Genetic driver behind rare skeletal dysplasia condition found – Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

Researchers in the Department of Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine have identified a previously unimplicated gene behind a particular form of chondrodysplasia, a skeletal dysplasia that affects cartilage formation and causes disproportionate short stature and premature osteoarthritis. The study appears in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Stemming from research being performed at Baylor and its genetics department as part of a systematic search for genetic causes of skeletal dysplasias, the project set out to identify the genetic driver behind Shohat type spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia (SEMD). It was led by Dr. Brendan Lee, professor and chair of molecular and human genetics at Baylor, and a team of researchers including project leader Adetutu Egunsola, a genetics graduate student.

SEMD is a rare type of skeletal dysplasia that impacts the development of cartilage and results in a form of dwarfism, characterized by a particular pattern of joint abnormalities, scoliosis and defects of the long bones.

Through combined whole exome sequencing and studies in zebrafish and mice, Lee and his team were able to identify a completely new gene associated with this skeletal dysplasia, DDRGK1, and discovered how it functions in cartilage. In zebrafish, for example, a DDRGK1 deficiency disrupts craniofacial cartilage development and causes a decrease in levels of the protein SOX9.

Not only did we discover the requirement of DDRGK1 in maintaining cartilage, but we also found that it to be a regulator of SOX9, which is the master transcription factor that controls cartilage formation the human skeleton, said Lee, who also holds the Robert and Janice McNair Endowed Chair in molecular and human genetics. If you do not have the SOX9 protein, you do not have cartilage it drives the production of cartilage in growth plates and joint cartilage all over the body.

The relationship between DDRGK1 and SOX9 reveals a novel mechanism that regulates chondrogenesis, or cartilage maintenance and formation, by controlling SOX9 ubiquitination, a process that controls the degradation of proteins like SOX9. Loss of the function of DDRGK1 causes this cartilage dysplasia in part via accelerated destruction of SOX9.

Studying this skeletal dysplasia resulted in the biological insight about this gene that had never been implicated in any disease condition related to the skeleton, Lee said. The future is to find out whether DDRGK1s function more globally controls ubiquitination in general and to determine how this process could be targeted for treating patients with dwarfism.

Other contributors to this work include Richard Gibbs, Adetutu T. Egunsola, Yangjin Bae, Ming-Ming Jiang, David S. Liu, Yuqing Chen-Evenson, Terry Bertin, Shan Chen and James T. Lu with Baylor, Nurit Magal with Rabin Medical Center, Annick Raas-Rothschild with Sheba-Tel Hashomer Medical Center, Eric C. Swindell with the University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Lisette Nevarez and Daniel H. Cohn with the University of California, Philippe M. Campeau with the University of Montreal and Mordechai Shohat with the Sackler School of Medicine at Tel Aviv University.

This research was supported by the BCM Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center and a Program Project grant from the Eunice and Kennedy Shiver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the BCM Advanced Technology Cores with funding from the NIH, the Rolanette and Berdon Lawrence Bone Disease Program of Texas, the BCM Center for Skeletal Medicine and Biology and Tel Aviv University.

See the original post here:

Genetic driver behind rare skeletal dysplasia condition found - Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

HudsonAlpha establishes service to determine genetic risks – WAAY

The HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology in Huntsville is establishing a new program for people interested in learning about various hereditary disease risks.

The program is called Insight Genome, and it will provide interested patients information about various risks for specific medical conditions. Patients will receive a clinical report which can be used for personal or physician use along with a pharmacogenomic report, which shows you how you will respond to certain medications based on your genetics.HudsonAlpha associate company Kailos Genetics will provide that report.

Those who enter this $7,000 program can also participate in a research study program, which could lead to more personalized information based on your genome.

Howard Jacob, Ph.D., announces Insight Genome at HudsonAlpha Monday afternoon.

People participating in Insight Genome will have their whole genome sequenced by having blood and saliva samples taken. This will allow researchers to determine genetic codes, which is used to learn more about disease risks. The tests are conducted at the not-for-profit institute's Smith Family For Genomic Medicine, and doctors will look at more than 2,000 genes. Using the information gathered from the sequencing, the doctors will be able to determine disease risks for various conditions including Alzheimer's, various cancers and ALS.

Whole genome sequencing offers information not found in one comprehensive tool elsewhere, says HudsonAlpha executive vice president for genomic medicine Howard Jacob, Ph.D., Many people have heard us talk about rare, undiagnosed disease and how do we apply this technology, but the holy grail is how do we deploy this for everybody?

The entire testing process takes approximately three months. Insurance does not cover the $7,000 expense, and you must be 19 or older to qualify for this program.

You can call the Smith Family Clinic for Genomic Medicine to schedule an appointment at 256-327-9640. You will need a physician referral.

Read this article:

HudsonAlpha establishes service to determine genetic risks - WAAY

Shooting for the Moon: Advancing Cancer Research through Precision Medicine – KBTV Fox 4 Beaumont

During his final State of the Union address in January 2016, President Obama announced a $1 billion initiative to jumpstart cancer research. Inspired by our country's drive to put a man on the moon in the 1960s, he called it the "Moonshot" initiative to accelerate development of new cancer detections and treatments. This is right in line with Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at the University of Utahan organization that already shoots for the moon with its research in precision medicine.

Precision medicine takes into account individual differences in people's genes, environments, and lifestyles. It gives researchers and health care providers' tools to better understand the complex mechanisms underlying a person's health, disease, or condition, and to better predict which treatments will be most effective. This is transforming the way diseases such as cancer can be treated.

Randall Burt, MD, emeritus director of prevention and outreach at HCI, says he is thrilled about the President's announcement. Burt has worked to discover the genetics of inherited colorectal cancer syndromes for decades. He was a leader of the team that in 1987 discovered a mutation in the gene called FAP that's responsible for one such syndrome.

With precision medicine, doctors look at a patient's family history to discover clues about possible inherited genetic mutations and use that information to guide cancer prevention and treatment efforts. Dr. Burt says, "Genetic testing can determine which individuals are predisposed to get cancer and determine optimal therapies."

Gregg Johnson is one of those individuals. He lost his mother and grandmother to cancer at young ages. Doctors at HCI discovered a genetic mutation within Gregg's family that will cause him to have colon cancer. Since that discovery, Gregg has regular screening through a yearly colonoscopy and attributes early prevention as the key to his health. He says, "I've outlived my mother by almost a decade and a half now, and it's because of what we've come to know and understand about genetics."

Dr. Burt expects that the Moonshot initiative will help further genetic research to find more genes that lead to high risk for cancer. The hope is this research will help prevent cancer before it ever occurs and, says Dr. Burt, "increase the survival rate to 100%."

For more information on precision medicine and the Moonshot initiative, visit http://www.huntsmancancer.org/precision-medicine.

Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) is a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-Designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, which means it meets the highest standards for cancer research and receives support for its scientific endeavors. HCI is located on the campus of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and is a part of the University of Utah Health Care system. HCI treats patients with all forms of cancer and operates several high-risk clinics that focus on melanoma and breast, colon, and pancreas cancers, among others. HCI also provides academic and clinical training for future physicians and researchers. For more information about HCI, please visit http://www.huntsmancancer.org.

Read more:

Shooting for the Moon: Advancing Cancer Research through Precision Medicine - KBTV Fox 4 Beaumont

Lifestyle choices condition colon and rectal cancer risk more than genetics – Medical Xpress

March 7, 2017 Dr. Moreno's team. Credit: IDIBELL

Researchers of the Colorectal Cancer research group of Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), led by Dr. Vctor Moreno, and linked to the Catalan Institute of Oncology (ICO), the University of Barcelona (UB) and the Epidemiology and Public Health CIBER (CIBEResp), have issued the first predictive risk model of colon and rectal cancer based on Spanish data that combines genetic and lifestyle information. Their work, published by Scientific Reports, highlights the importance of improving lifestyle to reduce the risk of colon cancer and suggests to use a combination of lifestyle and genetic information to subdivide the population into different groups according to their colon cancer risk, which would fine tune the current screening method.

"A risk model is a mathematical tool that allows us to predict who is most likely to suffer from a particular disease, in this case colon cancer," explains Dr. Moreno, head of ICO's Cancer Prevention and Control Program. In order to develop this model, the researchers used data from the 10,106 participants included in the "MCC-Spain" Spanish multicentre study, carried out collectively by researchers belonging to CIBEResp. All of them were interviewed to analyze known risk factors (diet, physical exercise, body mass index, alcohol and family history of cancer, among others) and in a subgroup of 1,336 cases of colorectal cancer and 2,744 controls a blood test was performed to detect the genetic predisposition to develop colon and rectal cancer.

With all this information, the research team concluded that lifestyle influences cancer risk more than genetics. They calculated that if a risky lifestyle choice is changed (for example, if a healthy weight is obtained), this can compensate for having 4 genetic risk predisposition points (risk alleles). "This is important considering that lifestyle, unlike genetic traits, is somewhat modifiable, while genetic susceptibility is inherited from our parents", says Dr. Gemma Ibez, a digestologist and first author of the study; "In fact, the items we have identified as risk markers correlate with the recommendations set by the European Cancer Code to reduce the risk of cancer."

"Today, screening for colon cancer in patients with no family history is based solely on age. If we include information about lifestyle and genetics, we could classify the population into groups of greater or lesser risk, which would allow us to offer a more personalized follow-up", adds Dr. Moreno, who is also a professor at the UB Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.

At the moment, the research team that participated in the study is conducting a new study called COLSCREEN: "Personalization of the risk of colorectal cancer" to, among other things, find out about the social perception about genetic screening. "There are no studies that say what patients think about genetic tests, or whether they want to be informed of their chances of having certain diseases, and we think it is very relevant," says Dr. Ibanez. At the same time, with this new study the researchers want to evaluate the utility of the risk score system for colon cancer by applying it prospectively in the population of Baix Llobregat.

Explore further: Men with high genetic chance of bowel cancer could have lower risk with healthy lifestyles

More information: Gemma Ibez-Sanz et al, Risk Model for Colorectal Cancer in Spanish Population Using Environmental and Genetic Factors: Results from the MCC-Spain study, Scientific Reports (2017). DOI: 10.1038/srep43263

Men with a high genetic risk of developing bowel cancer over the next 25 years could have a lower risk of developing the disease if they also have a healthy lifestyle, according to a Cancer Research UK-funded study published ...

(HealthDay)While it's well known that healthy living can lower the odds for colon cancer, a new study finds it's even true for men whose DNA puts them at high risk for the disease.

Researchers have identified common genetic traits that may explain how aspirin can help protect against colon cancer.

Precision medicine's public face is that of diseaseand better treatments for that disease through targeted therapies.

Men are more likely to develop colorectal cancer or its precursors than women. A new study conducted by MedUni Vienna shows that known risk factors do not explain this difference between the sexes. However, the research team ...

(HealthDay)Incorporation of a genetic risk score can improve the accuracy of colorectal cancer (CRC) risk determination, according to a study published in the June issue of Gastroenterology.

A drug already used to slow tumor growth may also prevent infertility caused by standard chemotherapies, according to a study published online March 6 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The featured clinical investigation article of the March 2017 issue of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine demonstrates that the PET radiotracer fluciclovine (fluorine-18; F-18) can help guide and monitor targeted treatment for ...

Bioengineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a new blood test that could detect cancerand locate where in the body the tumor is growing.

The National Cancer Institute's "cancer moonshot" tasks researchers with, among advancing other new biotechnologies, delving into immunotherapy and epigenomic analysis.

The Institute of Biological and Medical Imaging at Helmholtz Zentrum Mnchen is heading the "Hybrid optical and optoacoustic endoscope for esophageal tracking" (ESOTRAC) research project, in which engineers and physicians ...

A pilot study by University of Otago researchers suggests that people with colorectal cancer that have a certain type of immune cell in their tumour may have increased survival rates.

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

See the original post here:

Lifestyle choices condition colon and rectal cancer risk more than genetics - Medical Xpress

View gene therapy as a medical advancement – The Straits Times

I agree with Mr Darius Lee (Gene editing will create more divisions in society; March 3) that gene editing should not be used to promote eugenics.

However, gene editing to cure or ameliorate genetic diseases should be viewed as a form of medical advancement, akin to any medical breakthrough in the form of drugs or surgery.

Recently, it was reported that a teenage boy with sickle-cell anaemia was cured of the disease using gene therapy.

Presently, such patients are treated with blood transfusions to clear the blockages caused by abnormal haemoglobin, and have to be on powerful painkillers to manage the painful symptoms. Bone marrow transplants are also used to treat the disease, but finding matching donors can be difficult.

Many other genetic illnesses also exact a grave personal and financial toll on patients and their families.

Besides improving the quality of life for sufferers, gene therapy may also prove to be much less costly in the long term, as sufferers do not need to undergo further treatment.

It can be argued that gene therapy may be accessible only to patients in well-developed medical systems, thus potentially exacerbating the divisions between the "haves" and "have-nots".

But, just as we do not use this as a reason to withhold conventional medical treatment, so we should not condemn those with hereditary illnesses to life-long suffering if gene therapy is available to them.

It behooves society to make such treatments accessible to as many as people possible.

We may also already be"editing" our children's genetic potential with our lifestyle and behavioural choices, such as diet and smoking, as these factors may cause epigenetic modifications.

Studies have found that men who were smokers from an early age had sons who were significantly fatter than average.

Researchers who analysed historical records from a remote part of Sweden found that people whose grandparents had been short of food between the ages of nine and 12 seemed to live longer.

Whether intentionally or not, people have been subjected to varying forms of genetic modifications since time immemorial.

It is only right that gene editing be viewed as just another form of medical treatment to cure illnesses.

Maria Loh Mun Foong (Ms)

Continued here:

View gene therapy as a medical advancement - The Straits Times

Gene therapy lets a French teen dodge sickle cell disease – CBS News

This 2009 colorized microscope image made available by the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia via the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a sickle cell, left, and normal red blood cells of a patient with sickle cell anemia.

Janice Haney Carr, AP

A French teen who was given gene therapy for sickle cell disease more than two years ago now has enough properly working red blood cells to dodge the effects of the disorder, researchers report.

The first-in-the-world case is detailed in Thursdays New England Journal of Medicine.

About 90,000 people in the U.S., mostly blacks, have sickle cell, the first disease for which a molecular cause was found. Worldwide, about 275,000 babies are born with it each year.

Vexing questions of race and stigma have shadowed the history of its medical treatment, including a time when blacks who carry the bad gene were urged not to have children, spurring accusations of genocide, Keith Wailoo of Princeton University wrote in a separate article in the journal.

The disease is caused by a single typo in the DNA alphabet of the gene for hemoglobin, the stuff in red blood cells that carries oxygen. When its defective, the cells sickle into a crescent shape, clogging tiny blood vessels and causing bouts of extreme pain and sometimes more serious problems such as strokes and organ damage. It keeps many people from playing sports and enjoying other activities of normal life.

A stem cell transplant from a blood-matched sibling is a potential cure, but in the U.S., fewer than one in five people have a donor like that. Pain crises are treated with blood transfusions and drugs, but theyre a temporary fix. Gene therapy offers hope of a lasting one.

The boy, now 15, was treated at Necker Childrens Hospital in Paris in October 2014. Researchers gave him a gene, taken up by his blood stem cells, to help prevent the sickling. Now, about half of his red blood cells have normal hemoglobin; he has not needed a transfusion since three months after his treatment and is off all medicines.

Its not a cure but it doesnt matter, because the disease is effectively dodged, said Philippe Leboulch, who helped invent the therapy and helped found Bluebird Bio in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the company that treated the boy. The work was supported by a grant from the French governments research agency.

Bluebird has treated at least six others in the U.S. and France. Full results have not been reported, but the gene therapy has not taken hold as well in some of them as it did in the French teen. Researchers think they know why and are adjusting methods to try to do better.

Two other gene therapy studies for sickle cell are underway in the U.S. -- at the University of California, Los Angeles and Cincinnati Childrens Hospital - and another is about to start at Harvard and Boston Childrens Hospital using a little different approach.

This work gives considerable promise for a solution to a very common problem, said Dr. Stuart Orkin, a Boston Childrens Hospital doctor who is an inventor on a patent related to gene editing.

The results are quite good in this patient, he said of the French teen. It shows gene therapy is on the right track.

2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Read the original:

Gene therapy lets a French teen dodge sickle cell disease - CBS News

Researchers develop controllable gene therapy, make rats glow … – The Stanford Daily

Researchers at Stanford have made mice glow using a new gene therapy technique, showing that the process can work on living animals.

(Courtesy of Linda Cicero).

Named charge-altering releasable transporters (CARTs), the new technique allows researchers to control how much of a desired protein is expressed inside a cell, and how long the gene therapy lasts. It has a variety of applications to many central problems in biology and medicine, including immunology and cancer research.

Previous gene therapy techniques have relied on permanently changing the DNA within a cell. Colin McKinlay, a third-year Ph.D. student in chemistry and co-lead author on the paper, explains that CARTs take advantage of messenger RNA (mRNA) rather than DNA to give researchers greater control over the process.

By introducing mRNA into the cells, you can basically tell those cells to produce any given protein, McKinlay said. Its more of a temporary effect and you have a lot more control over doing that.

However, mRNA molecules are too large to enter the cell on their own. CARTs are able to latch onto the mRNA, cross the cell membrane, release the mRNA into the cell and quickly degrade into small molecules called metabolites naturally recognizable by the cell. After that, the cell takes over, translating the mRNA into the desired proteins.

Its kind of like the cell already has all of the ingredients, McKinlay said. Were just providing the recipe, and the cell then puts all the pieces together.

One possible application of the new gene therapy technique is creating new types of vaccinations. Typical vaccination techniques involve introducing a dead or weakened antigen, bacteria and foreign substances such as viruses into the cell, which the body then uses to create antibodies. CARTs could allow researchers to temporarily introduce specific proteins from the antigens into cells in order to specify targets for the immune system that are less sensitive to antigen mutation.

CARTs also have the potential to be used as a research tool. As transient polycations, CARTs allow proteins to be introduced and manufactured by the cell in controlled quantities and for a controlled amount of time, making them a valuable resource for studying signaling cascades and other biological phenomena.

The team behind CARTs primarily consists ofWender and Waymouth Group researchers, andalso drawson collaborators across Stanford. As the team begins to test the potential applications of CARTs, more researchers are expected to come on board.

In their recent paper on bioluminescent proteins in mice, researchers worked with Christopher Contag, a professor of pediatrics at Stanford, to show that the technique can work in vivo in animal models,bringing the team a step closer to using it in humans.

We couldnt have done it if we were stuck just within the confines of the chemistry department, said Jessica Vargas 16, a formerPh.D. student in the Wender Lab and a co-lead author on the paper. The work in general is a true testament to Stanfords collaborative spirit.

Contact Aulden Foltz at afoltz at stanford.edu.

See the article here:

Researchers develop controllable gene therapy, make rats glow ... - The Stanford Daily

One third of lymphoma patients cancer free after 6 months in CAR-T … – Genetic Literacy Project

An experimental gene therapy that turns a patients own blood cells into cancer killers worked in a major study, with more than one-third of very sick lymphoma patients showing no sign of disease six months after a single treatment

In all, 82 percent of patients had their cancer shrink at least by half at some point in the study.

Its sponsor, California-based Kite Pharma, is racing Novartis AG to become the first to win approval of the treatment, called CAR-T cell therapy, in the U.S. It could become the nations first approved gene therapy.

A hopeful sign: the number in complete remission at six months 36 percent is barely changed from partial results released after three months, suggesting this one-time treatment might give lasting benefits for those who do respond well.

The therapy is not without risk. Three of the 101 patients in the study died of causes unrelated to worsening of their cancer, and two of those deaths were deemed due to the treatment.

It was developed at the governments National Cancer Institute and then licensed to Kite. The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society helped sponsor the study.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post: Gene therapy to fight a blood cancer succeeds in major study

Go here to read the rest:

One third of lymphoma patients cancer free after 6 months in CAR-T ... - Genetic Literacy Project

The Futurist: Experiences are the new currency – Marketing Interactive

The rise of technology has radically changed the way we live, consume, work and share our lives.

With social platforms and different forms of crowdsourcing initiatives, consumer preferences particularly those of Millennials are constantly evolving. Its an exciting time indeed, and the travel industry is in the middle of it all.

While digital may be everything today, not all things should be automated and digital.

Todays travellers are connected and well-informed; they want to travel in evermore immersive ways. We use technology to connect travellers and local hosts for that truly authentic travel experience.

More importantly, we always try to provide authentic off-the-beaten path experiences. According to our study, if money was no object, 42% of Millennials surveyed in China, the United Kingdom and the United States would choose travel as the thing they would most do ranking higher than buying a new home or car. Creating memories has surpassed the appeal of purchasing possessions.

Also, Millennials are the largest generation in history and by 2025, Millennials and the younger generations will account for 75% of all consumers and travellers it is crucial that brands both in the travel sector and beyond pay attention to their evolving priorities and adapt their offerings to cater accordingly.

We also recently launched Trips which was based on the research of people wanting to create a truly meaningful and connective experience. One of the ways through this mobile first application, is Experiences.

Now, travellers can enjoy handcrafted activities designed and led by local experts that they would never find anywhere else such as a wasabi making workshop in Tokyo or learning about an organic vintage vineyard in Paris. As such, going forward, brands should also ensure relevancy and play a valued role in their lives, along with what is important to them.

With the ever-connectivity with global current affairs news, they are passionate about supporting various communities and causes.

Social impact experiences build on the inherent good of Airbnb travel, from economic impact to communities and neighbourhoods, to environmental impact of sustainable travel to the social impact of bringing people from different cultures together.

Any brands initiatives will not be possible without the combination of the interest in consumer needs and technology. People always think of new behavioural trends as disruptive and a replacement from more traditional forms of strategies, I think its more innovation. Now more than ever, technology is the business. And no company, not even Airbnb, can afford to slow the pace of its development.

The writer is Juliana Nguyen, regional brand marketing director, Asia-Pacific, Airbnb.

Excerpt from:

The Futurist: Experiences are the new currency - Marketing Interactive

A Futurist Utopia at Undercover – The Business of Fashion

PARIS, France Photos can capture an important part of the story the scale, the imagination, the complexity of the clothes but they dont have a hope in hell of communicating just how sublime Jun Takahaskis presentation for Undercover was.

Making an effort to look at the runway images through the eyes of someone who wasnt there, I appreciate theres something of a shortfall between reality and record. Which means my fanboy overdrive comes down to one simple, irrefutable fact. You had to be there: to experience the eerie choreography and lighting; to absorb Thom Yorkes thrilling soundtrack (torrents of abstract sound, steadily cohering into pulsating rhythm); to feel like you were suspended inside the belly of a new life form.

In a way, thats what it was, in Takahashis terms at least. He called his collection Utopie. Subtitle: A New Race Living in Utopia. After the show, mind still reeling, I asked him if he believed such an ideal could come to pass. I hope so, he answered.

Hope: that was the cloud on which the collection floated by, dreamlike. This entire season has been recast with a political tint, courtesy of the populist upheaval in America and Europe. Takahashis futurist Utopia was curiously reliant on a distinctly old world order, a hierarchy whose ten archetypes were listed in the shownotes, among them, Aristocrats, Soldiers, Young Rebels, Agitators, and, finally, Monarchy, this last notion represented by a Red Queen, straight out of a sci-fi Wonderland. Part Princess Leia, part Christmas tree ornament.

The thought did cross my mind that Takahashi might have been endorsing hierarchical security class system bordering on authoritarianism as an escape from the dangerously inchoate state of global politics, but then, he did incorporate anti-Establishment archetypes into his cast of characters. And, putting them all together, he had a delicious slew of inspirations for another of his ravishing takedowns of fashion orthodoxy, from the floor-length knit dresses which opened the show, through romantic deconstructions of military jackets and sensational studded sweatshirts, to spectacular knitwear, quilted parkas and insectoid black urbanwear, and finally, the Red Queen.

The details were mindboggling, especially the belts worn by the Agitators, laden with keys, scissors, knives, bits and pieces of threatening hardware. Not an accessory designed with modern travel in mind.

But that was another wondrous thing about the collection. Takahashi is a cultural archeologist almost without equal, dedicating an entire collection to, say, New York musical legends Television, or the jazz pianist Bill Evans, or Hieronymus Bosch. The references werent specific here, but there was an optimistic feeling for an alternate reality where all times and places coincided, and where all things were equal, distant past as relevant as far future. Utopia, I guess, though the way the Salle Wagram was configured for the show, with huge red velvet curtains opening and closing after each vignette, did remind me of the Red Room in Twin Peaks, pop cultures ultimate alternate reality.

Takahashi featured a golden bee on his invitation. You could say it was a Lynch-ian synchronicity that the same insect was embossed on the invitation for the Dior show, two hours earlier. Given fashions occasionally uncanny ability to not just reflect a mood, but also project what might be upcoming in the hive mind, the symbology of the golden bee is worth a look. Im holding out for Golden Bee Number Three. Then well have a trend.

Visit link:

A Futurist Utopia at Undercover - The Business of Fashion

Meet the Revolutionary Apple That Grows Human Skin – Futurism – Futurism

Whats In An Apple?

Apples are a staple in most peoples homes and, it seems, in science. There was Newtons apple, and the proverbial daily apple to keep your doctor away. Now, biophysicist Andrew Pellingof University of Ottawa wants to add an apple of his own into the mix and this one might bring with it the future of biomaterials and human tissue repair.

Many scientists thought the idea of this apple itself was a little fruity. Pelling said that his team did not have many cheerleaders when they startedto look for ways to grow human cells by biohackingfruits.

Nobody else is doing this. In fact, in the early days people thought Id lost my mind, Pelling said during a TED Talk earlier in 2016. What Im really curious about is if one day it will be possible to repair, rebuild, and augment our own bodies with stuff we make in the kitchen.

How Pellingsteam achieved this was rather simple, he said. To remove the apples cellular material, they bathed it in boiled water and liquid dish soap. As a result, the apples cells popped open. After the apple was washed clean of all its disgorged cellular material, what was left of it was a rigid cellulose scaffolding like an apples skeletal structure, so to speak. The spaces that once contained apple cells were then filled with mammalian cells.

Pelling demonstrated the success of the technique on several occasions, and in some playful ways. For instance, his teamcarved apples into the shape of human ears and then infused them with skin cells. The apple-ears were remarkably life-like.

Pellings method is, of course, still in its early developmental stages. At this point, it cant be tested on human beings. The team did test it on mice, though. Pelling injected cellulose scaffolding under the skin of lab mice. Amazingly, the mice didnt show any adverse immune reactions to the infusion. Within a few months, the animals body had populated the scaffolding with their own cells. The scaffoldhad become part of the tissue, Pelling said.

These studies have spurred two doctors from hospitals in Ottawato expressed their interests in Pellings work. The doctors are brainstorming possible medical applications of this technique with Pelling. One potential is for regenerative medicine, particularly as scaffolds to graft skin and bone. The scaffolds currently used these procedures are derived from collagen harvested from human cadavers, which can be cost-prohibitive.

A toonie-sized piece of traditional scaffolding material costs $1,000. Weve developed a material that could be just as good for a fraction of a penny, Pelling said. Plus, would you want a piece of cadaver in you, or a piece of apple?

But why stop at just apples? Pelling and his team are also looking at the potential of cellulosescaffolding derived from asparagus or even rose petals to be used as biomaterials to repair bone or nerve damage. And thisjust one way that biohacking can revolutionize our lives.

Go here to see the original:

Meet the Revolutionary Apple That Grows Human Skin - Futurism - Futurism

NASA Has Plans to Give Mars a Magnetic Shield to Enable Human Colonization – Futurism

Building Mars

At the forefront of modern space exploration looms the possibility of manned missions to Mars. From the ambitious schemes of Elon Musk, to NASAs hopeful plan,to the collaborative endeavor of the ESA and Russia, it seems as though every major space agency is making strides towards putting humans on Mars. But, on a cold and desolate planet whose minuscule atmosphere is severely lacking, how do you sustain human life for long periods of time?

Many scientists and science fiction enthusiasts have, over the years, speculated at the possibility of terraforming Mars. Finding innovative ways to make the surface of the red planet gradually more conducive to human living. There have been many ideas and models created in the hopes of successful terraforming. Engineers designed a shell that could be placed around a small planet which could protect the planet from radiation and help to facilitate an atmosphere over time. Others thought that by breaking apart the martian crust they could release enough CO2 to build up an atmosphere. There have been many attempts, but the issues of cosmic and solar radiation paired with the unsurvivable atmosphere and dry terrain are always too much.

And, while the concept of terraforming Mars isnt completely impossible, to successfully do it you would need to protect against cosmic radiation, solar radiation and solar winds, increase planet temperature, add oxygen and nitrogen to the atmosphere, and do all of this in a way that could be self-sustaining. Not impossible, but currently posing serious obstacles.

Despite all of these hurdles, scientists have not stopped trying to find inventive ways to terraform Mars. NASA recently proposed a unique strategy that shows a promising solution that could address some of these issues: a magnetic shield. Sincethe current scientific consensus is that Mars atmosphere was lost because of solar winds and the disappearance of the planets magnetic field, this solution shows promise. Mars magnetic field once protected the red planet while supporting an atmosphere (and moisture), and NASA scientists think it can be artificially restored.

According to Dr. Jim Green, Director of NASAs Planetary Science Division, In the future it is quite possible that an inflatable structure(s) can generate a magnetic dipole field at a level of perhaps 1 or 2 Tesla (or 10,000 to 20,000 Gauss) as an active shield against the solar wind.

The research team working on this idea recently conducted a simulation with their artificial magnetosphere, thanks to the Community Coordinated Modeling Center (CCMC). They found that their dipole shield would be able to protect against solar wind and help to balance the Martian atmosphere. Because the shield would work as an artificial magnetic field, the atmosphere would actually continue to thicken over time.

This could be just another stepping stone in a long line of terraforming concepts, but this solution holds concrete possibility. Because it could help to actually create a better atmosphere over time and can actually be simulated within a lab, it is possible that the future of terraforming will begin with magnets.

More:

NASA Has Plans to Give Mars a Magnetic Shield to Enable Human Colonization - Futurism

IBM Aims to Build the First Commercial Quantum Computer in ‘the Next Few Years’ – Futurism

In Brief

While many developers focuson increasing the intelligence of artificially intelligent (AI) algorithms, IBM is eyeing a different area of technology: quantum computing.

Quantum computers are going to be game changers, bringing with them faster data processing and information handling. This increase in speed is made possible through the use of quantum bits (or qubits) instead of the binary bits that current computers employ. Qubits rely on the quantum phenomenon of superposition, which allows them to be 0s or 1s at the same time. This ability to exist in multiple states at once enables qubits to process information more quickly.

IBM has been working on quantum computing technologies for some time now. Last May, the company gave the public access to its 5-qubit quantum computer. These computers, located in their New York labs, were available as a cloud service. More recently still, IBMs 5-qubit quantum computer competed against another quantum computer and proved to be the faster of the two devices (though qubit sustainability was a bit of an issue).

Now, IBM is pushing for the development of a truly universal quantum computer, and to that end, it has launchedIBM Q, an industry-first initiative to build commercially available universal quantum computers for business and science.

Through IBM Q, the company hopes to improve its current quantum computing models by enlisting the help of others interested in the field. IBM is updating itsquantum computing cloud service with a new application program interface (API)designed to give developers and programmers who dont have a background in quantum physics the ability to create interfaces between IBMs cloud-based quantum computer and traditionalcomputers.

The computing industry giant hopes that these updates will encourage researchers and other interested parties to use their experimental quantum computing system to build more sophisticated applications. While technologies like AI can find patterns buried in vast amounts of existing data, quantum computers will deliver solutions to important problems where patterns cannot be seen and the number of possibilities that you need to explore to get to the answer are too enormous ever to be processed by classical computers, IBM explained.

IBMs goal is to build quantum systems with roughly 50 qubits in the next few years. Once we have those, well be able to truly begin to harness the power of quantum computing, and the applications are endless. Everything frommedicine and finance to cloud security and even the modern technological eras golden child of AI will be faster and more advanced.

See the original post here:

IBM Aims to Build the First Commercial Quantum Computer in 'the Next Few Years' - Futurism

Georgia: Media Freedom at Risk – Human Rights Watch

(Tbilisi) An ownership dispute over Georgias most-watched television broadcaster, Rustavi 2, has sparked serious concerns about potential government interference with both media and the judiciary, Human Rights Watch said today.

Rustavi 2s current leadership, the political opposition, and many independent groups see a lawsuit by a former owner seeking to retake ownership and a March 2, 2017 ruling by the Supreme Court endorsing the change as a government-orchestrated move to take over the opposition-minded station. The European Court of Human Rights has ordered temporary suspension of the Supreme Court decision and instructed the Georgian authorities to refrain from interference in the station.

A government-favored change in the editorial policy of Rustavi 2 would deliver a serious blow to Georgias media pluralism and could significantly limit the publics access to opposition views, said Giorgi Gogia, South Caucasus director at Human Rights Watch. The entire process of contesting Rustavi 2s ownership threatens media freedom and judicial independence and demands further scrutiny.

Concerns about potential government interference in Rustavi 2 have been exacerbated by other developments in the overall media landscape in Georgia that have reduced the space for critical opposition media, Human Rights Watch said.

The March 2 ruling by Georgias highest court of appeal said that the stations ownership should revert to Kibar Khalvashi, a businessman who owned it from 2004 to 2006, and who alleged he had been improperly forced to sell the station at below market value by then-president Mikheil Saakashvili. The Supreme Courts Grand Chamber, consisting of nine judges, issued a unanimous decision the same day it took up the case, declining to allow the parties to make oral arguments. The written judgement is expected in a month.

Khalvashi initiated the lawsuit in August 2015, claiming he had been strong-armed into relinquishing his majority stake by the then-Georgian leadership. Khalvashis key evidence was a report on the valuation of Rustavi 2 shares in 2005-2006 by a current state forensic bureau expert based on data Khalvashi provided. The report showed the shares were worth far more than Khalvashi received.

Rustavi 2s current shareholders dispute the reports validity, alleging that the valuation was based on inconclusive financial data and had not been compiled in accordance with international valuation standards. In November 2015, a judge from Tbilisi City Court ruled to reinstate Khalvashi as the majority owner. An appeal court upheld the decision in June 2016.

Rustavi 2s current owners, brothers Giorgi and Levan Karamanishvili, are widely seen as close associates of Saakashvili. Nika Gvaramia, the stations current general director, served in several high-level government posts during Saakashvilis administration, and maintains close contact with him. Khalvashi and the current government are both strong opponents of Saakashvili.

The current owners, numerous Georgian human rights groups, Georgias ombudsman, and many of Georgias international partners have raised questions and concerns throughout the ownership dispute, suggesting possible government interference to silence critical, and in particular, opposition media.

Senior government officials have on multiple occasions made clear not only that they take issue with Rustavi 2s editorial stand, but that they want to see the stations ownership changed and given to Khalvashi, expressing clear support for the courts to act to strip the current leadership at the station.

The Tbilisi City Court judge also issued an interim injunction in November 2015, replacing Rustavi 2s top management, including Gvaramia, with temporary management, contending that the stations managers were too focused on the ownership dispute, to the detriment of other issues of public interest. Local human rights groups and Georgias international partners criticized the move as an attempt to affect the channels editorial policy.

A week later, the judge overturned his decision and reinstated the broadcasters top management. The Constitutional Court then suspended the civil procedure code clause that had allowed the appointment of temporary managers.

Domestic observers have raised questions about the independence and impartiality of the judges in this case. Rustavi 2 attorneys unsuccessfully sought to get the first-instance court judge recuse himself on the basis that pending criminal proceedings against the judges mother could have been used by the government as leverage against him.

The stations current director, Gvaramia, has also made credible allegations of intimidation to pressure him to resign. In October 2015, Gvaramia alleged that a government official threatened to leak a personal video of him if he refused to step aside. Although the prosecutors office initiated an investigation, the results were inconclusive. A few days later, audio recordings appeared online, allegedly of Gvaramia receiving instructions from Saakashvili to prepare for a possible physical confrontation with the authorities to defend the station.

The Georgian government has consistently denied that it backs Khalvashis efforts to regain ownership or that it has interfered in anyway with the process. The government issued a statement the day after the Supreme Court ruling, emphasizing that [T]he Government of Georgia has full appreciation and respect towards the freedom of media and does its best to protect and ensure a pluralistic media environment.

On March 3, Rustavi 2 lodged an application with the European Court of Human Rights contesting the March 2 decision, saying that it violates guarantees under the European Convention on Human Rights. In a rare move on the same day, the European Court instructed the Georgian government to temporarily suspend enforcement of the March 2 decision and to abstain from interfering with the applicant companys editorial policy in any manner. The government has complied with the temporary measure, which is to remain in effect until March 8. The European Court said it would treat the Rustavi 2 case as a priority.

The Georgian governments compliance with the suspension measure is a positive move, Human Rights Watch said. It should agree to extend the suspension until the European Courts final judgement and to allow scrutiny of all the human rights concerns raised by the ownership dispute.

The Council of Europe places a high premium on media pluralism and diversity of media content as integral to freedom of expression and information and essential for the functioning of a democratic society. It has called on it members to adopt policies designed to foster as much as possible a variety of media and a plurality of information sources, thereby allowing a plurality of ideas and opinions. The European Court has long held that the state has a key obligation to ensure media pluralism, noting that this observation is especially valid in relation to audio-visual media, whose programmes are often broadcast very widely.

In February, the leadership of the Public Broadcaster announced controversial plans to suspend political talk shows, citing reorganization plans to upgrade the stations equipment and content.

In August 2015, Imedi TV, the second most-watched station, suspended its current-affairs political talk shows amid claims of government interference and pressure. The station merged with two other smaller broadcast stations, and now is largely viewed as a government-friendly channel.

Rustavi 2 was founded in 1994 in the town of Rustavi, about a 20-minute drive from Tbilisi, the capital. The station gained popularity for its hard-hitting investigative exposes and reporting on corruption during the administration of then-president Eduard Shevardnadze. After becoming the nations most-watched news channel, Rustavi 2 played a key role in catalyzing the November 2013 Rose Revolution, which brought Saakashvili to power. Rustavi 2 ownership changed hands multiple times after Khalvashi sold his shares, and before the current ownership.

Democratic societies depend on safeguards to ensure the government of the day cannot unduly interfere with either an independent judiciary or the requirement of a pluralist media, Gogia said. With widespread concerns about such undue interference in Georgia, action should be taken to address them, and the process before the European Court of Human Rights could create the space and opportunity for that.

Original post:

Georgia: Media Freedom at Risk - Human Rights Watch

Mass Effect: Andromeda Offers Awesome Player Freedom – IGN

Share.

I took a look at the map and estimated I was a short Nomad drive away from my objective in Mass Effect: Andromeda maybe 30 or 40 seconds. I ran over some enemies, passed small settlements inside of icy caves, and saw the mysterious Remnant fighting wildlife, then double checked my position. I had only gone a short distance and was still at least a dozen discoveries away from my target. The map for this one of several explorable planets was so large I actually laughed.

You say you dont want to spend tons of time exploring each planet? Dont. You want to know everything about the Ryder family secrets? Hunt away. You want Ryder to act like the beloved Commander Shepard? Make it so. Members of developer BioWare told me that player freedom is more important than ever in Andromeda, and it showed in every facet of the game I experienced during my nearly 10 hours of playtime.

New Kids on the Block

After 600 years of travel, the human colony ship Arc Hyperion arrives in the Andromeda galaxy in search of a new home. Playing as either Sara or Scott Ryder, the player embarks on an adventure to find a Golden World, or habitable planet, after their original destination turns out to be a bust. Chaos ensues.

Regardless of which Ryder twin you choose, the difference between them and the original Mass Effect trilogys Shepard is immediately noticeable. While they have combat training, they dont command the same leadership as Shepard. If Andromeda is going to be your first Mass Effect, I think youll be in good hands with the new protagonist. Ryder feels more relatable thanks to the new dialogue system that allows you to better dictate Ryders personality.

Mass Effect: Andromeda does away with the black and white Paragon and Renegade options in favor of four other response types that arent colored by morality. Instead I chose between emotional, logical, casual, and professional lines that shape Ryders character. In one playthrough Ryder was somewhat shy and sometimes struggled for confidence when talking to crew members, but in another I made Ryder stern with little care for the feelings of others.

And the others? Theyre great. From the new squadmates to random people I encountered on the Nexus, everyone had something to say. Its obvious that a lot of care was put into writing even the most minor engineers and colonists. Among the main cast, S.A.M. seems to have the highest potential for causing galactic controversy. In Andromeda, Ryder is always accompanied by an integrated AI that acts a little like The Legend of Zeldas Navi, but instead of being talkative like the squadmates he occasionally chimes in to offer analysis and advice for objectives. He doesnt seem to have as much personality as the original trilogys EDI, but S.A.M.s mysterious relationship with the Ryder family makes his side quests intriguing. Having true AI is taboo in Mass Effect, so itll be interesting to see how issues with S.A.M. pan out in the Andromeda galaxy.

In one mid-game save I had Sara Ryder run around the Tempest and flirt with as many crew mates as I could.

Like S.A.M., a lot of the squadmates have unique backgrounds that directly tie them to some of the biggest conflicts in Andromeda. As one of the native Andromeda races, the angara Jaal offered unique insight to exploration and drama. Pairing him with the inquisitive Peebee made for a fun drive in the Nomad. When I geared up for a mission I considered their personalities and interests as much as their combat capabilities. Since Andromeda doesnt lock Ryder into one class, I felt like I could be flexible with the squadmates I brought along to each mission. Interactions with the squadmates seem more robust during downtime, too. I got to jump to a mid-game save at one point during my two days at BioWare, and thankfully didnt find anyone calibrating a weapon endlessly.

Better interactions leads to better flirting. In one mid-game save I had Sara Ryder run around the Tempest and flirt with as many crew mates as I could. It was hilarious. She stumbled over her words when flirting with some of the dashing characters, and was silly with others. Though I didnt play enough to experience a full romance, I liked both the beginnings and the end yup, BioWare let me skip to one of the sexier scenes. Without spoiling it, I was delighted by how much choice I got even in that moment. It was intimate and respectful of the kind of relationship I wanted to create between the two characters.

Tell Me Another Story

Andromeda draws out many feelings I got from the first Mass Effect without treading too familiar ground. Exploring a galaxy filled with alien life and a mysterious threat is delightful. The danger from the oppressive kett seems to be more direct than the Reapers secretive existence, but there are plenty of supplemental stories that bolster the main mission. For one, exploring potential homes for humanity is a pretty big deal, and Ryders personal journey to learn family affairs refreshes the adventure as well.

Im a twin myself, so I had an especially deep connection with the Ryder family. Unlike in past Mass Effect games, family is an important (or, if you really dont care, an unimportant) part of Ryders identity, which opens a whole new kind of emotional vein. The Ryder family had a lot to do with the development of the Andromeda Initiative and have the weight of humanitys future on their shoulders, so there seems to be some good drama waiting to be discovered there.

Though Andromeda departs from Shepards Milky Way adventure, some story beats that were massively important to the original trilogy do come into play in the new galaxy the genophage wasnt magically cured during the trip, after all. If youre new to the series or simply forgot some of the finer details, Andromeda does supply players with enough information about these issues. Like in past games you almost always have the option to ask about a subject, or you can look it up in the robust Codex.

In addition to the main story and family drama there are a plethora of paths to follow; residual Milky Way drama, rebellions against oppressors, squadmate loyalty missions, Remnant secrets, and tons of side missions. Andromeda is packed with stories. Thankfully, like the Codex, the Journal tracks who I add to my crew, what missions Ive completed, what optional objectives I may have missed, and most importantly, minor and major choices like who shot first when meeting new species.

I was impressed with how even the smallest actions have nuanced consequences. At one point I talked with my human squadmate Cora about dragons, and not long after Ryder saw a huge beast flying in the sky. Ryder then brought up conversation they had with Cora to their other human companion, Liam. Had I not taken the time to talk to Cora previously I wouldnt have experienced that. Sure, its not revolutionary or even remotely important to the story, but it gives capability of caring about things other than what I dictate they have agency.

Other actions like saving crew members or disagreeing with someone higher in command have rippling effects too. Rumors spread about my choices in an argument and I once saw a soldier I failed to help laying in a medical bed. And of course there are the bigger, game-changing decisions youll have to make. Im already planning on having a pre-choice save to retreat to based on the one big decision I played through.

Shoot, Craft, Explore

Each Mass Effect game has its own take on cover-based combat, and Andromedas has a great redesign. The jump jet helps modernize Andromedas movement to be faster and give players better verticality without sacrificing what makes Mass Effects combat special. I could jump, hover and shoot, then pummel one or two enemies, but I still had to take cover when my team was swarmed. The automatic cover system took some time to get used to, but once I did I had fun obliterating enemies with my chosen loadout.

Andromeda doesnt lock players into one weapon or ability class. I experimented with all sorts of combinations and felt more powerful because of the ability freedom. The number of powers and their skill trees is a little overwhelming, but Id much prefer them over a simpler RPG system that limits customization, especially since Ryders combat versatility allowed me to pick squadmates based in their personality or interest in the mission.

The weapon variety, customization, and crafting were also a tad intimidating. I didnt have enough time to explore the systems fully with access to Milky Way, Remnant, and Andromeda weapons youve got a lot to choose from. While I enjoyed trying the new kinds of beam-based guns, my favorite were the new melee weapons. The Asari sword is awesome. I opted to stick with weapons I picked up through the campaign, but if you use your scanner to research enough technology in the environment you can develop all sorts of things. Schematics require certain resources for construction, so if youre especially interested in crafting, youll need to do some exploring.

Even if you dont care about crafting, youll want to wander. As mentioned previously, the planets I got to explore are huge and have a lot to offer. I was surprised at how many objectives popped up on my map as I drove around in the Nomad. There were plenty of random kett waiting to be fought and strange Remnant structures that beckoned me to fight their guards then snoop around.

Remnant technology is fascinating and its architecture is beautiful.

Though I didnt get to fully explore a Remnant vault, I loved the small part I got to see. The Remnant technology is fascinating and its architecture is beautiful. I know Im going to obsess over their mysteries once I get to play more.

The rest of the places I visited were well-designed too. Theres a surprising variety of planets and people youll meet. One of my favorite parts of being in this galaxy was how it felt like it lived without me. I came across random enemy scuffles and plenty of fun conversations between random people on the Nexus Ill always wonder if that salarian engineer ever got his Galactic Girl Scout cookies. Squadmates react to the environment more too. All this is great, but it was a little disappointing when I accidentally cut someone off because I triggered a new scripted line. Still, too much good writing seems like a decent problem to have.

If you dont want to wait around to eavesdrop on NPCs or get in an intimate interspecies relationship, you dont have to. But the beauty is that BioWare gives you that choice. Mass Effect Andromeda is filled with secrets and options, and I cant wait to uncover them all.

Keep it on IGN for more reveals and features Mass Effect: Andromeda. Take a look at the IGN First hub to see all of our Andromeda coverage.

Miranda Sanchez is an Editor at IGN. You can talk with her about space dates, AI ethics, anime, and video games on Twitter.

View original post here:

Mass Effect: Andromeda Offers Awesome Player Freedom - IGN

Freedom Is Free – PopMatters

The immediate impression you get upon hearing Freedom Is Free, the latest album from L.A.s Chicano Batman, is that of an old, battered, obscure album from 1972 that you found in your cool uncles vinyl collection. Or maybe its something you discover while aimlessly browsing a flea market. The music has that kind of authenticity. The thing is, its brand new music. But it sounds like it wasnt recorded within 100 miles of a laptop.

Chicano Batmana quartet consisting of Bardo Martinez (vocals, guitar, organ), Carlos Arevalo (guitar), Eduardo Arenas (bass, vocals) and Gabriel Villa (drums, percussion)make music that seems hermetically sealed from another time, yet their politics and social commentary are as vital as ever in this day and age.

Take the albums title, for example. Its a deliberate flip of the Freedom Isnt Free catchphrase that was plastered on the back of countless American pickup trucks after the Iraq War. Martinez argues that this logic has explicitly justified war and its atrocities in the name of freedom. The title, he adds, is an antithesis to that ideological fallacy.

While the lyrics and social conscience of Chicano Batman are a throwback to the revolutionary messages of Gil-Scott Heron and Whats Going On-era Marvin Gaye, the music also adds to the retro-soul atmosphere. Thick slabs of Hammond organ mix with funky guitar riffs, relentless backbeats and a heavy coating of analog grease, combined with a heaping helping of Tropicalia. For producer Leon Michels (who brought the band to Long Island City, New York, to record the album), this is familiar territory, as hes worked with artists like Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings and the Black Keys.

The albums first single, Friendship (Is a Small Boat in a Storm), works well as a primer for the bands hard-hitting yet intoxicating psychedelic soul. Martinez aching falsetto is straight out of classic Curtis Mayfield singles and New York-based female vocal group Mariachi Flor de Toloache provide a soulful, sympathetic backing.

The band also infuses their sound with jarring musical shifts that owe more to the jazzier, more complex genres of the bygone era they tend to inhabit. Angel Child shifts from soul balladry to heavy funk and then to a spacey, jittery, guitar-heavy psych/prog style that sounds like Sly Stone channeling Frank Zappa.

The aforementioned title track does a fantastic job of marrying a sunny, bouncy groove and positive message with a sharp admonishment to those who claim that the natural state of society is war. You got your guns up on display / But you cant control how I feel, no way / Cause freedom is free / And thats the way its always gonna be. It should be noted that Chicano Batman recently covered Woody Guthries This Land Is Your Land for a Johnny Walker commercial (appearing in the ad with their trademark retro tuxes with ruffled feathers, naturally), further sealing their reputation as a band with a strong social conscience.

Elsewhere, Freedom Is Free includes a few direct nods to the bands Latino heritage as a pair of back-to-back songs (La Jura and Flecha Al Sol) are sung in Spanish. The former song is a lazy, mid-tempo funk ballad that breaks for tasty guitar and organ soloing at the halfway mark, while the latter is a faster, almost punk-ish earworm that still allows for plenty of easygoing melodicism to live comfortably alongside the frantic pace. As if checking off boxes to ensure an eclectic mix, the album even throws in a brief instrumental, Right Off the Back, which employs a tight, funky urgency that gives the impression of a car chase on an old Streets of San Francisco episode.

One of the albums most impressive tracks is one that enjoyed a relatively long gestation period. Martinez confesses to taking a long time to write The Taker Story, inspired in large part by Daniel Quinns novel Ishmael. Backed by an almost hypnotic funk groove, Martinez both speaks and sings the lyrics, which focus on the destruction humans foist upon both themselves and the planet, in addition to their assumed superiority over all creatures. Weve been enacting the story for twelve thousand years / The one that says man must follow no natural laws / The one that says that man is distinctly set from every living thing / That man is the end result of evolution. This isnt just mere protest its putting injustice in the context of the entire history of existence. Heady stuff.

Chicano Batman is a band that makes you dance, makes you long for days gone by, but reminds you that the world can be a dark place and that art can make you think, speak out, and ultimately enact change. They may just be the perfect band for our times.

Chris Ingalls is a Massachusetts native who spent the first seven years of his adult life as a broadcast journalist in the U.S. Navy, serving in a variety of overseas locations. He was also a videotape editor for a CBS affiliate television station, a newspaper editor at a military public affairs office in Naples, Italy, and spent 14 years in the media relations department of a Boston-area cancer research institute. He was born in 1969 and has been a rabid music fan since at least 1970, thanks to his three older siblings. He hosted his own music podcast, The Supersonic Time Machine, from 2011 to 2015, is a frequent guest on the current events podcast Get the Knaak and contributes to Omniluxe, a retro pop culture website. He is on Twitter @Ingalls1969 and lives in Malden, Massachusetts, with his wife, son, their ornery cat and hyperactive dog.

Excerpt from:

Freedom Is Free - PopMatters

Saxophonist Noah Preminger Joins The Protest With ‘Meditations On Freedom’ – Hartford Courant

Get ready, 2017 listeners: Here comes the protest music.

"Meditations on Freedom," a new album by tenor saxophonist and Connecticut native Noah Preminger, recorded in December and released on Inauguration Day, is among the first shots fired, a stunning document of intuitive, small-group improv that elevates contemplation over anger.

"As an artist, sometimes I struggle: Why am I doing this? I'm just blowing into a saxophone, a piece of brass," Preminger says. "What is it actually doing for me or for others?"

Preminger is a political guy, a deep thinker. The election, and everything since, has given him plenty to think about.

He's also one of the best saxophone players you'll hear, or want to, with seven albums as a leader ("Meditations" is number eight) in his catalog and a highly developed, personal sound and aesthetic.

Before "Meditations," Preminger self-released two albums of Mississippi Delta-centric music: "Pivot: Live at the 55 Bar," from 2015, consisting of only two tracks of extended improvisation (each lasts a half an hour) on songs by Booker T. White; and 2016's "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground," with shorter reworkings of songs by Blind Lemon Jefferson, Mississippi John Hurt and others.

Last fall, photographer and engineer Jimmy Katz, who co-produced both of those records with Preminger, approached the saxophonist about making a protest record.

"I thought it was a really great idea to write some new material and also to cover some material," Preminger says.

They decided to fill half an album with message songs: Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come," Bob Dylan's "Only a Pawn in Their Game," George Harrison's "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)" and Bruce Hornsby's "The Way It Is."

For the rest, Preminger composed at the piano, while thinking about women's rights ("Women's March"), racial injustice ("We Have a Dream"), income inequality ("The 99 Percent"), climate change ("Mother Earth") and Native American rights ("Broken Treaties").

Composing was easy. Some research was involved; for "Broken Treaties," Preminger borrowed a rhythmic idea from Native American music. Ideas emerged freely, from thoughts swirling around in his head.

"There's so much great stuff out there [in the news], and so much awful stuff," Preminger says. "There are so many emotions right now, it just flows right out."

On Dec. 17, Preminger assembled his "Pivot" and "Dark Was the Night" quartet trumpeter Jason Palmer, bassist Kim Cass and drummer Ian Froman in the studio, bringing only sketches and not having any previous conversations with the musicians.

"They got the feeling of those songs when I told them what they were about and played the melody for them. That was the rehearsal: three minutes of me telling them how it goes and playing the melody, explaining how I wanted the form to be."

Katz engineered, mixed and mastered the session, and he also took photos. For economic reasons, Preminger releases albums on his own, and quickly; "Meditations on Freedom" came out on Jan. 20, a little more than a month after the studio date.

"It was an urgent thing, because this is sort of an urgent time," Preminger says.

"Meditations" begins with three covers. Dylan's "Only a Pawn in Their Game" was written in 1963, after the assassination of activist Medgar Evers. "The Way It Is" was a massive hit for Hornsby in 1986. Cooke's civil rights anthem "A Change Is Gonna Come" came out in 1964. All three, in a sense, wrapped pointed political statements, about racial and income inequality, in accessible folk/pop/soul packaging.

Preminger's take on "Pawn" opens like a slow sunrise, the narrow harmonic range of the original transformed into something like a ruminative drone. Preminger's languid, chromatic runs skitter around the tonal center, while Palmer explores low growls, rapid mid-range bursts and legato leaps, over Cass and Froman's barely present triple-meter groove.

"The Way It Is" finds Preminger and Froman splintering off into a thunderous duet. And "Change," a ballad, showcases Preminger's stately tone and subtle vibrato, until both he and Palmer slice through the chords changes with chilly remove.

Harrison's "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)," a song I've loved forever, offers hope and community. The melody sounds like calypso buoyant, nostalgic, narrative before Preminger and Palmer trade lines, dialing up the rhythmic complexity and dissonance.

With covers that good, you might overlook Preminger's five originals. That would be a mistake. Palmer blankets the loping swing of "We Have a Dream," a straight-ahead song form (almost like pre-Elvis pop), with thematic fragments and searing descents, before Preminger juxtaposes hanging-mobile fragments with snaking chromatic lines.

Cass's intro and churning ostinato on "Mother's Earth," a cheeky, melancholic nod to "There She Is, Miss America" (a jab at Trump, perhaps), anchors gorgeous improv by Preminger, Froman and Palmer.

"Women's March" affords Palmer and Preminger a certain time-lapse freedom above Cass and Froman's rocket-ride pulse. Fittingly, "The 99 Percent" begins with a spare, unison melody (played by Preminger and Palmer) that grows slightly, fed by Preminger's long-tone solo, but stays lean (at 3:31, it's the shortest track on "Meditations"). "Broken Treaties," the final song, unfolds from evocative, slow-moving, two- and three-part harmonies into frenzied action and interplay.

Preminger and his quartet will perform at the Side Door in Old Lyme on April 14 and on May 19 at Black-eyed Sally's in Hartford. He'll be there physically, but he'll be trying to get to somewhere else.

"When you're able to completely take yourself off the bandstand, out of body, that's the highest place you can get to as an artist," he says. "That's why I continue to play, period. I don't do it for the money, because there is none."

And while Preminger is proud of "Meditations," he's realistic about its ability to reach a wide audience.

"Jazz music is such a small genre. It's not like I'm standing on the stage at Madison Square Garden talking about these important issues like Bono or Bruce Springsteen or Britney Spears. It's small-time, but it's something I feel I'm able to do to spread the word about issues that need to be talked about."

Follow this link:

Saxophonist Noah Preminger Joins The Protest With 'Meditations On Freedom' - Hartford Courant

Freedom’s Meaning: What Once United Us, Now Splinters Us Up and Divides Us – CNSNews.com


CNSNews.com
Freedom's Meaning: What Once United Us, Now Splinters Us Up and Divides Us
CNSNews.com
If there is one thing that has always united, and can even still unite Americans, it is our love for freedom. Indeed, the mere mention of freedom has always served as an inebriating rallying cry that opens up seemingly infinite possibilities of ...

Link:

Freedom's Meaning: What Once United Us, Now Splinters Us Up and Divides Us - CNSNews.com

Cow eugenics: Colombian ranchers breed cattle to stand their ground against big cat predators – Genetic Literacy Project

If big cats dont kill livestock, farmers wont shoot them.

Panthera, a charity that manages corridors for jaguars that stretchfrom Argentina to Mexico, guesses that just 5,000 of the cats are left in los llanos, Colombias scorching savannah. It has come up with a less violent way of protecting both the jaguars and the cattle.

The idea is to teach cattle self-defence, or rather to breed the instinct into them.

Pantheras idea is to replace panicky Zebu with cattle that stand their ground, or to interbreed the two.Esteban Payn, who directs Pantheras operations in northern South America, chose San Martineros, a little-known subspecies of Criollo cattle descended from Spanish fighting bulls. Few jaguars dare to challenge a massed group of 500kg (1,100-pound) San Martineros, their horns levelled. Docile with humans, they are fierce defenders of territory and their young.

Eugenics seems to work. Cattle that are just a quarter San Martinero may be just as brave, says Mr Payn. No jaguars have attacked cattle on Las Pampas, [a] 4,000-hectare ranch, since the programme began, he says. Zebu-only ranches in the area suffer a dozen attacks a year.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:Breeding cows that can defend themselves against jaguars

The rest is here:

Cow eugenics: Colombian ranchers breed cattle to stand their ground against big cat predators - Genetic Literacy Project

3 tech body modifications to turn you into a cyborg – Memeburn

By Julia Breakey on 7 March, 2017 Share

If youve ever watchedInspector Gadgetand wished that you were as cool as him, then youve chosen the right time to be alive.

Over the past few years, scientists have worked on ways to integrate technology into the human body, with functionality ranging from medical diagnoses to sheer cool factor.

And according to some scientists, the first person to live to 1000 has already been born.

But while you wait for that technology, here are three body modifications that are as close youll get to being a robot today.

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology developed temporary tattoos called DuoSkin last year.

These tattooscan work as a trackpad for your device or even light up when your partner is angry at you, or if your temperature is rising.

And if you desperately want to promote your Instagram, then some even work as NFC tags so no one around you has an excuse not to follow you.

Cindy Hsin-Liu Kao, one of the PhD students involved in this project, is from Taiwan, and she understands the importance of being able to control your appearance. Because of this, she wants to make DuoSkin available to as many people as possible.

You could just use any graphic design software on your computer like Paint to design the circuit, and then hook it up to this very cheap vinyl cutter and cut out the traces on the film layer on top of tattoo paper, she says. After that, you just layer on the gold leaf and then remove it.

Then its simple: apply like you would any temporary tattoo.

Kao believes the future is full of tattoos like this.

They will become an extension of yourself, she asserts.

In 2015, a company formerly known as Chaotic Moon created temporary tattoos that used conductive paint to create circuits on your skin.

The tattoos were meant to accumulate medical data about the wearer, standing in for doctors appointments.

But a search for them pulls up only news articles.Chaotic Moon are now known as Fjord Austin, and they dont mention anything about what they dubbed Tech Tats.

So this one may just be a pipe dream for now.

The Unseenpremiered their new hair dye that changes colour depending on temperatures at London Fashion Week late last month.

The hair dye works similarly to that of a mood ring.

When heat hits the pigment, or if the cool hits the pigment, it changes the bonds of the chemistry to give you a different colour, so its like a chemical reaction, creator Lauren Bowker told Dazed.

Colours include a black to red dye that is affected by higher temperatures (around 31 degrees Celsius) and white to blue that works better in winter (changing at 15 degrees Celsius).

The dye is not yet on the market, but they are seeking a brand partner so they can start giving you the hair you deserve.

Technology like Apple, Google, yes they are technology, but for me technology should be magic and shouldnt be engineered all the time. To me, chemistry and science is witchcraft and so it should be, Bowker says.

Biohacking is a broad term, and it generally refers to DIY biology.

That could mean figuring out how the DNA in plants affects their growth, or how to manipulate genes from another source to make a plant glow in the dark, PBS explains.

Procedures can range from RFID implants that can unlock cars and safes, injections to your eye that give you night vision, andantennae that give colours a sound.

But the most popular procedure for beginners is the implantation of magnets under the skin.

The magnet is said to give people a sixth sense, allowing them tosense magnetic fields, pick up metal objects and detect iron levels in various metals.

So if you are getting bored of sight and taste and need a novel sensory adventure, then perhaps its time to contact your local bodypiercing shop and ask them what they can do.

Original post:

3 tech body modifications to turn you into a cyborg - Memeburn