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Scientists calculate the speed of death in cells, and it’s surprisingly slow

Regular, programmed “cellular suicide” keeps us healthy.

Cells in our bodies die all the time, and now we know just how fast.

Scientists found that death travels in unremitting waves through a cell, moving at a rate of 30 micrometers (one-thousandth of an inch) every minute, they report in a new study published Aug. 10 in the journal Science. That means, for instance, that a nerve cell, whose body can reach a size of 100 micrometers, could take as long as 3 minutes and 20 seconds to die.

That may sound morbid, but it’s precisely this lethal tide that keeps us alive and healthy. Apoptosis — or programmed cell death — is necessary for clearing our bodies of unnecessary or harmful cells, such as those that are infected by viruses. It also helps shape organs and other features in a developing fetus. (There is a second way cells can die, called necrosis, which is a different process that occurs as an unplanned response to a stressful event.)

If this process doesn’t work properly, the consequences can be dire. For example, cancerous cells, happily living on, having slipped the grasp of the Grim Reaper, begin to spread instead of dying off. [5 Ways Your Cells Deal With Stress]

“Sometimes our cells die when we really don’t want them to — say, in neurodegenerative diseases. And sometimes our cells don’t die when we really do want them to — say, in cancer,” senior author Dr. James Ferrell, a professor of chemical and systems biology and biochemistry at Stanford University, said in a statement. “And if we want to intervene, we need to understand how apoptosis is regulated.”

Apoptosis is also sometimes called “cellular suicide,” because it is a process of self-destruction. It begins with a signal either from the inside or the outside that informs enzymes within the cells called caspases to start cleaving the cell. But it had been unclear how apoptosis, after being triggered, actually spread through the cell.

To figure this out, Ferrell and his team observed the process in one of the larger cells present in nature: egg cells of Xenopus laevis,or African clawed frogs. They filled test tubes with fluid from the eggs and triggered apoptosis, which they watched unfold by tagging involved proteins with fluorescent light. If they saw fluorescent light, it meant apoptosis was taking place.

They found that the fluorescent light traveled through the test tubes at a constant speed. If apoptosis had carried on due to simple diffusion (the spreading of substances from an area of high concentration to one of low concentration), the process would have slowed down toward the end, according to the study.

Since it didn’t, the researchers concluded that the process they observed must be “trigger waves,” which they likened to “the spread of a fire through a field.” The caspases that are first activated, activate other molecules of caspases, which activate yet others until the entire cell is destroyed.

“It spreads in this fashion and never slows down, never peters out,” Ferrell said in the statement. “It doesn’t get any lower in amplitude because every step of the way it’s generating its own impetus by converting more inactive molecules to active molecules until apoptosis has spread to every nook and cranny of the cell.”

The team then wanted to watch this process occur inside the egg itself, as it would in nature. They noticed that when frog eggs died, they darkened in color. So, they initiated conditions that would naturally lead to the death of a frog egg and imaged what happened. Similarly, the cell darkened at the average rate of 30 micrometers per minute.

Such trigger waves are actually pervasive in nature, Ferrell said. Trigger waves also help cells reproduce, neurons propagate signals through the brain and viruses spread from cell to cell. Ferrell and his team hope to find out where else in biology trigger waves occur.

Originally published on Live Science.
Source: NBCNEWS.COM

Facebook gets rid of its Friend List Feeds feature

Facebook has removed a feature that allowed users to tailor their feed.

The feeds allowed you create a personalized version of social network that only showed posts from a predefined friend list. But the feature has now been shut down, Facebook announced Thursday.

Friends List Feeds worked with Friend Lists (which you’ll still be able to create), according to TechCrunch, which first reported the change. “We’ll be making these friend list feeds unavailable on Aug. 9, 2018, to focus on improving your main news feed experience,” Facebook wrote.

“But don’t worry — you can still continue to create, edit and share to your friend lists.”

Facebook noted, in a statement to TechCruch, that you can still customize your News Feed by altering the settings in the News Feed preferences. It didn’t immediately respond to CNET’s request for comment.

On Thursday, the company announced that it’s adding tools for connecting mentors and mentees within Facebook groups. It also said it’s banning websites that host and share blueprints of 3D-printed guns.

Source: Cnet

Samsung Throws More Shade At Apple And iPhone X With Two New ‘Ingenious’ Ads

Samsung continues its faux Apple store anti-Apple series, this time mocking the iPhone X for its lack of a pen and for its amount of power.
Samsung on Friday released a pair of new 30-second videos as part of its “Ingenious” series. The ads are set within a faux Apple store and as always, feature shots at the iPhone X, in comparison with Samsung’s own Galaxy phones.

In the first spot, titled Pen,” a woman approaches “Pat,” the fictional Apple store employee, and asks the difference between the Apple Pencil and the pen that comes with the Galaxy Note 9. Pat’s answer? “The Apple Pencil only works on the iPad.”

When she asks what she can use on her phone, Pat answers, after a beat, “your finger?”

In the second spot, “Power,” a male customer tells Pat that “the Galaxy Note 9 is really powerful.” Pat answers, “you know what I think is really powerful? Being able to unlock your phone with your face!” The customer then tells him that the Galaxy phone does that as well. Then Pat points out that “on OS 12, you can FaceTime up to 32 people at the same time.” The commercial cuts him off after the customer answers, “why would I ever want to do that though?”

The ads bring the total of “Ingenious” commercials to nine, at least according to Samsung’s YouTube channel. It’s unclear if the new spots will run on television.

The actual effectiveness of the new spots is up for debate. Apple may have released the Apple Pencil, despite Steve Jobs’ own long-held aversions to styluses, but it doesn’t appear that there’s any great groundswell of customers clamoring for the ability use the Apple Pencil with the iPhone.

As for the second ad, it doesn’t do much to make the case for the Galaxy Note’s power, which is demonstrably less than that of the iPhone X and iPhone 8. All it is likely to do is remind customers that Apple is adding the ability to FaceTime large amounts of people when iOS 12 arrives

Source: https://appleinsider.com/articles/18/08/10/samsung-goes-after-apple-and-iphone-x-again-with-two-more-ingenious-ads

Facebook Apologizes For Adding Balloons and Confetti to Posts on the Deadly Indonesia Earthquake

Facebook apologized Wednesday after users posting about a deadly earthquake in Indonesia had their messages covered in balloons and confetti.

The powerful 6.9-magnitude earthquake that struck the island of Lombok has left more than 130 people dead and displaced thousands.

While exchanging messages on Facebook about the earthquake, many Indonesian speakers used the word “selamat,” which has several meanings including “safe,” “unhurt” or “congratulations” depending on the context. Facebook’s feature misinterpreted the comments and automatically sent out celebratory animations.

“We regret that it appeared in this unfortunate context and have since turned off the feature locally,” Facebook spokesperson Lisa Stratton said in a statement to news site Motherboard. “Our hearts go out to the people affected by the earthquake.”

According to authorities, more than 156,000 people have been displaced and tens of thousands of homes have been destroyed, BBC reports. The Indonesian Red Cross said Thursday that an estimated 20,000 people in remote areas of the island are still without aid.

The National Disaster Mitigation Agency said that at least 131 people were killed in Sunday’s earthquake, but other agencies say the death toll has risen to more than 300.

Off the coast of Lombok, some 5,000 foreign and Indonesian tourists have been evacuated from three outlying islands, AP reports.

Source: http://time.com

Here’s how to stop your iPhone from listening to you :)

We’ve all heard the (continually refuted) rumors that Facebook’s apps secretly listen to our conversations to figure out what ads to show us.

While Facebook has categorically denied that it’s listening to users (really, it’s just very good at targeting ads), US lawmakers had similar concerns about the devices and services offered by Apple and Google.

Apple sent a response to US representatives Greg Walden, Marsha Blackburn, Gregg Harper, and Robert Latta, Tuesday (Aug. 7), to queries about what its devices were able to listen to and ascertain about its users when they weren’t aware the devices were doing so. The questions followed similar queries raised to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg during his hearings before Congress in April.

In the letter, which was shared with Quartz, Apple called out that its business is not reliant on customers’ data, unlike some of its Silicon Valley counterparts. “Not all technology companies operate in the same manner—in fact, the business models and data collection and use practices are often radically different from one another,” the company said.

Apple’s letter detailed all the ways users can turn off location tracking, Siri listening (more on that below), and data collected from third-party apps. Although Apple says it builds “technical controls into iOS and iPhone to ensure customer data has strong protections” and analyzes each app that requests permission to be listed on its App Store to ensure they follow Apple’s rules, it cannot always control where information users supply to third-party apps, like Facebook, goes.

“Apple does not and cannot monitor what developers do with the customer data they have collected, or prevent the onward transfer of that data, nor do we have the ability to ensure a developer’s compliance with their own privacy policies or local law,” Apple wrote.

“Apple has the right to terminate a developer’s account immediately upon notice for engaging in prohibited behavior, including but not limited to impermissible uses of user data,” it added.

How to turn off Siri

But if you’re still concerned that Siri might be tuning in when you don’t want her to, here’s how to turn the digital assistant off:

1. Go to Settings
2. Tap Siri & Search
3. Turn off the toggles for “Listen for ‘Hey Siri,’” “Press [Side or Home] Button for Siri,” and “Allow Siri When Locked”

This will turn off Siri, but if there are nefarious apps out there, circumventing Apple’s regulations that say developers have to make it clear when their apps are listening to users, there’s no real way to stop that. You could tape over the microphones on your phone, as many have taken to doing for their laptop webcams. But that would be quite difficult, as there are a few of them in awkward places.

How to turn off location tracking

Apple’s iPhones use a combination of GPS, cellular towers, and nearby wifi hotspots to figure out where you are, and apps are supposed to only have access to this information if you’ve explicitly given them permission.

If you want to ensure no third-party apps are tracking your location when you don’t want them to be, head to Settings > Privacy > Location Services, and turn off the green toggle. But be warned: This will mean that services that require your location to work properly, like Uber or weather apps, won’t be able to do so.

On that same screen, you can turn off location tracking for individual apps, too. So instead of turning off all tracking, you can turn off certain apps you’d prefer didn’t know where you were at all times.

Source:

What the Tech? Provocative Musical.ly app changes name to “TikTok”

The hottest app among pre-teens is changing its name. Musical.ly is now TikTok, which is the hottest social media app in China.

We first told you about Musical.ly earlier this week after we found dozens of youngsters who appear to be 10 years old and younger, performing lip sync and dance videos featuring sexually explicit musical lyrics and suggestive dances.

READ MORE | What the Tech? What parents should know about Musical.ly

Musical.ly claims to have over 100 million active users while TikTok has been downloaded over 300 million times. Together TikTok/Musical.ly has more active users than Pinterest, Snapchat and Twitter.

While it is true that Musical.ly mostly features teenagers who make silly and fun 15-second videos where they lip sync and perform challenges, parent groups have expressed concern for the suggestive videos that can be discovered by searching for certain hashtags such as #ultralowpants where young girls wear their shorts, skirts or pants below their hips while belly dancing while young men share videos with explicit moves imitating sex movements.

Musical.ly users will see their app change to TikTok the next time they update the app.

Source: WRCBtv.com

NASA announces astronauts for first commercial space flights

NASA has named nine astronauts to crew the first test flights and missions of Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner and SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule. From left to right: Sunita Williams, Josh Cassada, Eric Boe, Nicole Mann, Christopher Ferguson, Douglas Hurley, Robert Behnken, Michael Hopkins and Victor Glover. NASA

NASA has announced the names of the astronauts who will be the first people in history to ride to orbit in private space taxis next year, if all goes as planned.

In 2019, SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule and Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner are both scheduled to blast off on test flights with NASA astronauts on board. “For the first time since 2011, we are on the brink of launching American astronauts on American rockets from American soil,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Friday, standing in front of a giant American flag at Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Since NASA retired its space shuttles, the agency has had to buy seats on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get its crews to the International Space Station.

NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley will be the test flight astronauts for SpaceX’s Dragon, Bridenstine said. NASA astronauts Eric Boe and Nicole Aunapu Mann are slated for the test flight of Boeing’s Starliner, accompanied by former NASA astronaut Chris Ferguson, who now works as a commercial astronaut for Boeing.

Ferguson commanded the final mission of the space shuttle program, and Hurley was the pilot on that flight. Now the pair will be among those who usher in a new era for NASA.

“The first flight is something you dream about as a test pilot, you know, and you don’t think it’s ever going to happen to you,” Hurley said. “But it looks like it might. Bob and I are extremely excited to kind of put Dragon through its paces in space. ”

NASA has been collaborating with commercial space companies for years, with the goal of having the private sector take over “routine” trips to the space station and low Earth orbit. That shift came under the Obama administration, which killed President George W. Bush’s plan to return to the moon.

Lawmakers in Congress, however, insisted that NASA still needed to develop its own rocket and space capsule, called the Space Launch System. And the moon has re-emerged as the pre-eminent space destination under the Trump administration.

NASA has spent billions developing the Space Launch System and its first flight, scheduled for 2020, will send an uncrewed capsule around the moon and back. Astronauts aren’t expected to go on such a trip until at least a couple years after that.

Critics say NASA’s rocket is too expensive and won’t fly enough to be worth the money. They point to the Falcon Heavy, a brand new, much lower-cost heavy-lift rocket developed by SpaceX, and say that NASA could use commercial options like this one to send up pieces of hardware and assemble them in orbit.

Source: https://www.npr.org/2018/08/03/635344671/nasa-announces-crew-for-first-commercial-space-flights

Apple hits $1 trillion stock market valuation

Apple became the first $1 trillion publicly listed U.S. company Thursday, crowning a decade-long rise fueled by its ubiquitous iPhone that transformed it from a niche player in personal computers into a global powerhouse spanning entertainment and communications.

The tech company’s stock jumped 2.9 percent to close at $207.39 a share, bringing its gain to about 9 percent since Tuesday, when its reported June-quarter results above expectations and said it bought back $20 billion of its own shares.

Started in the garage of co-founder Steve Jobs in 1976, Apple has pushed its revenue beyond the economic outputs of Portugal, New Zealand and other countries. Along the way, it has changed how consumers connect with one another and how businesses conduct daily commerce.

Apple’s stock market value is greater than the combined capitalization of Exxon Mobil, Procter & Gamble and AT&T. It now accounts for 4 percent of the S&P 500.

The Silicon Valley stalwart’s stock has surged more than 50,000 percent since its 1980 initial public offering, dwarfing the S&P 500’s approximately 2,000 percent increase during the same almost four decades.

One of three founders, Jobs was driven out of Apple in the mid-1980s, only to return a decade later and rescue the computer company from near bankruptcy.

He launched the iPhone in 2007, dropping “Computer” from Apple’s name and super-charging the cellphone industry, catching Microsoft Corp, Intel Corp, Samsung Electronics and Nokia off guard. That put Apple on a path to overtake Exxon Mobil in 2011 as the largest U.S. company by market value.
During that time, Apple evolved from selling Mac personal computers to becoming an architect of the mobile revolution with a cult-like following.
Jobs, who died in 2011, was succeeded as chief executive by Tim Cook, who has doubled the company’s profits but struggled to develop a new product to replicate the society-altering success of the iPhone, which has seen sales taper off in recent years.

In 2006, the year before the iPhone launch, Apple generated less than $20 billion in sales and net profit just shy of $2 billion. By last year, its sales had grown more than 11-fold to $229 billion – the fourth highest in the S&P 500 – and net income had mushroomed at twice that rate to $48.4 billion, making it the most profitable publicly-listed U.S. company.

Jeff Carbone, a co-founder of Cornerstone Financial Partners in Charlotte, North Carolina, has included Apple in his clients’ portfolios for about a decade. Recently, some of his older clients have bought Apple shares for their grandchildren.

“We still see upside from it, and as new money gets deposited we continue to buy, preferably on the dip,” Carbone said.

Apple’s stock has risen over 30 percent in the past year, fueled by optimism about the iPhone X, launched a decade after the original. Also propelling Apple higher in recent months was Apple’s announcement that it earmarked $100 billion for a new share repurchase program.
In its report Tuesday, Apple sales led by the iPhone X, which sells for about $1,000, pushed quarterly results far beyond Wall Street targets, with subscriptions from App Store, Apple Music and iCloud services bolstering business.

“The markets are starting to recognize the value of its platform and services more and more, and that’s what is being reflected in the increase in market capitalization,” said Brad Neuman, Director of Market Strategy at Alger, a growth equity asset management firm in New York City.

Even with its $1,000,000,000,000 stock market value, many analysts do not view Apple’s shares as expensive. Shares of Apple this week traded at about 15 times expected earnings, compared to Amazon at 82 times earnings and Microsoft at 25 times earnings.

Adjusting for four stock splits over the years, Apple debuted on the stock market for the equivalent of 39 cents a share on Dec. 12, 1980, compared to Thursday’s high of $207.05.

In 2015, Apple joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average, one of capitalism’s most exclusive clubs. Since 1980, IBM, Exxon Mobil, General Electric and Microsoft have also alternated as the largest publicly listed U.S. company.

In 2007, Chinese government-controlled PetroChina briefly reached a stock market value of about $1.1 trillion following its public listing in Shanghai. It is now worth about $200 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data.

One of five U.S. companies since the 1980s to take a turn as Wall Street’s largest company by market capitalization, Apple could lose its lead to the likes of Alphabet Inc or Amazon.com Inc if it does not find a major new product or service as global demand for smartphones loses steam.
Hot on Apple’s heels is Amazon, the second-largest listed U.S. company by market value, at around $880 billion, closely followed by Google owner Alphabet and by Microsoft.

Source:

Petrichor: why does rain smell so good?

It turns out it’s not just gratitude that makes rain smell so appealing after a long period of dry weather.

There’s actually some chemistry involved too.

Bacteria, plants and even lightning can all play a role in the pleasant smell we experience after a thunderstorm; that of clean air and wet earth.

Known as petrichor, the scent has long been chased by scientists and even perfumers for its enduring appeal.

Wet earth

First named by two Australian researchers in the 1960s, the warm, earthy fragrance we experience when rain hits dry ground is produced by bacteria.

“These critters are abundant in soil,” explained Prof Mark Buttner, head of molecular microbiology at the John Innes Centre.

“So when you’re saying you smell damp soil, actually what you’re smelling is a molecule being made by a certain type of bacteria,” he told the BBC.

That molecule, geosmin, is produced by Streptomyces. Present in most healthy soils, these bacteria are also used to create commercial antibiotics.

Drops of water hitting the ground cause geosmin to be released into the air, making it much more abundant after a rain shower.

“Lots of animals are sensitive but human beings are extremely sensitive to it,” added Prof Buttner.

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France bans smartphones, tablets in schools: report

Politicians in France reportedly voted Monday in favor of a new law that would largely prohibit students from using smart devices on campus.

Students as old as 15 years old will not be allowed to use their smartphones, tablets and other similar items at school, unless they’re needed for lessons or after school activities AFP reported. Students with disabilities are not included in the ban.

MAN TRIED USING CELL PHONE AS SCOOTER HEADLIGHT, MAINE POLICE SAY

Secondary schools are reportedly given the choice to opt-in on the full ban or enforce a less strict version.

Critics of the legislation, who refrained from casting votes, decried it as being a “publicity stunt,” the outlet reported. Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer, on the other hand, reportedly argued that it modernized the country and brought them “into the 21st century.”

He argued that a 2010 law, which disallowed such devices from being used in class, was not strong enough, the report said.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2018/07/31/france-bans-smartphones-tablets-in-schools-report.html