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Category Archives: Futurism

1988: The New Vauxhall Cavalier Is the Car 1950s Futurists Predicted – Autoweek

Posted: June 20, 2020 at 10:23 am

During most of the 1980s, GM's Vauxhall sold J-Body Cavaliers based on the North American Chevrolet Cavalier, and sales in Britain went well. Starting in late 1988, the Cavalier moved over to a new platform, best-known in Europe as the basis of the Opel Vectra (the later Saab 900 and the 9-3 were close relatives). This U.K.-market television advertisement demonstrates that this new Cavalier was exactly what the wisest prognosticators predicted for the year 2000.

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You May Be At Risk of Severe COVID If You Have This Blood Type – Futurism

Posted: at 10:23 am

According to a new study by European researchers, people with type A blood are at a much higher risk of developing severe COVID-19, suggesting there may be a way to explain which COVID-19 patients get far sicker than others, Reuters reports.

It could also help health practitioners determine who is more at risk of developing a serious illness as a result of the coronavirus. The research could even point researchers towards developing more effective drug treatment plans.

Out of 1,610 patients with respiratory failure from Italy and Spain alongside a control group of 2,250 the risk of developing severe COVID-19 was 45 percent higher for those with type A blood. For those with type O blood, the risk was 35 percent lower.

The studywas published in The New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday.

The findings [] provide specific clues as to what disease processes may be going on in severe COVID-19, co-author Tom Karlsen, from Oslo University Hospital in Norway told Reuters in an email.

If confirmed, this wouldnt be the first time the severity of a disease was linked to blood types. For instance, people with blood type O only rarely develop severe malaria symptoms, as German broadcaster Deutsche Welle points out.

Its still far too early to draw any definitive conclusions, though. Scientists are racing at breakneck speeds to find treatment plans and a cure. No stone is being left unturned but even researchers can end up stumbling on early findings.

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Bree Runway: Without sounding cocky, Freddie Mercury reminds me of me – The Guardian

Posted: at 10:23 am

Pop-rap superstar of the future Bree Runway is trying to unpick the reasons why her Apeshit video an eccentric update of millennium-era R&B futurism went viral. Sometimes people are scared of standing out too much, she says while Zooming from her east London bedroom. I dont feel like that, though.

Runways outre instincts, which recall the cartoonish personae of Busta Rhymes and Caught Out There-era Kelis, seemingly cant be tamed, and she has proved just as creative in quarantine. You have to push the Runway show on, she notes. For Aprils Damn Daniel video she set up a green screen and body-popped to the songs synth-funk beat, wearing a leopard body suit in homage to Shania Twains iconic 90s look.

Today, Runway, born Brenda Mensah, is surrounded by a kaleidoscope of vintage fashions, including a Ginger Spice union jack dress (3 from a charity shop). Her obsession with looking on-point goes back to when she was a kid in Hackney doing the hair of friends on her estate. We were all on the babyhair shit, she notes. But it was quite dangerous. I saw so many crazy things growing up. Ive seen friends go to jail and come out, and now theyre thriving. So its made me really resilient.

She had her own battles, too. After getting racist playground taunts about her skin tone, Runway started using skin-bleaching creams at just nine years old, leaving her with severe chemical burns. Ive really fought to get here to love myself, she says. I always want black girls to feel confident in who they are, and in their skin. That message inspired the cover of 2019s Be Runway EP, where she is photographed wearing both light and dark makeup. There is a blown-up image from the shoot on her bedroom wall. Its more than just a beautiful picture, she says, looking up at it with a smile. Its like: Wow, you can really turn your face to a camera now. You couldnt do that before. Never.

Runway learned to rap through freestyling with her brother over YouTube instrumentals that spanned drill beats and Latin styles. When she was 14, Michelle Obama visited her school and praised her performance of a gospel song. Runways versatility gives a rare artistic malleability to her new music, due next month: shes as at home on American-leaning trap, glossy pop, even nu-metal.

Refreshingly, though, for Runway, it all comes back to putting on a show. She shares an up-from-the-bootstraps flamboyance that has powered the work of heroes such as Grace Jones and Freddie Mercury. Without sounding cocky, Freddie Mercury does remind me of me, she says, sounding cocky indeed. [My heroes] made me feel confident, because they ruled the world by being themselves. So I feel OK to step out into the world and just be myself, too.

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‘Optimism tinged with anxiety’: What to expect from the next 100 days of COVID-19, according to experts – Mayerthorpe Freelancer

Posted: at 10:23 am

Whats keeping you awake at night? Thats the question we put to doctors, scientists, philosophers, psychologists, futurists, microbiologists and bioethicists, 100 days after theWorld Health Organization officially declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. We asked the experts what theyre anticipating for the next 100 days, what we should do differently, what worries them most. Things have changed at such manic speed in the past three months, its difficult to predict what the next 100 days will yield, said McGill Universitys Samuel Veissire. Below, Veissire and others reflect on the challenges ahead. Their responses have been edited for clarity and length.

On compliance fatigue, social isolation and the politics of a pandemic:

Im worried about future waves being imminent, maybe not even waves, but just this steady, persistent (viral activity).How do we sustain what were doing? Its so important for mental health to have livelihoods. To continue to function. I dont know what the answer is. That kind of keeps me awake. Dr. Samira Mubareka, virologist and infectious diseases doctor at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto

As summer arrives, lockdown-weary people will increasingly flock to parks, beaches. Protest rallies and, south of the border, political rallies will bring people together in large numbers. This could prolong the current wave of infection or even spur a second wave. Paradoxically, efforts to combat one social problem (protest rallies to combat racism) could exacerbate another social problem (the spread of COVID-19). Unlike the 1918 flu pandemic, in which the sight of coffins was an everyday occurrence, COVID-19 is largely a hidden pandemic, where the sick and dying are sequestered in hospitals, and coffins are nowhere to be seen. This can lead people to underestimate the seriousness of the current pandemic. Dr. Steven Taylor, professor and clinical psychologist at the University of British Columbia

Politics and social polarization is what worries me the most. Before the pandemic some of us had predicted that 2020 would be the year of reason and reconciliation in the culture wars. We couldnt have been more wrong. For a few weeks, as the world ground to a halt, trying to make sense of the new threat posed by the virus, people everywhere appeared to be uniting in ways never seen before. This sadly didnt last. As everything from epidemiology, mathematical modelling, mask wearing, treatment options and whether or not to lock down became politicized, the already-polarized left-right divide took a sharper turn toward irreconcilable divisions. The recent wave of protests condemning racism and police brutality gave millions of young people worldwide a much-needed sense of purpose and justice after months of terrifying isolation, but it also reinforced the tribalization of politics that had been underway since the Trump election. Samuel Veissire, co-director, Culture, Mind and Brain Program at McGill University

On bringing patients back:

I worry about all the triaging of non-COVID activity that weve done, shutting down all sorts of cardiac and cancer and transplant care in order to potentially look after COVID patients, and the adverse effects patients have suffered because of that. I worry about this balance of trying to ramp up and catch up with all the non-emergency activity that we shut down, with the ongoing burden of COVID disease in our ICU. Dr. Niall Ferguson, head of critical care at Torontos University Health Network

On a dreaded second wave:

I worry about big, rebounding second waves if all these physical distancing things are taken less seriously, orwhen kids go back to daycare or school. Nobody knows how important a vector they might be. Ferguson

I look at the next 100 days with optimism tinged with anxiety. What keeps me up at night is that, as the memory of the catastrophic events in Spain, Italy and N.Y.C. fades, people will take this disease lightly. We are seeing resurgences of the virus in places like Beijing and some U.S. states, and Canada is not immune from that. But until we have a vaccine we have to be vigilant as a population. Dr. Wael Haddara, chair/chief of critical care medicine at London Health Sciences Centre

On long-term care homes:

Im looking ahead to how institutional custodial care will change for the better. But that wont happen in the next 100 days. What is happening is reintroducing family visits in Ontarios LTCs after 100 days of isolation. This hard lockdown on already isolated people has had a devastating impact even in homes where basic care needs were still provided adequately. Many residents have declined significantly. New family visits will require face masks and keeping a two-metre distance. Many elderly residents cannot see their family at two metres away, cannot hear what they are saying through a mask, and often have dementia, making the strange meetings very distressing. There is evidence of successful closer encounters with screening and testing in place coming from the Netherlands. I hope our government will explore kinder options. Our elderly have been through a lot and deserve the comfort of family. Maya Goldenberg, associate professor of philosophy at the University of Guelph

On the anxiety of the unknown:

I can tell you exactly what keeps me up at night: Neurology resident Dr. Chris Freehan and I have been talking and writing about pre-traumatic stress disorder, the stress of waiting for the next surge in the pandemic, preparing for the unknown, anticipating the morally challenging decisions that will accompany a resurgence, where it will be, why, how do we keep frontline healthcare workers mentally healthy when they are already fragile how do we keep growing individual and societal anxiety under control, while tensions and frustrations about the continued need to distance ourselves from loved ones and others continue. Judy Illes, professor of neurology and Canada Research Chair in Neuroethics at UBC

What we will or should do differently is start waking up to the fact that we are all connected to the point that our individual and collective fate ... is inseparable

On the likelihood of reverse zoonosis:

The other thing that keeps me awake now is, humans are the most abundant species on the planet. This virus is circulating broadly amongst us. The likelihood of a reverse zoonosis, or spill over back into wildlife is a concern. (In June, Dutch mink farms began a government-ordered cull over concerns minks infected with coronavirus could transmit it to humans.) If the virus establishes itself in a wildlife reservoir, it can change enough that if it spills back over into humans, we can have resurgent disease. Were not really doing much in the way of surveillance of wildlife or protection of wildlife to make sure that doesnt happen. Mubareka

On the hunt for a vaccine:

My biggest concern relates to our collective ability in the coming months to a year to determine what is the most effective vaccine, how will we be able to produce sufficient quantities for Canada and across the world, and how we can push corporate and government interests aside for collaboration and cooperation for testing and production. As the numbers of cases decrease around most of the high income countries, we will need to turn for support to the lower income countries to test these vaccines in a safe and ethical manner for efficacy, and ensure that the vaccine will then be distributed across the globe. We cannot give up this time like we have with SARS and MERS in the past. This virus will be with us for a long time. Eric Arts, professor of microbiology and immunology at Western University in London

There is a growing anti-vaccination sentiment in Canada and the U.S. Our most recent research indicates 20 per cent of Canadians, and 25 per cent of Americans would not get vaccinated. If those numbers continue to grow, that will seriously undermine the effects of vaccination for battling the coronavirus. Taylor

On what we need to do now:

Im not a public health doctor, but Im certainly supportive of everyone wearing a mask when theyre out in public, especially in a closed indoor environment. Universal masking would be very helpful. Ventilators and drugs and PPE, and lack therefore, are other things that keep me up at night. Hopefully well have all those things somewhat better sorted out if things get worse again in the coming months. The burn rate through (PPE) is constant. Ferguson

The next 100 days will bring us up to the start of the school year. While (Ontario Education Minister Stephen) Lecce has signalled that Ontario kids will be back in the classroom in September, school boards have not been given direction on how to prepare, teachers have not been consulted. Lecce has promised for a late June update, but this is not giving school boards enough time to plan for challenges. Goldenberg

What we will or should do differently is start waking up to the fact that we are all connected to the point that our individual and collective fate pandemics, global warming, nuclear weapons, artificial intelligence is inseparable from that of those living on the other end of the world. And this is where we can find an opportunity to start developing what the Dalai Lama calls a sense of oneness. Because the major 21st century problems cannot be solved within borders with the traditional me vs. you, or us vs. them mindset, but require a unified global approach that can come only after we stop seeing ourselves as different. futurist Nikola Danaylov

Its difficult to predict what the next 100 days will yield. While we need to remain cautious and take cues from our public health authorities, we have reason to believe that the worst days of the pandemic are over in Canada, and that a brighter summer than previously anticipated lies ahead. At the same time, social, economic and psychological sequela from the lockdowns are also likely to endure for a while. The biggest challenge for the next 100 days will be to take conversations offline, depoliticize everyday life and rediscover the shared humanity and solidarity that seemed to have been awoken in the pandemic early days. Veissire

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Life in a post-coronavirus world: will it feel so very different? – The Guardian

Posted: at 10:23 am

Has there ever been an easier time to be a futurist? Im distrustful of the profession at the best of times, since it involves making pronouncements about a time that hasnt arrived and not being held to account for your errors when it does arrive, because then its no longer the future, and thus no concern of the futurists. But these days, as the world staggers uncertainly out of lockdown, its even easier. All you need to say is that in life in general, or in whatever field youre supposedly expert, everythings going to change. Education, the economy, travel, work, dating, sport, the advertising industry, the world of aluminium can manufacturing: recent stories have promised massive transformation in them all. Or as a great sage (on the groundbreaking satire The Day Today) put it a quarter of a century ago: If youve got a history book at home, take it out, throw it in the bin its worthless.

My objection isnt that any of this is necessarily false. (Although taken literally, it is, because history never unfolds in absolutes: for example, its always jarring to be reminded that most people spent the Great Depression in work, not unemployed.) Rather, its the implication that life, in years to come, is going to feel very different indeed. And one of the few things we can be pretty sure of is that it wont. For most of us, most of the time, itll feel normal.

Part of the reason is hedonic adaptation, our tendency to swiftly adapt emotionally to positive or negative changes in our circumstances, drifting back towards our baseline levels of curmudgeonliness or cheer. Another is the focusing illusion, whereby we overestimate the impact that any given change will have on our lives. The cumulative result is that any future change in your situation like never shaking hands again, wearing a mask in public, or even something huge, like losing your job is likely to make less of a difference than you think. After the attacks of September 11, we were told the world would never be the same again, and it wasnt. But for all except those most directly affected bereaved by war, imprisoned in Guantnamo it soon felt normal. And so it goes, through history: each time a huge event disrupts a civilisations ordinary way of life, the ordinary way of life its disrupting is what people formerly thought of as the terrible climate ushered in by the last huge event.

None of this means things will be fine. They may well be worse: a world with less human contact, or more joblessness, is surely objectively worse, however normal it feels. But it does mean that if you found life generally meaningful in the post-9/11 world, or the post-financial-crisis world, the chances are youll do so in the post-coronavirus world as well.

In any case, as the political scientist Mark Lilla pointed out in a recent essay, even to ask a question such as How different will the future be? is to assume an oddly passive stance towards it. The future doesnt exist so we should ask only what we want to happen, and how to make it happen, given the constraints of the moment. Were never really waiting to see how the future unfolds. Were creating it as we go.

Being certain about the future would drain your life of meaning, Susan Jeffers argues in her self-help book Embracing Uncertainty.

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Researcher: Second COVID Wave May Be Psychologically Devastating – Futurism

Posted: at 10:23 am

As U.S. states ease up their coronavirus lockdown, theyre seeing a resurgencein new COVID-19 cases.

Overall, it seems as though a resurgence of the coronavirus outbreak is looming in the future and that has experts worried that a massive psychological toll may come with it, according to the Washington Examiner.

I think a second wave would be devastating for a lot of people, University of Connecticut psychologist Crystal Park told the Examiner. There is a sense that we have been through a really terrible, traumatic time, and we are now in a phase of reopening and recovery.

For what its worth, the phrase second wave is a bit of a misnomer: while coronavirus infections dropped in some states, the U.S. never really beat its first outbreak, compared to other countries which stamped it out decisively. Its all part of one, long, unconquered pandemic.

That said, living in lockdown has led to an increase of reported anxiety and depression, and Park told the Examinerthat going back into lockdown for round two could be even more emotionally taxing than the first time.

Park explained that a resurgence might provoke a whole new and perhaps deeper sense of fear and uncertainty.

We would be feeling like we are retraumatized and likely more distressed and hopeless than the first time around, Park told the site.

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The Space Station Is Getting a New Toilet – Futurism

Posted: June 17, 2020 at 1:06 am

Astronauts on board the International Space Station will be about to sigh a big sigh of relief: the space station is getting a brand spanking new toilet, as Space.com reports.

The new system called the Universal Waste Management System (UWMS) is meant to be the (smelly) testing grounds for zero gravity toilets to be used during long space flight, such as a journey to Mars.

Its also meant to standardize the toilet experience in space and thereby reduce costs as well as lead to the development of smaller fecal canisters to improve stowage efficiency, according to NASA.

A NASA spokesperson told Space.com that the new and improved lavatory could be headed to the ISS as early as this fall, but a spacecraft has yet to be picked out for the special delivery.

The goal of the new toilet is also to make sure that we dont have to leave human waste behind and thereby risking cross-contamination on distant planets. In fact, during Apollo 11, US astronauts left 96 bags of human poop on the lunar surface. Many scientists argue we should go back and dispose of it properly.

Long-distance space travel could end up accruing a lot of waste. In fact, NASA estimates that wed need to manage about 600 pounds of solid waste on a mission to Mars.

Our future goals are to stabilize and dry the metabolic waste to make it microbially inactive and possibly reuse that water, reduce the amount of consumables for the potty, because it does really accumulate on a long mission, Jim Broyan, program manager for Environmental Control and Life Support Technology and Crew Health and Performance at NASA, said during a May 20 meeting, as quoted by Space.com.

The toilet on board the ISS right now dates back to the 90s. In the past, astronauts have struggled with aim. It also proved to be clunky to use, especially for women.

In February 2019, Russian media reported that the toilet on board the ISS burst, spilling gallons of fluid. The lucky astronauts had to mop it up with towels.

The new toilet will have an adjusted shape and will include toe bars for astronauts to hook their feet into. The same model will eventually fly on NASAs Orion spacecraft thats headed to the Moon later this decade.

READ MORE: The International Space Station is getting a new toilet this year [Space.com]

More on space toilet: Scientists New Goal: Make the ISS Bathroom Less Disgusting

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A Space Probe Just Took the Closest Pictures of the Sun Ever – Futurism

Posted: at 1:06 am

The European Space Agencys Solar Orbiter probe just made its first close approach of the Sun, getting within 77 million kilometers (47.8 million miles) of the stars surface about half the distance between Earth and the Sun.

During its approach, it snapped the closest images of the Sun ever captured which will be released in mid-July, according to a statement.

We have never taken pictures of the Sun from a closer distance than this, ESAs Solar Orbiter Project Scientist Daniel Mller said in the statement.

While weve been able to zoom in further using solar telescopes from Earth such as the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii, this spacecraft was able to get a much clearer look from outer space, unobstructed by Earths atmosphere.

For the first time, we will be able to put together the images from all our telescopes and see how they take complementary data of the various parts of the Sun including the surface, the outer atmosphere, or corona, and the wider heliosphere around it, Mller added.

Scientists will also be able to get an unprecedented peek at the structure and composition of solar winds, according to the scientists.

For the in-situ instruments, this is not just a test, we are expecting new and exciting results, Yannis Zouganelis, ESAs Solar Orbiter Deputy Project Scientist, said in the statement.

The Solar Orbiter will get even near to the Sun later, getting as close as 42 million kilometers (26 million miles) closer than Mercury.

The record still belongs to NASAs Parker Solar Probe, which in November 2018 became the closest man-made object to the Sun ever sent into space, at just 24 million kilometers (15 million miles) from the surface.

The images taken by the Solar Orbiter will take a week to travel the 134 million kilometers (83 million miles) back to Earth. The images will then be processed and released to the public in mid-July.

READ MORE: Solar Orbiter makes first close approach to the Sun [ESA]

More on the Sun: The Highest Def Photo of the Sun Looks Like Popcorn

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COVID Could Be Making People So Lonely That They’re Getting Sick – Futurism

Posted: at 1:06 am

As we enter another week of pandemic lockdown, scientists are working to understand the toll extended isolation takes on our minds and bodies.

The medical effects of loneliness are difficult to measure especially because loneliness is a subjective experience that varies wildly from person to person. But semantics aside, a clear trend is emerging, CNET reports, and its not great.

Extended loneliness can have serious psychological impacts, like exacerbated depression, anxiety, and increased irritability, according to 2018 research posted in the journal The Lancet. But the impacts extend far beyond psychological health.

Its very distressing when we are not a part of a group, Brigham Young University psychologist and neuroscientist Julianne Holt-Lundstad told CNET. We have to deal with our environment entirely on our own, without the help of others, which puts our brain in a state of alert, but that also signals the rest of our body to be in a state of alert.

Loneliness has been linked to all sorts of medical problems, like cognitive decline in old age, cancer, and heart disease, CNET reports. Though the causal relationship between loneliness and disease is poorly understood, there seems to be a genetic mechanism, potentially triggered by prolonged loneliness, that increases the risk of those diseases.

The subjective experience has to be translated somehow in the brain into biology, and so thats [what] were looking at now, Turhan Canli, an integrative neuroscientist at Stony Brook University, told CNET.

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Scientists Gave Ketamine to Sheep and Were Baffled by the Result – Futurism

Posted: at 1:06 am

While studying the effects of ketamine on sheep, researchers say they found something truly strange: high doses of the drug appeared to turnthe sheeps brains off and back on again, like a light switch.

This wasnt just reduced brain activity, Jenny Morton, neurobiologist from the University of Cambridge, co-author of the study published in Scientific Reports earlier this month, said in a statement.

After the high dose of ketamine the brains of these sheep completely stopped, she added. Weve never seen that before.

Ketamine is usually used for anesthesia, sedation and pain relief.But in recent years, its also attracted interest as a treatment for depression and other mental health issues.

An interesting new clue about what the drug does: electroencephalography (EEG) readings of the sheeps brains showed a complete shut down of brain activity within two minutes of injection effects that were only temporary.

A few minutes later their brains were functioning normally again it was as though they had just been switched off and on, Morton said.

Similar effects could be seen in humans as well.

The timing of the unusual patterns of sheep brain activity corresponded to the time when human users report feeling their brain has disconnected from their body, Morton explained. Its likely that the brain oscillations caused by the drug may prevent information from the outside world being processed normally.

That kind of disconnect has often been referred to as the K-hole by recreational users of the drug.

Our purpose wasnt really to look at the effects of ketamine, but to use it as a tool to probe the brain activity in sheep with and without the Huntingtons disease gene, said Morton. But our surprising findings could help explain how ketamine works.

It could also help us to see how brain networks function, both in the healthy brain and in neurological diseases like Huntingtons disease and schizophrenia, according to Morton.

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