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    6
    POPS
    Ancient bones may hold clues to TB
    pokkets
    by pokkets  7-14-2008   
     They think there is enough Tuberculosis DNA to give clues to how it has evolved.(And where it's going?), and find new ways to fight it
    7
    POPS
    3D renderings of the human body
    pokkets
    by pokkets  7-13-2008    1
     Rather than imagine what goes on in the body, now CGI can create images that can seem almost as alive as we are .The technology used is only at a relatively primitive stage. Can't wait until they introduce holograms. It leaves 'Fantastic Voyage.' a cheap trick of the 1950s.
    17
    POPS
    “What is Life?” Evolution of Robots is Causing Scientists to Question
    wildcat
    by wildcat  7-1-2008    2
     “Robots are not human, but humans aren’t the only things that have emotions,” she said. “The question for robots is not, Will they ever have human emotions? Dogs don’t have human emotions, either, but we all agree they have genuine emotions. The question is, what are the emotions that are genuine for the robot?”
    12
    POPS
    Worm-like Marine Animal Providing Fresh Clues About Human Evolution
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-19-2008    2
     The human genome has only about 25 percent more genes than the amphioxus genome, according to Holland. During evolution, humans have duplicated genes for different functions. Such duplication has given humans and other vertebrates a much larger "toolkit" for making various structures that are absent in amphioxus, including cells for pigment and collagen type II-based cartilage, for example.
    25
    POPS
    6 iconoclastic discoveries about the brain
    wildcat
    by wildcat  6-11-2008    2
     let go of the dogma
    21
    POPS
    Will We Recognize The Future?
    Mohir
    by Mohir  6-7-2008    1
     A talk with Ray Kurzweil.
    9
    POPS
    Scientists probe the memory of bees
    pokkets
    by pokkets  6-3-2008    1
     The clip suggests that bees brain wiring is divided in a way that is reminiscent of the hemispheres in the human brain. From what I remember, bees had brains long before humans, so perhaps it is the other way around
    6
    POPS
    New evidence from oldest human settlement in the Americas
    arifsali
    by arifsali  5-8-2008    2
     No Remarks
    1
    POPS
    Wrangle With CIA Over ‘Ghost Prisoners’get disappeared--what then
    papananook
    by papananook  4-28-2008    2
     And when you or I get disappeared, what then...when will we stop this shit?
    21
    POPS
    Earth's hum more mysterious than ever
    kkcapricorn
    by kkcapricorn  4-22-2008    7
     Everything in the universe is connected and has it's own unique form of communication.
    6
    POPS
    European Values - The Ideology of Fortress Europe?
    Johanna_G
    by Johanna_G  4-22-2008    1
      Are the values of human rights specific to European civilisation, marking the continent off from other regions of the world? Traugott Schoefthaler takes a critical look at the positions of European think tanks and foundations. ↗ "Europäische Werte"-Debatte - Ideologie der Festung Europa?
    6
    POPS
    Human rights education (international)
    GeDeGe
    by GeDeGe  4-17-2008   
     In deutscher Sprache: Menschenrechte (internationale Perspektive)
    2
    POPS
    natural history
    fabro
    by fabro  4-11-2008   
     science
    1
    POPS
    Human-cow hybrid embryos made in lab
    pokkets
    by pokkets  4-3-2008   
     I noticed the was presented in Israel, perhaps a legal issue. They say one of these embryos is just human DNA wrapped up in a cow egg 'skin', but that is all a human egg is. The egg 'skin' just happens to be human. If a cow was growing donor organs, would it get human rights?
    9
    POPS
    Found ! Oldest recording of human voice
    pokkets
    by pokkets  3-28-2008    2
     The inventor 'recorded' the song 17 years before Edison, but he was never able to play it back. He wanted to study it. The recording was played by getting high resolution digital scans, and converting them into sound at the Lawrence Berkley, National Lab using equipment used to preserve, and gain access to a wide variety of early recordings.
    1
    POPS
    DEET messes with mosquito 'nose'
    pokkets
    by pokkets  3-14-2008   
     Known as an insect repellent, Scientists were not sure how it worked until now. DEET does not so much repel mosquitoes and ticks which are attracted to carbon dioxide, and other human odors which give a signal that there is a blood supply somewhere, It masks these signals so the mosquitoes go and look for their blood supply somewhere else. DEET has been available to the to the public,for over 50 years and is an active ingredient in many insect repellents, but adverse health effects have been noted such as rashes and seizures, is toxic to some marine species. The risk of DEET side effects are generally rare and must be matched with the risk of mosquito borne disease. Advice is given to avoid using on broken skin, and to wash off if no longer needed. The standard warning on an insect repellent can. I've always found that any itch or sting from an insect repellent is better than the itch of a mosquito bite.
    2
    POPS
    Farm smells can cause real stink
    pokkets
    by pokkets  3-11-2008   
     They have qualified the amount gases from farm animals can irritate the human respiratory system. It is curious that they have decided to qualify farm animals now, when humans have been farming for thousands of years. Still many humans live in a bubble known as civilization, where all farm produce is processed and packaged, so the closest they get to a farm is the organic grocery section of the supermarket. With all of the artificial noxious chemicals introduced into the environment over the past few hundred years, I'd say farm animals are the least of our worries. particularly when many animals these days are born into and never leave a processing plant unless they're pre-packaged.
    4
    POPS
    Tiny Pacific skeletons stir hobbit debate
    pokkets
    by pokkets  3-11-2008   
     I was talking to arifsali about this yesterday (He did a clip on the discovery) There is one line I clipped at the bottom that I managed to get in before I ran out of space. The description of the caves as 'burial caves' One of the most significant milestones in the evolution of our species, is the incidence of 'self awareness,' or perhaps the point where we had a clearer understanding of death, and began to practice funeral rites. Will the manner in which the 'Palau Man' dealt with their dead give us more of an understanding into their character. One of the main ideas that can rattle our thinking is that there may have been more than one species of human on recent history, with an intelligence to compare. I have little doubt however that if we are meant to survive beyond these next few centuries, the human progeny will generate more than a few species, depending on the extent of isolation between the threads. (Eloi, and Moorlock perhaps?) Star travel would throw the field wide ope
    8
    POPS
    Ancient Bones of Small Humans Discovered in Palau
    arifsali
    by arifsali  3-10-2008    2
     No Remarks
    17
    POPS
    Dalai Lama speaks out
    arifsali
    by arifsali  3-10-2008    9
     No Remarks
    4
    POPS
    Is the hobbit just a dwarf cretin ?
    pokkets
    by pokkets  3-5-2008   
     It did live on an island Flores in Indonesia, and seaweed and seawater are high in Iodine, but giant rats, dwarf elephants,and Komodo Dragons also lived on the island. They may have eaten all of the seafood before the hobbits got any. Maybe we'll never know. Evolution does have millions of curious threads. I'm sure many people forget that while we have made it so far, Evolution hasn't stopped, and technology may give it some more curious twists which are directly related to us. If two machines get together and produce viable offspring, will that be a new species? Our definition of 'life' is in need of an overhaul. (Perhaps a bit beside the point, but it will be another one of our 'relatives') I was just reminded of something Mark Twain once said that applies to a point. "It's not change I'm against, it's change for change's sake" Let's hope we improve.
    2
    POPS
    Geologists push for dawn of new age
    pokkets
    by pokkets  1-28-2008   
     The effects of the use of coal in around 1800, and then the steam engine, and the accelerated advances in technology since, will leave a marked effect on the geological record. The Holocene Epoch began about 11,500 years ago and we may already be a few hundred years into the Anthropocene Epoch, the period where humanity has dominated the effects on the planet. I was reminded of a question that has occurred to me in the past. With all of our extraction of fossil fuels, and minerals from beneath the Earth's crust, What is left behind? Seems like there would be vast 'empty' spaces left behind where once the ground was being held up by whatever was taken. I have no doubt that for such deposits to exist, there must have been a generally geologically stable capsule for things such as oil to be contained, but even Diamonds have flaws - and the amount of empty space, (apart from volatile natural gas) would seem to be significant. Then of course there are subterranean coal fires
    2
    POPS
    Detailed gene map will lift lid on diseases
    spherepet
    by spherepet  1-23-2008   
     No Remarks
    31
    POPS
    Lab Freaks Gone Wild?
    wildcat
    by wildcat  1-20-2008    7
     “What was once only science fiction is now becoming a reality, and we need to ensure that experimentation and subsequent ramifications do not outpace ethical discussion and societal decisions.
    5
    POPS
    First 'proven' human cloned embryo
    pokkets
    by pokkets  1-17-2008   
     Seems ironic that they have to destroy some things to prove they worked
    3
    POPS
    273 Proteins found that AIDS Virus Preys on
    pokkets
    by pokkets  1-10-2008   
     The AIDs virus is so simple that it is almost like a boot strap, with a protein mount point. Perhaps they could design a protein shell, with a 'lock' where the AIDs Virus 'key' is likely to fit, then Snap the Key off, spit it out and trap another virus. Protein Catalysts.
    3
    POPS
    Glowing Pig passes gene to piglets
    pokkets
    by pokkets  1-9-2008   
     While there seems to be evidence that the glowing gene can be passed on, it only seems to be passed on at the same ratio as any other variation.
    24
    POPS
    Time Travel in the Brain
    pokkets
    by pokkets  1-7-2008    3
     Perhaps areas that are lit up are where new pathways are being formed, and dark areas are where old pathways are 'studied' or remembered. Where, while the brain may not literally be able to 'see' the future, our choices are being refined, by the projection of possible outcomes of choices, based on past experience.
    1
    POPS
    Global warming unequivocal
    Joseph48
    by Joseph48  12-31-2007   
     Wake up and smell the smoke.
    48
    POPS
    From Little Things, Big Things Grow
    debbyski
    by debbyski  12-20-2007    9
     If the title doesn't fit this clip, then I'll explain the meaning. It's funny how the simplest random act of kindness can be so powerful. It can literally move one to tears. Like someone giving me this clip. I can't take credit where credit is due. Again, random acts of kindness are what make us better human beings. My New Year's resolution is to try to be a better human being. It's an entirely selfish one you know. It not only makes me feel better about myself. It hopefully makes me grow as a person. Thank you. :)
    25
    POPS
    Evolution tied to Earth movement
    invictus
    by invictus  12-19-2007    1
     No Remarks
    2
    POPS
    W.H.O. Urges vigilance as Bird Flu Spreads
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-19-2007   
     They are still waiting for the first case of human to human transmission, but there is the problem that many of the affected areas are remote, and far from medical facilities, so there can be a gap in communication, and action, and the disease can spread before action is taken. There is also the no-doubt crippling effect of having total populations of poultry destroyed for the sake of containing the disease, when they can be a communities primary source of food and income.
    27
    POPS
    The Evolution of Evolution: how culture changes genes
    abailart
    by abailart  12-17-2007    3
     Not, as stated, a new idea: been around a long time in complexity theory, and quantum consciousness theory, for instance. This is a short, pithy statement of the claim, read it in a couple of minutes.
    4
    POPS
    W.H.O. to investigate Pakistan bird flu
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-16-2007   
     The strain H5N1, was believed to have infected four brothers, two of whom have died. The main concern, is that only one of the two brothers that died worked at the farm where the disease was found. The details are confusing with conflicting reports, but so far the fatal cases of bird flu, as far as doctors are aware, have been caught directly from birds. They are still on the alert for a case of human to human transmission. If such a variant happens to arise, the transmission will increase, and it will need to be identified quickly and specifically to develop an effective vaccine or treatment.
    7
    POPS
    When it's on the tip of your toungue
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-16-2007   
     If a picture paints a thousand words, a metaphor paints a million pictures. I love metaphors,so I just thought I'd do a clip then I figured if it was going to fit I was going to have to be more specific. I am amazed at the way a metaphor can translate ideas between people, that may have been mutually exclusive. The way when there is a completely new concept related, we may be unable to find any direct analogy, but a metaphor can provide enough clues to transmit understanding. It can be a case of I can't explain exactly, but I can show you where to look. The way poets, musicians, artists, writers use metaphors creatively to allow new ideas or emotions to be accepted more easily.
    2
    POPS
    Semen protein ushers HIV into cells
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-14-2007   
     They were looking for factors in human semen that may be used to block the AIDS infection. What they found was a factor that increased transmission as much as 50 fold.
    5
    POPS
    'Mathlete' smashes human calculation record
    tabsey
    by tabsey  12-12-2007    2
     The eyes tell me he is about to faint, though he is probably looking up at something, or just focusing on the problem. We all have our gifts and this bloke is making the most of his.
    2
    POPS
    Researchers:Human evolution speeding up
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-10-2007   
     Sometimes the kids act like another species. Maybe it's only a matter of time. Will human evolution carry a cyber thread? Homo Geekus.
    12
    POPS
    Neanderthal-human hybrid 'a myth'
    pokkets
    by pokkets  12-10-2007    2
     No Remarks
    16
    POPS
    500,000-year-old TB case 'found'
    Fast T friend
    by Fast T friend  12-9-2007    1
     The American Journal of Physical Anthropology details the find by a team from the US, Germany and Turkey.
    — end of the list —

    pokkets human

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