA inside Jefferson Lab that we want to mine, Johnson said.

The two agencies spend $1 billion on research annually.

Juanarena said he would offer advice to help NASA researchers in making the jump across the chasm from the laboratory to the private sector.

He should know. He gave up a research position at NASA Langley to do that with Pressure Systems Inc., the sensor company he started in the 1977 at a time when the agency took a hands-off approach when one of its scientists got the entrepreneurial urge.

Now Juanarena hopes to help others in the agency bridge the gap with a bit of business guidance before they leave, akin to the simple, but probing, questions trademarked by consultant Wendy Kennedy: So what? Who cares? Why you?

Thats the essence of it, he said. So youve got this pretty baby, so what?

Will customers want it? If so, how many will buy it? Is it unique or a me-too? Whats the competition? How much is it going to cost to turn a prototype into a minimally viable product?

Some may find out that your baby isnt the prettiest baby out there, he said.

But if it is, the new program may help them go it on their own or find an existing company to shepherd it into existence.

NASA finished the first phase of its in-house program modeled after the Air Force Research Laboratory.

Five teams of researchers, including Fredericks and Thomsen, developing everything from sensors to radiation shields to drones, spent 12 weeks learning about possible customer needs and developing their product. The next six-month phase involves writing business plans, pitching investors and teaming up with other executives to help with specific roles.

Without the entrepreneurial training, Thomsen said he may never have known his technology might have other customers namely in medical fields or nuclear handling.

Unlike Fredericks, hes not giving up his day job quite yet, or perhaps ever. Its too early for that decision. While its been exciting to meet entrepreneurs in the program, he said he still likes the research life.

But he said what hes learned may already help him think about a product in the initial stages.

He said hed ponder: Whats the cost of the research were doing and how could somebody actually use it?

Fredericks found out he would need to raise several million dollars in seed money to make NASAs Greased Lightning a reality. So he pivoted, for the moment, to another drone hes calling Hercules.

He said it would require 90 percent less startup money. It would cost customers at least $60,000 for a base model more than twice as much as existing battery-powered, multi-rotor drones on the market.

But, he said his customers likely in the agriculture or mapping industries could survey a larger area, with less staff, because Hercules can fly longer: 3 hours with a full tank of gas, or two hours if its carrying something weighing 4 pounds.

In two years, Fredericks said he hopes to get back to making Greased Lightning, a vehicle that might whip along a line at 80 mph detecting anomalies along the way and slowing to a hover to inspect it more closely, all without a human being in sight. Its a feat that might appeal to the Defense Department or utilities that need to inspect lengthy power lines, railroad and pipelines. Eventually, he hopes to build a model large enough to carry four people.

For now, though, hes just hoping for a steady stream of revenue.

Then Ill be able to breathe a little easier, he said.

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NASA aims to get its technology off the shelf, out of the agency and into the marketplace - Virginian-Pilot

House members criticize proposed NASA education and Earth science cuts – SpaceNews

NASA Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot discusses the agency's 2018 budget proposal before the House space subcommittee June 8. Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

WASHINGTON House members criticized a NASA budget proposal for fiscal year 2018 that would cancel several Earth science projects and close the agencys education office.

In back-to-back hearings June 8 by the space subcommittee of the House Science Committee and the commerce, justice and science (CJS) subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, members expressed general support for the agencys $19.1 billion proposed budget.

However, members of both parties opposed the proposal to defund the Office of Education, which received $100 million in the fiscal year 2017 appropriations bill. The office would receive $37.3 million in 2018 to close out its operations.

Im concerned about, in your budget, your cuts to the Office of Education, said Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), a former chairman of the House Appropriations Committee who is now a member of the CJS subcommittee. I cant understand why you would want to cut that.

NASA Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot, the sole witness at both hearings, said the decision was the outcome of an assessment on how the agency could do its outreach activities more efficiently. We felt we could balance them better, he said of the various NASA education activities, including those in its mission directorates. We felt like, in the balance of things, we could do this more effectively, in a different way.

However, Rogers and other members criticized the cuts to programs such as Space Grant, Experimental Project To Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) and Minority University Research and Education Program, which are all part of the Office of Education. Members expressed concern about how the cuts would affect programs in their home states.

Rep. Evan Jenkins (R-W.V.), a member of the CJS subcommittee, pressed Lightfoot in particular on the fate of EPSCoR, which supports research infrastructure in underserved regions of the country. When Lightfoot said EPSCoR would not be funded in the proposal, Jenkins responded, I will be going to bat because I believe that EPSCoR has been very effective.

This budget request zeroes out funding for three long-standing programs within NASAs Office of Education, said Rep. Jos Serrano (D-N.Y.), ranking member of the CJS subcommittee. I hope we can work together, in a bipartisan manner, to preserve these programs that so greatly benefit the American people.

Serrano and other Democrats on both committees also criticized the planned cuts to NASAs Earth science program, including the termination of five projects. I do want to make sure that the Earth sciences mission is also protected, said Rep. Ami Bera (D-Calif.), ranking member of the space subcommittee.

At both hearings, Lightfoot said that NASA used a three-tier process to determine what Earth science projects to cut. We said what is in the decadal [survey], what gives us the best science value for the return for what were doing and how they are performing, he said at the space subcommittee hearing.

We still have 20 operating missions, we still have an airborne science campaign, were spending $1.7 billion on Earth science and have a pretty good portfolio that allows us to understand whats happening, he said at the CJS subcommittee hearing.

Most Republican members of both committees supported the Earth science cuts. The budget promotes a much better balance among NASAs many scientific endeavors, especially for planetary science, and starts to reverse the significant growth in Earth science, said Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), chairman of the House Science Committee.

An exception, though, was Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), a member of the space subcommittee, who opposed NASAs plans to cancel the Radiation Budget Instrument being built by Harris Corp. in his district. I would like to work with you, and my colleagues, to make sure that we dont discard investments that weve already made in these next-generation technologies, he told Lightfoot.

Much larger, and often more controversial, programs like the Space Launch System, Orion spacecraft and commercial crew programs received far less scrutiny at the hearings. Lightfoot reiterated the rationale behind the decision announced in May to not place a crew on the first SLS/Orion mission, and the reasons for delaying that mission to some time in 2019.

The fiscal year 2018 NASA budget shows that Congress and the administration both support a consistent, focused space program, Smith said. The requested levels for those key human spaceflight programs, he said, are realistic and reasonable, providing an increased level of stability and continuity of purpose.

Rep. John Culberson (R-Texas), chairman of the CJS subcommittee, noted in his opening statement that he had worked in the past to fully fund SLS and Orion. Later, he asked Lightfoot if he was confident in the current schedule for SLS and Orion. When Lightfoot said he was, Culberson offered a one-word response: Terrific.

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House members criticize proposed NASA education and Earth science cuts - SpaceNews