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Monthly Archives: March 2017
Budweiser Is Trying to Make It Possible to Brew Beer on Mars – Esquire.com
Posted: March 12, 2017 at 7:48 pm
Sure, your fancy Brooklyn brew may taste like oats or whatever, but is it a microgravity brew?
Budweiser is currently working on how to brew beer on Mars, for some reason. Adweek reports that the company announced its plans to "research and produce a microgravity brew" at South by Southwest Interactive in Austin, Texas.
On a panel moderated by noted Martian Kate Mara and retired astronaut Clayton Anderson, the company discussed the logistics of brewing beer in space. "When you're in a zero-gravity environment, a beverage with carbonation is going to be an issue," Anderson said.
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However, Budweiser's still working hard at it, because sometimes, you just gotta focus on what you can do instead of what you should do! "When we can enjoy a few ice-cold Buds on the Red Planet, that will be the moment when we can truly realize our dreams of space colonization," Budweiser vice president Ricardo Marques said.
Anheuser-Busch's vice president of marketing innovation, Val Toothman, also added that the Martian beer will "take the Budweiser experience to a whole other level." "We know that colonization of Mars could be a decade or two away, but we want to make sure that Budweiser is the beer that people are toasting with on Mars when we get there," he said.
Capitalism, the Martian way.
Seven Earth-Like Planets Orbit One Nearby Star
(H/T Adweek)
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Moon | Define Moon at Dictionary.com
Posted: at 7:48 pm
Old English mona, from Proto-Germanic *menon- (cf. Old Saxon and Old High German mano, Old Frisian mona, Old Norse mani, Danish maane, Dutch maan, German Mond, Gothic mena "moon"), from PIE *me(n)ses- "moon, month" (cf. Sanskrit masah "moon, month;" Avestan ma, Persian mah, Armenian mis "month;" Greek mene "moon," men "month;" Latin mensis "month;" Old Church Slavonic meseci, Lithuanian menesis "moon, month;" Old Irish mi, Welsh mis, Breton miz "month"), probably from root *me- "to measure," in reference to the moon's phases as the measure of time.
A masculine noun in Old English. In Greek, Italic, Celtic, Armenian the cognate words now mean only "month." Greek selene (Lesbian selanna) is from selas "light, brightness (of heavenly bodies)." Old Norse also had tungl "moon," ("replacing mani in prose" - Buck), evidently an older Germanic word for "heavenly body," cognate with Gothic tuggl, Old English tungol "heavenly body, constellation," of unknown origin or connection. Hence Old Norse tunglfylling "lunation," tunglrr "lunatic" (adj.).
Extended 1665 to satellites of other planets. To shoot the moon "leave without paying rent" is British slang from c.1823; card-playing sense perhaps influenced by gambler's shoot the works (1922) "go for broke" in shooting dice. The moon race and the U.S. space program of the 1960s inspired a number of coinages, including, from those skeptical of the benefits to be gained, moondoggle (cf. boondoggle). The man in the moon is mentioned since early 14c.; he carries a bundle of thorn-twigs and is accompanied by a dog. Some Japanese, however, see a rice-cake-making rabbit in the moon.
c.1600, "to expose to moonlight;" later "idle about" (1836), "move listlessly" (1848), probably on notion of being moonstruck. The meaning "to flash the buttocks" is first recorded 1968, U.S. student slang, from moon (n.) "buttocks" (1756), "probably from the idea of pale circularity" [Ayto]. See moon (n.). Related: Mooned; mooning.
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Jeff Bezos Wants to Improve Amazon Delivery Service… to the Moon … – Breitbart News
Posted: at 7:48 pm
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After The Washington Post obtained a copy of the confidential white paper that Bezos space company Blue Origin is passing on to Trumps transition team, the company verified its authenticity. And while Elon Musks SpaceX rushes to beat Trumps own lunar ambitions, Bezos is focused on the logistics of something a little more permanent than private sightseeing excursions.
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Blue Origin want to deliver cargo to the moon, paving the way for sustained human colonization of our natural satellite. Theyve even picked a spot for this potential real estate a cheery little crater near the moons south pole, with access to water via ice hidden in the craters shadows, and enough consistent sunlight to make use of solar energy.
The thought of lunar expansion hasmanaged to whet the appetites of several companies, who are already offering their own ideas for involvement. One such example is Bigelow Aerospace. Its founder, Robert Bigelow, wants to adapt the design of their BEAM habitat, currently docked with the International Space Station. He wants to create an orbital depot to house supplies and medical facilities.
According to Bigelow, venturing toward Mars is premature. As for the moon? Bigelow asserts that We have the technology. We have the ability, and the potential for a terrific business case. For his part, Bezos believes that if you go to the moon first, and make the moon your home, then you can get to Mars more easily.
Bezos says that this projectonly be done in partnership with NASA, and believes that [Blue Origins] liquid hydrogen expertise and experience with precision vertical landing offer the fastest path to a lunar lander mission. He is personally excited about this, to the point of investing his own money alongside NASA,to make sure they get there.
Blue Moon is all about cost-effective delivery of mass to the surface of the Moon, according to the Amazon boss. Any credible first lunar settlement will require that capability But all of this is just the beginning of Blue Origins ambitions. Their first proposed mission hopes to be just the first in a series of increasingly capable missions.
Well have to wait to see whether President Trump and his advisors are as excited about the possibilities as Bezos himself.
Follow Nate Church @Get2Church on Twitter for the latest news in gaming and technology, and snarky opinions on both.
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Travel to the Red Planet is the next big biz (ad)venture – Boston Herald
Posted: at 7:48 pm
Commercial space missions, colonies on Mars and finding a way for the tourists of the future to book round-trip flights to the Moon were among the out-of-this-world ideas being discussed by brainiacs yesterday at a Massachusetts Institute of Technology forum aimed at helping private companies get a foothold in what could be a budding multibillion dollar economy.
The universitys second annual New Space Age Conference focused on getting out in front of the space race of the new millennium, which is being fueled by private companies looking to create and expand a brand new commercial market for space travel.
Aside from making space travel affordable for the public, one of the hot topics at yesterdays forum was the ongoing effort to land astronauts on Mars and the technology that would be required before a human could set foot on the Red Planet.
Among the challenges facing future Mars-bound astronauts will be dealing with radiation exposure, developing better propulsion systems that will allow them to complete the journey, which would currently take eight months, and creating equipment reliable enough to withstand the journey.
If we had all these things, we can just do it, said Jeffrey Hoffman, a former NASA astronaut and MIT professor. Theres a lot of challenges ahead.
Hoffman, who serves as the deputy principal investigator of an experiment aiming to produce oxygen from extraterrestrial material for NASAs Mars 2020 mission, said finding a way to get there is one thing but finding a way to create a self-sustainable colony will be exponentially more difficult.
The level of skills well need will be much broader, Hoffman said. Well need a lot of MacGyvers up there.
Keegan Kirkpatrick, an aerospace engineer and founder of RedWorks, said in order for humans to truly become interplanetary, future astronauts will have to cut the cord completely.
Mars has to operate independently from Earth, he said. Colonization is a question of high value and low cost. You have to have a lot of people to support a large diverse economy. Mars has to achieve resource independence. This was key to the colonization of the Americas.
And when it comes to funding such an ambitious expedition, scientists gathered yesterday agreed its going to take a partnership between government and private companies.
It would be prohibitively expensive, Hoffman said, noting the $20 billion Apollo 11 mission that sent man to the moon in 1969 would cost $150 billion today.
If the government is sponsoring an expedition and something goes wrong, they get holed up in the halls of Congress. If a private company gets into an accident, they answer to shareholders, Hoffman said. Its going to take a public-private partnership.
The university will host another daylong seminar today, titled Beyond the Cradle: Envisioning a New Space Age, which will focus on how to adapt our culture for people that may never call Earth home and how to develop the habitats, spacecraft and innovations of the future.
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Apollo astronaut: ‘You go to heaven when you are born’ – Business Insider Australia
Posted: at 7:48 pm
It seems like the world has caught a case of moon fever.
On February 27, tech entrepreneur Elon Musk announced that two unnamed people are paying his rocket company, SpaceX, to send them on an auto-piloted trip around the moon in 2018. Later The Washington Post revealed that Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos and his own rocket company, Blue Origin, had circulated a 2020 moon colonization plan around Capitol Hill.
But its not just a gaggle of billionaires whove set their sights on Luna. On Tuesday, Congress passed its first big NASA budget in nearly 7 years. The bill calls on NASA to reach the moon by 2021.
To bring everything back to Earth a little, we called up Jim Lovell: an astronaut who visited the moon twice, once during Apollo 8 (the first crewed lunar mission) and again on Apollo 13 (which required a storied effort to rescue from disaster).
During a wide-ranging interview, we asked Lovell if there was a moment on Apollo 8 that he wished he spoke more about and his response floored us.
But first, a little setup.
Apollo 8, which launched aboard a gigantic Saturn V rocket on December 21, 1968, took off during what Lovell called a hilarious time for the planet.
There was the Vietnam War going on, it was not a popular war, especially with the younger people, Lovell told Business Insider. There were riots, there were two assassinations of prominent people during that period, and so things were looking kind of bad in this country.
And yet at the end of the year, he said, NASA was working toward its commitment, made in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, to send people to the moon before the end of that decade.
And it happened. So in the last few weeks or days of 1968 we accomplished something that we set out to do that was favourable and approved by just about every body in this country, he said.
However, Lovell said that he and his two crewmates, Frank Borman and Bill Anders, soon realised it was more than just a spaceflight.
You have to remember we brought back a picture of the Earth as it is 240,000 miles away. And the fact is, it gives you a different perspective of the Earth when you see it as three-dimensional between the sun and the moon, and you begin to realise how small and how significant the body is, he said. When I put my thumb up to the window I could completely hide it, and then I realised that behind my thumb that Im hiding this Earth, and there are about 6 billion people that are all striving to live there.
Lovell said this moment was a seed being planted, and one that would germinate into full blossom once he was back on Earth.
You have to really kind of think about our own existence here in the universe. You realise that people often say, I hope to go to heaven when I die,' he said. In reality, if you think about it, you go to heaven when youre born.
By this Lovell meant the remarkable situation we find ourselves in: floating on a cosy rock that is drifting through the seemingly endless void of space.
You arrive on a planet that has the proper mass, has the gravity to contain water and an atmosphere, which are the very essentials for life, he said. And you arrive on this planet thats orbiting a star just at the right distance not too far to be too cold, or too close to be too hot and just at the right distance to absorb that stars energy and then, with that energy, cause life to evolve here in the first place.
In reality, you know, God has really given us a stage, just looking at where we were around the moon, a stage on which we perform. And how that play turns out is up to us, I guess, he said.
Trapped on a cosmic stage together, and at a time when the US is again painfully divided, Lovells words are ones we could all take to heart.
Disclosure: Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post and is an investor in Business Insider through his personal investment company Bezos Expeditions.
Follow Business Insider Australia on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram.
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Genetic Engineering – Hutchinson News
Posted: at 7:48 pm
MANHATTAN Richard Dick Janssen of Ellsworth was named the 2017 Kansas Stockman of the Year during the 47th annual Stockmens Dinner in Manhattan.
Industry friends recognized Janssen for his contributions to the beef industry, and speakers described him as a visionary and an accomplished cattleman.
He is one of the most courageous and daring genetic engineers on the planet, said fellow Angus breeder Mary Ferguson.
Dan Moser, president of Angus Genetics Inc., said Janssen is making the investment in new technology and seeing the benefits and costs with his own eyes, with his own cattle and his own checkbook. Dick has positioned his business and those of his customers to take maximum benefit of these new tools.
Janssen started raising and showing his own Angus cattle in 4-H when he was 11, and hes been involved in the registered Angus business ever since. A 1964 graduate of Kansas State University with a degree in animal science, Janssen returned home and joined in a partnership with his brother, Arlo.
They farmed 1,200 acres of wheat, milo and alfalfa and managed their Angus herd. They also custom-fit and showed cattle nationwide. In 1969, Arlo transitioned to fitting and showing cattle full-time while Richard stayed in Kansas to manage his division of Green Garden Angus and farming.
In 1974, he married Shelly and they continued to expand their cattle operation, which now has 350 head. The couple had two children, Ben and Elizabeth.
In 1989, John Brethour, beef cattle scientist at K-States Ag Research Center-Hays, used the Green Garden herd to perfect ultrasound measurements of cattle.
In 2000, they were one of the first herds to use GeneStar DNA mapping and today they are using 50K DNA testing for yearling bulls and heifers.
In 2010, the Janssens sent their bulls to Hays Development Center in Diagonal, Iowa, to be evaluated for average daily gain, dry-matter intake, feed-to-gain and residual feed intake.
They used the testing station for three years and in 2013 they installed their own GrowSafe feed intake system so they can test all of their yearling bulls and heifers at home.
Janssen also served as Kansas Angus Association president in 1980, served two terms as an American Angus Association director and was the 1989-90 president. He also was chairman of the Certified Angus Beef (CAB) board of directors from 1988-89.
In 2000, Richard, Shelly, Ben and Elizabeth formed a limited family partnership, and since 2010 Ben, Elizabeth and their spouses have been running the operation, with Richard and Shelly acting as advisers.
The Stockman of the Year Award is presented annually by the Livestock and Meat Industry Council.
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Employees who decline genetic testing could face penalties under proposed bill – Washington Post
Posted: at 7:47 pm
Employers could impose hefty penalties on employees who decline to participate in genetic testing as part of workplace wellness programs if a bill approved by a U.S. House committee this week becomes law.
In general, employersdon't have that power under existing federal laws, which protect genetic privacy and nondiscrimination. But a bill passed Wednesday by theHouse Committee on Education and the Workforce would allow employers to get around thoseobstacles if the information is collected as part of a workplace wellness program.
Suchprograms which offer workers a variety ofcarrots and sticksto monitor and improve their health, such as lowering cholesterol have become increasingly popularwith companies.Some offer discounts on health insurance to employees who complete health-risk assessments. Others might charge people more for smoking.Under the Affordable Care Act, employers are allowed to discount health insurance premiums by up to 30 percent and in some cases 50 percent for employees who voluntarily participate in a wellness program where they're required to meet certain health targets.
[Obamacare revision clears two House committees as Trump, others tried to tamp down backlash]
The bill is under review by other House committees and still must be considered by the Senate. But it has already faced strong criticism from a broad array of groups, as well as House Democrats. In a letter sent to the committee earlier this week, nearly 70 organizations representing consumer, health and medical advocacy groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, AARP, March of Dimes and the National Women's Law Center said the legislation, if enacted, would undermine basic privacy provisions of the Americans With Disabilities Act and the 2008 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act(GINA).
Congress passed GINA to prohibit discrimination by health insurers and employers based on the information that people carry in their genes. There is an exception that allows for employees to provide that information as part of voluntary wellness programs. But the law states that employee participation must be entirely voluntary, with no incentives for providing the dataor penalties for not providing it.
But theHouse legislation would allow employers to impose penalties of up to 30 percent of the total cost of the employee's health insurance on those who choose to keep such information private.
[Rich Americans seem to have found a way to avoid paying a key Obamacare tax]
It's a terrible Hobson's choice between affordable health insurance and protecting one's genetic privacy, said Derek Scholes, director of science policy at the American Society of Human Genetics, which represents human genetics specialists. The organization sent aletter to the committee opposing the bill.
The average annual premium for employer-sponsored family health coverage in 2016 was $18,142, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Under the plan proposed in the bill, a wellness program could charge employees an extra $5,443 in annual premiums if they choose not to share their genetic and health information.
The bill, Preserving Employee Wellness Programs Act, HR 1313, was introduced by Rep. Virginia Foxx, (R-N.C.), who chairs the Committee on Education and the Workforce. A committee statement said the bill provides employers the legal certainty they need to offer employee wellness plans, helping to promote a healthy workforce and lower health care costs. It passed on a party-line vote, with all 22 Republicans supporting it and all 17 Democrats opposed.
The bills supporters in the business community have argued that competing regulations in federal laws make it too difficult for companies to offer these wellness programs. In congressional testimony this month, the American Benefits Council, which represents major employers, said the burdensome rules jeopardize wellness programs that improve employee health, can increase productivity and reduce health care spending.
A House committee spokeswoman told CNBC that those opposed to the bill are spreading false informationin a desperate attempt to deny employees the choice to participate in a voluntary program that can reduce health insurance costs and encourage healthy lifestyle choices.
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Your DNA May Determine How You Handle the Time Change – Lincoln Journal Star
Posted: at 7:47 pm
SATURDAY, March 11, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Some people have more trouble adjusting to daylight saving time than others and genes may be the reason why, says an expert on sleep/wake patterns.
The time change occurs 2 a.m. Sunday morning when clocks "spring ahead" one hour.
"It is likely that advancing our clocks in the spring would more affect owls, those individuals who tend to stay awake later at night and consequently wake up later in the morning," said Dr. Joseph Takahashi.
"Less affected are the larks, those individuals who tend to wake up early and go to sleep earlier," he added. Takahashi is chairman of neuroscience at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
"Since being an owl or a lark is in large part genetically influenced, the best way to deal with daylight saving time is to be self-aware of your chronotype (early versus late awakening and sleeping) and to realize that advancing your clock will be harder if you are an owl and easier if you are a lark," he advised in a medical center news release.
To check your chronotype, you can take a simple online test called the Munich Chronotype, Takahashi suggested.
Because some studies have found a spike in traffic crashes after the time change, Takahashi said it's a good idea to "go to sleep slightly ahead of your normal bedtime." Then, in the morning, he added, "have an extra coffee and be vigilant on the road."
Research also indicates that more heart attacks occur after daylight saving time starts.
"It is now well established that the incidence of heart attacks is highest in the morning. Since waking up one hour earlier adds to stress and sleep deprivation, these might contribute to the increase," Takahashi said.
The U.S. National Institute of General Medical Sciences has more on circadian rhythms.
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Scientists Just Mastered an Error-Free Way to Store Data on DNA – Inc.com
Posted: at 7:47 pm
Ask any business what it takes to really get ahead and data analysis comes pretty close to topping the list. The stink in the commode, though, is that companies have so much data that just storing it--let alone putting it to use--is problematic. But if scientists have their way, in the not-so-distant future, you very well could use deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) as a storage medium. As Robert Service of Science reports, researchers say they've created a new method to encode digital data onto DNA that's more efficient and accurate than any other process used until now.
Service notes several reasons why scientists are eying DNA as a viable data storage choice:
Because of these benefits, researchers have been working with DNA for data storage since 2012. But none have been able to store more than half of what researchers believe actually is possible (1.8 bits of data per nucleotide of DNA).
Yaniv Erlich, computer scientist at Columbia University, partnered with Dina Zielinski , associate scientist at the New York Genome Center. To get data onto DNA and retrieve it in a more efficient, less error-prone way, they completed the following steps:
The results, announced earlier this week, were outstanding, encoding 1.6 bits of data per nucleotide (85 percent what scientists think is the maximum) and exceeding previous attempts by other scientists by 60 percent. There were no errors, and through polymerase chain reaction, a modern technique people already use to copy DNA, Erlich and Zielinski were able to replicate the files without issue.
The price tag for Erlich and Zielinski's process was $9,000. And that's just for six measly files. Imagine the cost for all the files we've ever created, or the cost of the files people will create just today alone. In short, we're not nearly to the point where the technique would be financially prudent for companies or individuals. And writing and reading to DNA is still painfully slow, according to Erlich. So even if you could afford to use it right now, it's an archiving tool at best until technology streamlines the coding and decoding process. But those advances will happen. And when companies already are using artificial intelligence, robots and bionics, the line between natural and large-scale artificial learning might be closer than we think.
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Scientists Just Mastered an Error-Free Way to Store Data on DNA - Inc.com
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Innovative technique greatly increases sensitivity of DNA sequencing – Science Daily
Posted: at 7:47 pm
Innovative technique greatly increases sensitivity of DNA sequencing Science Daily To sequence DNA, scientists often use a technique called polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to increase the amount of DNA available from a sample. However, PCR can introduce mistakes that can limit researchers' ability to detect real mutations in the ... |
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