Nov 09

Some good medical news this week.

Some good medical news this week.

Originally shared by Larry Panozzo

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Physics breakthroughs, new discoveries, and impressive biomedical advancements. The Caltech and gene editing articles are excellent. It’s all in the links below!

Superposition of Ordered Events

http://m.phys.org/news/2015-11-quantum-superposition-events.html

Life-saving Gene Editing

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn28454-gene-editing-saves-life-of-girl-dying-from-leukaemia-in-world-first/

Reprogramming Neurons

http://m.medicalxpress.com/news/2015-11-neurons-reprogrammed-animals.html

Mars Barren Due to Solar Storms

http://futurism.com/links/nasa-says-solar-storms-destroyed-mars-atmosphere-and-water/

Using DNA in Blood to Track Cancer Development

http://m.medicalxpress.com/news/2015-11-dna-blood-track-cancer-response.html

Dissolving Cataracts

http://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-have-developed-an-eye-drop-that-can-dissolve-cataracts-from-eyes

Caltech Finds New Multipolar Order

http://www.caltech.edu/news/caltech-physicists-uncover-novel-phase-matter-48573

3D Printing with Embryonic Stem Cells

http://m.phys.org/news/2015-11-scientists-d-method-capable-highly.html

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#science #sciencenews

#biology #physics #astronomy #cancer #caltech #biomedical

futurism.com

Nov 08

Putting this in my Diversity and Representation collection for reasons which will be clear if you read the article.

Putting this in my Diversity and Representation collection for reasons which will be clear if you read the article.

The writer is right. Publishing rejections are, at least in part, a mark of inefficiency in the system. If we were coming up with the publishing industry from scratch today, I suspect that what we’d have is one or more “marketplaces” where authors put up samples of their work and publishers or publications bid on them, rather than the other way around.

Originally shared by Lisa “LJ” Cohen

This is a very powerful indictment of the publishing industry. http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/11/why-the-literary-world-shouldnt-romanticize-rejection/414229/

http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/11/why-the-literary-world-shouldnt-romanticize-rejection/414229
Nov 06

Not one, but two drone delivery mechanisms, steel-hard glass, better memory through electronic implants, and…

Not one, but two drone delivery mechanisms, steel-hard glass, better memory through electronic implants, and self-improving cars.

What a time to be alive.

Originally shared by Larry Panozzo

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Highly sensitive artificial skin, a new electric car brand, glass almost as strong as steel, a device that boosts human memory, the success of Tesla’s Autopilot, drone delivery from Google, a robot that delivers groceries for £1, and 3D printed artificial hair! It’s all in the links below!

Artificial Skin That Detects Texture, Temperature, Pressure, and Sound

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/electronic-skin-feels-heat-hears-sound?mode=magazine&context=190830

Mysterious Electric Car Maker

http://www.theverge.com/2015/11/5/9674314/faraday-future-electric-car-1-billion-factory

Unbreakable Glass

http://gizmodo.com/japanese-researchers-make-glass-thats-nearly-unbreakabl-1739673940

Memory Boosting Device

http://gizmodo.com/japanese-researchers-make-glass-thats-nearly-unbreakabl-1739673940

Tesla Autopilot is Learning

http://electrek.co/2015/10/30/the-autopilot-is-learning-fast-model-s-owners-are-already-reporting-that-teslas-autopilot-is-self-improving/

Google Drone Delivery Service in 2017 

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-34704868

Grocery Delivery Bot

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/11962566/Skype-founders-invent-self-driving-robot-that-can-deliver-groceries-for-1.html

3D printing Artificial Hair

http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2015/10/sorry-hair-club-for-menwe-can-finally-3d-print-hair/

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#tech #technology

#tesla #machinelearning #google #robotics #3Dprinting

futurism.com

Nov 06

Well, “Brother Blue” is still a novelette, just, at 16,300 words (the cutoff is 17,500).

Well, “Brother Blue” is still a novelette, just, at 16,300 words (the cutoff is 17,500).

Why is this important? Because there are some markets that will take a novelette but not a novella, and even those that take both will think harder about buying a novella.

On the other hand, if it needs another 1500 or 2000 words to be the story it needs to be, it will by all means get them.

Today I strengthened the romance section (made it a site of conflict, not just a thing that happened on the way to the resolution), and also pumped up the part just before the ending, so that it relates more clearly to the middle, and the ending doesn’t seem abrupt, rushed, and unearned.

At least, I hope it doesn’t. My faithful editor will tell me. And then I’ll show it to some other people, and get their thoughts. I want this one to be the best it can be, because I feel like if I work on it hard enough, I’ll be able to sell it to a pro market. I’m not rushing to get it out, because I’d rather take the extra time and do it right.

Nov 03

My story “Something Rich and Strange” will be podcast on The Overcast next week.

My story “Something Rich and Strange” will be podcast on The Overcast next week. 

A Victorian miss in an alternate version of our world finds her true self at the Change Storm, the bizarre natural phenomenon that her father studies.

(I’ll drop a link once it’s up.)

http://peoples-ink.com/the-overcast/

Nov 02

The Hollows urban fantasy series starts with an infodump about a genetic plague spread by tomatoes.

The Hollows urban fantasy series starts with an infodump about a genetic plague spread by tomatoes. Kim Harrison may have had it backwards.

Originally shared by Larry Panozzo

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Physics breakthroughs, astronomy discoveries, and impressive biomedical advancements. Even a new type of cancer treatment that reprograms cancer cells to kill other cancer cells! It’s all in the links below!

Redesigned Hall Thruster

http://www.sciencealert.com/this-plasma-engine-could-get-humans-to-mars-on-100-million-times-less-fuel

Oxygen Found Around Comet 67P

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-34660576

Restoring Neural Plasticity

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/neuron-transplants-may-one-day-reverse-blindness/

Femtosecond Electron Pulses

http://www.nanowerk.com/nanotechnology-news/newsid=41691.php

Lab Grown Intestinal Linings

http://news.sciencemag.org/health/2015/10/lab-grown-guts-show-promise-mice-and-dogs

Hundreds of Young Stars Discovered

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-10/e-vdn102615.php

Making Leukemia Cells Kill Each Other

http://nextbigfuture.com/2015/10/researchers-making-leukemia-cells-kill.html

Turning Tomatoes into Pharmaceutical Labs

http://www.thelatestnews.com/will-gm-tomatoes-be-used-to-fight-diseases-in-the-future/

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#science #sciencenews

#biology #physics #astronomy #biomedical #cancer

futurism.com

Nov 01

The “Simple Sabotage Field Manual,” put out by the OSS (the CIA’s predecessor) in 1944, is a wonderful source of…

Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger

The “Simple Sabotage Field Manual,” put out by the OSS (the CIA’s predecessor) in 1944, is a wonderful source of tips and techniques for anti-management. What’s particularly brilliant is that revealing these methods can be even more destructive than concealing them: consider what happens when every time someone does something stupid and inefficient, the response is for people to wonder if that person is actually a saboteur. (The answer, by the way, is “The Joys of Stalin,” and is why Russia almost lost WWII: he had spent the 1930’s purging everyone that he didn’t trust, which is to say, basically everyone who knew anything)

But if you’re willing to accept that the people around you might just be idiots, and not actively planning your overthrow, then the pamphlet is a short and surprisingly amusing read. You can see the whole thing at https://www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-archive/2012-featured-story-archive/simple-sabotage.html .

h/t Neha Narula