Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Military hopes 3-D printing bones can help injured veterans


TUCSON, Ariz. – A lab in Arizona is hoping to help wounded veterans – through 3-D printing.
Arizona’s Orthopedic Research Lab is hoping to use the technology to help military veterans with bone injuries.
Dr. John Szivek, who runs the University of Arizona Orthopaedic Research Lab, said the lab received a $2 million grant from the Department of Defense to create 3-D bone printing to help military personnel.
“We could regenerate their bone by 3-D printing a scaffold that’s specific to that bone and that patient and then filling it with stem cells from that patient, adult stem cells,” Szivek said. “Surgeons in the military would try to treat military personnel with blast injuries, in particular. Those injuries usually cause massive bone loss and unfortunately, in many cases, they’re currently amputating military personnel who have those types of injuries. But in this way, they could regrow the bone for that person and they could continue their service in the military.”
David Gonzales, the lab’s research specialist, said the technology could eventually also help civilians and cancer patients.
Adam Jakus, Dimension Inx chief technology officer, ran a 3-D printer at Northwestern University and said although it’s huge that the government is now starting to fund academic research on health 3-D printing, the technology has been around for a while.
“What’s coming out of the University of Arizona is really nice to see but I’m not sure, from my perspective, if the technology is anything that new—what really needs to be done is, it’s one thing to regenerate a bone, scientists and engineers have figures that out,” Jakus said. “It’s another thing to make it cost effective and surgically viable…money is everything in healthcare. Unfortunately, even in the military.”
The grant will be funded over a five-year period. Szivek is aiming to test patients near the end of that period to prove they can print these individualized bones to help those suffering from severe limb injuries.

How a veggie burger stole the show at CES 2019


LAS VEGAS — The most impressive product launch at CES 2019 isn’t a drone or smartphone.
It’s a veggie burger.
Impossible Foods unveiled its latest recipe for its famous faux-meat burger, and The Post was on hand to take a bite before it hits a restaurant near you.
And, yes, the Impossible Burger 2.0 made a believer out of this veggie burger skeptic. The new blend is made with soy protein, is gluten- and cholesterol-free, and has significantly less fat and fewer calories than a regular burger.
The surprising part? I could hardly taste the difference from the real thing.
Examining the slider that Impossible Foods gave me, everything looked right. The “meat” was browned and charred, it was juicy when squeezed, and it even smelled like a real burger.
After biting into it, I would have believed it if they told me I was eating a prime 80/20 blend.
“This is the plant-based ‘meat’ that will eliminate the need for animals in the food chain and make the global food system sustainable,” Impossible Foods CEO and Founder Patrick O. Brown said.

Elsewhere during CES, firms are vying to present their visions for the future of car transportation.
Hyundai unveiled a concept car sure to turn heads if it ever hits the streets. The Elevate, as it is called, is a car with robotic legs that allow it to reach areas that no car has gone before.
The South Korean automaker ginned up artwork of the Elevate working as an emergency response vehicle in rocky mountainous terrain, with the legs nimbly climbing over treacherous rocks. It also envisions a future in which New York City cabs will be able to climb the front steps of a brownstone to help a mobility-impaired rider easily enter the vehicle.
Kia, meanwhile, is looking even further into the future, designing a concept car for a day when self-driving vehicles are the norm. The automaker worked with MIT to design a system that it says can monitor your emotions during the ride and adjust accordingly.
In a demo, an AI-powered camera with “bio-signal recognition technology,” scanned my face as it simulated a drive through Midtown. When it determined that I looked 11 percent bored, it queued up a video of an upbeat concert to entertain me.

A sex toy company found itself making headlines at CES after it was revealed that the trade show had initially given it an innovation award, before taking it back when it realized it had given a prize to a high-end vibrator.
Osé, which uses “intricate engineering and robotics” to provide its users with the “elusive blended orgasm,” was deemed “obscene” and “immoral” by CES judges after it received a prize for robotics.
Lora DiCarlo, the startup that makes the vibrator, slammed CES for an “obvious double standard” against female sexuality, pointing out that the show has had no issue with sex robots and VR porn in the past.

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Teens are now getting drunk on boiled tampon juice


Kids these days will try just about anything to catch a buzz, from “boofing” beer to vaping vodka. Their latest cheap thrill? Feminine hygiene products.
Teenagers in Indonesia are collecting menstrual pads and tampons — often of the used variety — and boiling them, allowing the mixture to cool and then imbibing the resulting liquid.
Police have already arrested several minors caught making this menstrual-pad moonshine.
One 14-year-old confessed that he and his buds swig it “morning, afternoon and evening,” the Daily Mail reports.
The National Narcotics Agency in Indonesia says it’s the chlorine used to sanitize menstrual products that’s getting kids tipsy, giving them hallucinations and a feeling of “flying.”
As it turns out, this has been going on for at least a couple of years, as this phenomenon was first reported by Indonesian authorities back in 2016.
“I don’t know who started it,” Jimy Ginting, an advocate for safe drinking in Indonesia, tells the Jakarta Post. “There is no law against it so far. There is no law against these kids using a mixture of mosquito repellent and [cold syrup] to get drunk.”
Please, Mr. Ginting, don’t give them any more ideas.

Google moved $23 billion to Bermuda in 2017 to avoid taxes

AMSTERDAM — Google moved 19.9 billion euros ($22.7 billion) through a Dutch shell company to Bermuda in 2017, as part of an arrangement that allows it to reduce its foreign tax bill, according to documents filed at the Dutch Chamber of Commerce.
The amount channeled through Google Netherlands Holdings BV was around 4 billion euros more than in 2016, the documents, filed on Dec. 21, showed.
“We pay all of the taxes due and comply with the tax laws in every country we operate in around the world,” Google said in a statement.
“Google, like other multinational companies, pays the vast majority of its corporate income tax in its home country, and we have paid a global effective tax rate of 26 percent over the last ten years.”
For more than a decade the arrangement has allowed Google owner Alphabet to enjoy an effective tax rate in the single digits on its non-US profits, around a quarter the average tax rate in its overseas markets.
The subsidiary in the Netherlands is used to shift revenue from royalties earned outside the United States to Google Ireland Holdings, an affiliate based in Bermuda, where companies pay no income tax.
The tax strategy, known as the “Double Irish, Dutch Sandwich,” is legal and allows Google to avoid triggering US income taxes or European withholding taxes on the funds, which represent the bulk of its overseas profits.
However, under pressure from the European Union and the United States, Ireland in 2014 decided to phase out the arrangement, ending Google’s tax advantages in 2020.
Google Netherlands Holdings BV paid 3.4 million euros in taxes in the Netherlands in 2017, the documents showed, on a gross profit of 13.6 million euros.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

There’s an Antarctic lake ‘twice the size of Manhattan’ buried under 3,500 feet of ice


Scientists in Antarctica got a unique gift this holiday season: access to a mysterious lake buried under more than 3,500 feet of ice.
It took about two days of drilling to reach Mercer Subglacial Lake on Dec. 26, the Subglacial Antarctic Lakes Scientific Access (SALSA) announced in a blog post.
A team of researchers — which includes 45 scientists, drillers and other staff members — with the organization were able to send an instrument down a borehole the next day, capturing rare footage of the body of water which is “twice the size of Manhattan,” according to the journal Nature. They will also lower a remotely operated vehicle down the hole to capture more footage and take more extensive measurements.
The group plans to study the depth, temperature and cleanliness of the lake over the next few days.
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“We don’t know what we’ll find,” John Priscu, chief scientist for SALSA, told environmental news site Earther Monday. “We’re just learning, it’s only the second time that this has been done.”
The SALSA team flew to Mercer Subglacial Lake on Dec. 19 and began drilling days later, on Dec. 23.
“Part of the drilling process involves sampling the drill water to test its cleanliness. The water has been tested twice thus far, and both tests showed the water was ‘as clean as filtered water can get’, in the words of SALSA PI Brent Christner,” SALSA explained. “The drill water is run through filters that catch 99.9 percent of bacteria and particles.”
The organization has scheduled at least eight days dedicated to sampling the lake’s water and sediment, a previous blog post states.
Priscu told Earther researchers hope to gain more information about life that exists thousands of feet under ice, noting it will take years to study all the samples they collect.
“We’re knee-deep right [now] sampling the deepest standing water body humans have ever accessed beneath Antarctica,” Matt Siegfried, a glaciologist and SALSA member, told Earther. “[So] it’ll take some time to process what the ‘most’ exciting part [is].”
Mercer Subglacial Lake was first discovered via satellite more than a decade ago, according to Nature. There are reportedly around 400 lakes hiding beneath Antarctica’s ice sheets.

Soulja Boy kills off gaming console after controversial tweet

Nintendo, it wasn’t.
Soulja Boy has pulled his video game consoles from the market a week after he defended the consoles with a tweet containing a slur.
Released earlier this month, the self-named SouljaGame Console and SouljaGame Handheld were hyped by the rapper as containing more than 800 and 3,000 built-in games, respectively.
But those devices are no longer available on the “Crank That” rapper’s website, Rolling Stone reports. Soulja Boy announced the death of his gaming devices Monday, tweeting, “I had to boss up, I didn’t have a choice.”
A week prior, the rapper had reportedly said his consoles weren’t going anywhere in a controversial, since-deleted tweet.
“For anyone who thinks that Nintendo is going to sue me you’re retarded,” he wrote. “Nothings going to happen everything is legit. My console isn’t going anywhere trust me.”
To many, the news didn’t come as a surprise. One Twitter user posted, “It wasn’t even his console. Its a Chinese knockoff that he bought wholesale.”
Gaming publication GamesRadar had questioned the existence of the consoles, saying they appeared to be the same as previously released devices from Abernic, but sold at a markup.