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Category Archives: Transhuman News

A Man Injected Himself With Mushrooms and the Fungi Took Over His Blood – Futurism

Posted: January 15, 2021 at 1:49 pm

A man found himself in the hospital with severe organ failure after grossly misunderstanding how to consume psychedelic mushrooms.

Instead of ingesting the psylocibin, he injected them directly into his bloodstream, according to Insider. And while the man did try to boil the shrooms first, he must not have killed them offentirely, because they started to grow inside his bloodstream, taking hold of his system and causing serious injury including organ failure.

This was, unfortunately, more than merely a trip gone bad. The 30-year-old man had, in the past, been treated for bipolar disorder and came across psilocybin after researching ways to help treat condition online, according to a case report published Monday in the Journal of the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry. Preliminary research suggests that he may have been on to something psilocybin, the active ingredient in psychedelic mushrooms, seems to treat depressive symptoms in some patients.

But that assumes that those patients are ingesting the compound not injecting it.

Because the fungi treated the mans veins like any other damp, dark place, they proliferated and he found himself vomiting blood, confused, and unable to speak coherently in the hospital with severe kidney and liver damage. Doctors had to put him on a ventilator and filter his blood over the course of his three-week hospital stay, according to the case report.

All in all, the case report describes a one-off horror story. But it does illustrate how dangerous it can be when people are left to seek out new treatments for themselves without proper support or guidance.

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China Is Using Robots to Administer COVID Tests – Futurism

Posted: at 1:49 pm

Residents in Shenyang, China are being tested for COVID-19 by a plastic-wrapped robotic arm, Euronews reports. The goal of the arm, which is being controlled by a health worker from the next room, is to minimize contact and reduce the risk of cross contamination between people.

The disembodied arm is capable of taking a throat swab a routine yet delicate medical procedure. The person being tested simply open their mouth and bites down on a contraption to make sure they remain motionless while the robot does its work.

A robotic voice will even tell the person being tested to say aaah.

The robot, dubbed Lingcai, is part of a greater mass testing campaign to battle an ongoing outbreak in the surrounding Liaoning province, according to Euronews.

Officials are hoping the robot will reduce the risk of cross-infection and even increase the rate of testing. According to Chinese state-owned newspaper the Global Times, the robot can even automatically register the subjects information to both speed up the process and ensure sampling authenticity.

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Sooke man reveals how he made a living predicting the future – Sooke News Mirror

Posted: at 1:49 pm

So, do you look in a crystal ball or something?

Thats one of the most common quips Jim Bottomley hears when he shares that hes a futurist.

The Sooke man is always hesitant to share what he does for a living because hes been perceived as highfalutin or stuck up by some.

Its not about pie in the sky sort of predictions, said the 63-year-old. I want to help people understand the future of humanity.

Simply put, a futurist is someone who helps make predictions and possibilities of the future based on trends, technology and research.

Although predictions are the name of the game, he cant tell you what the interest rate will look like in two to three years. One of the key rules he follows is not giving solid numbers, as he says its destined to be wrong.

Bottomley never imagined that he would end up becoming a futurist, but the stars aligned for him back in the 1980s.

READ MORE: Sooke author short-listed for national writing prize

He was working under the pet foods division of Quaker Oats Co. when his boss asked him whether they should invest more into cat food or dog food. Bottomley conducted interviews and extensive research to give the best presentation to the board. He determined that cats were the leading trend, and the team moved forward with his suggestion.

From that moment on, his path to becoming a futurist was set.

Fast forward, Bottomley has worked with all sorts of clientele, anywhere from political parties to cosmetic companies. He said he enters any conversation with a new client by asking them what they are trying to sell. By their response, he can tell whether theyre headed towards success or failure.

Take the Ford F150, for example, said Bottomley. Some would say, youre selling a truck. Youre selling intimidation. Big protective vehicles seem protective, and customers are always looking for safety.

He pointed out other companies, like Revlon, depend on emotional benefits. While chatting with their marketing executives, he helped their team determine that they werent just selling lipstick. They were selling hope.

RELATED: The long road to recovery will have a few bumps for Greater Victorians

Bottomley said the timeline for how long he spends researching and preparing a presentation to each client ultimately depends on the industrys scope. During his time working for the American dairy industry, the clients felt like their consumers didnt fully understand the effort farmers put into their milk and beef products.

Bottomley helped them navigate the situation by suggesting that the addition of a cow on the cartons side with a farmer might improve public reception.

I had no idea what a futurist was until I met him myself, said Doni Eve, a friend of Bottomleys since 2016 and member of the Sooke Writers Collective.

Hes done a fantastic job carving out a niche for himself, and Im surprised at how much research he does to understand the challenges companies face. Hes just a vibrant and engaging person to be around.

Since the first wave of the pandemic, Bottomley said speaking gigs and interested clients have dramatically dropped.

Trends change, said Bottomley. I have no plans to retire anytime soon, but its hard to predict how quickly business will bounce back and whether it will be as successful as before. But youve just got to take your shot.

Looking ahead, the Sooke man has focused his efforts towards writing Hypnotizing Lions, a psychological thriller novel centred around an escape from a prison psychiatric hospital. Hes been working on it since 1984 and plans to release it later this year.

ALSO READ: Head in the clouds: Sooke resident recalls former career as astronaut training officer

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DARPA Working on Night-Vision Goggles the Size of Normal Glasses – Futurism

Posted: at 1:49 pm

Eyes Up

DARPA, the research and development division of the Pentagon, is working to give bulky night-vision goggles a major overhaul.

The ultimate goal is to make night-vision goggles that look like any other pair of glasses and do away with the giant headgear currently in use, according to a DARPA press release on Monday, citing neck strain and limited fields of view caused by existing gear.

Replacing night-vision goggles array of optical equipment will be tricky. But recent advances by DARPA scientists made it possible to convert infrared thermal vision light to the visible spectrum with a single eyeglass lens, resulting in a much more lightweight and comfortable piece of equipment.

Our warfighters experience significant neck strain from current [night-vision goggles] caused by the weight of the optics extending 4-5 inches in front of their helmets, Rohith Chandrasekar, program manager in DARPAs Defense Sciences Office, said in the press release. If youve never worn [night-vision goggles] for hours at a time imagine wearing a baseball cap all day with a two-pound weight attached to the front of the bill that gives you a small sense of the stress experienced.

According to Chandrasekar, doing away with all the optical equipment inside current goggles will actually make the glasses far more efficient, since they convert infrared to visible light all in one step.

This will further simplify [night-vision goggle] systems by advancing from the multi-step conversion currently used to a single step up-conversion process, Chandrasekar said in the release. Some of these processes even conserve the momentum of photons, which, in theory, could enable night vision without the need for any optics.

READ MORE: With new tech, DARPA aims for night-vision goggles the size and weight of regular eyeglasses [DARPA]

More on night-vision goggles: The Armys New Night Vision Goggles Let Soldiers Look Around Corners

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Pandemic’s lasting legacy to be key theme of the People in Law Conference 2021 – Personnel Today

Posted: at 1:49 pm

The long-term effects of Covid-19, creating an ideal culture and how learnings from other industries can be applied to the legal sector will be among the key themes at this years People in Law Conference, taking place digitally later this month.

People professionals from across the legal sphere will hear from experts including futurist Katherine Templar Lewis, who will discuss opportunities for redefining work and the practical skills needed to navigate 2021; racing driver Charlie Martin, who as a transgender woman has had a unique role in reshaping culture within the sport; and equality campaigner Tiernan Brady, who will share how firms can empower individuals to champion inclusion.

Delegates will also hear how firms including Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, Pinsent Masons and Clifford Chance are improving inclusion of ethnic minority workers, while senior figures at Shoosmiths and Willis Towers Watson will discuss the latest trends in remuneration.

The conference takes place over three afternoons from 26 28 January, with a networking session after each day.

Buy your ticket to secure your place now.

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At 78, British Columbian artist Jim Adams has first solo in U.S. in over 45 years – ArtfixDaily

Posted: at 1:49 pm

Jim Adams, Lil' Zoose, 2008Acrylic on canvas, artist painted frame, 49 x 37 in.Courtesy of the artist and Luis De Jesus Los An...

Luis De Jesus Los Angelesis pleased to announceJIM ADAMS: Eternal Witness, on view through February 27, 2021.The exhibition presents new paintings and sketches completed over the last four years along with a selection of works from the 1990s and 2000s. Philadelphia born Adams has lived in Canada since the 1970's and at age 78, this marks his first solo exhibition in the United States in over 45 years.

The paintings inEternal Witnessdraw primarily fromMythic Sketches, abody of work that Adams has pursued consistently over the past three decades. They manifest as portraits of deities garbed in contemporary clothing, paintings of pyramids, and sketches of the Nubian Express trainand are often accompanied by a vibrant full moon. Drawn from Egyptian and Classical mythologies, Adams use of iconography acknowledges the long historyof artistic representationassociated with his mythic subjects. "For centuries, artists have used mythsboth classicand obscureto depict issues and conflicts that are as significant today as they were in earlier times, says Adams. Jealousy, ambition, hubris, greed and the glorificationof warfare are essentially the same as they were in the age of the classic Greeks or the Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe. The only things that have changed are the clothes and the technology we use.

It is tempting to read Adams' art as an expression of Afro-Futurism, given both his own race and his frequent references to Nubia, space, flight, and ancient Egyptian mythology. The recurring portrayal of young Black men and women in the role of classical heroes and deities supports this argument; but it is important to see these aspects within the broader context of his practicein a career spanning five decades.For as many paintings as there are of specific people, places, and times, there are an equal number of ahistorical, dreamlike worlds. Just as much as Adams draws upon current events and geopolitics, so too does he capture the seemingly apolitical: dramatic skyscapes, planetary eclipses, and astral constellations.

In his essay for theexhibition, the Canadian curator Rhys Edwards writes: It is the paradox of the pyramid which underlies the art of Jim Adams. An eternal symbol, it is always more than what it seems. Its cache extends beyond its own history. Likewise, Adams' myths always extend beyond their own precepts; they are never fixed, never singular, never the monoliths they may appear to be.

For further information and inquiries, please contact the gallery at310-838-6000, or emailgallery@luisdejesus.com.

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Activists Plan to Hand Out Free Weed at DC Vaccination Sites – Futurism

Posted: at 1:49 pm

The cannabis activist group DC Marijuana Justice (DCMJ) says its going to hand out free bags of weed to people who get their coronavirus vaccine at some locations in Washington, D.C.

Both the medical and recreational use of marijuana is perfectly legal in D.C., so DCMJ doesnt expect any legal trouble while it gives out its post-vaccine goody bags, Motherboard reports. The ultimate goal is two-fold: further incentivizing people to protect themselves against COVID-19 and, hopefully, recruiting their grateful recipients into the fight for federal marijuana legalization.

I want people to get the shots and to know they are appreciated for doing so, DCMJ co-founder Adam Eidinger told Motherboard. We also see the vaccination center as a place for education and outreach as well as to mobilize people to let lawmakers know they want to protect and even expand home grow rights in the District and to allow adults to buy and sell cannabis.

We want to end the intense policing of Black communities too as its completely connected to marijuana enforcement to this day, Eidinger added.

The Joints for Jabs campaign will begin as soon as vaccines are available to the general public, according to a DCMJ press release. Along with the free bag, DCMJ will distribute cards with information on how people can call their representatives to fight for legal cannabis.

But the call to arms shouldnt get in the way of a good time, DCMJs other co-founder, Nikolas Schiller, said in the press release.

We are looking for ways to safely celebrate the end of the pandemic, Schiller said, and we know nothing brings people together like cannabis.

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Next-generation Dragon cargo spacecraft returns from space station – SpaceNews

Posted: at 1:46 pm

WASHINGTON The first in SpaceXs new generation of Dragon cargo spacecraft completed its mission with a splashdown off the Florida coast Jan. 13.

The CRS-21 Dragon spacecraft splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico west of Tampa at 8:26 p.m. Eastern. It had undocked from the station a day and a half earlier after original plans for an undocking and splashdown Jan. 11 were postponed by poor weather.

The Dragon brought back to Earth about 2,000 kilograms of research payloads and other cargo from the station. The spacecraft, launched Dec. 6, brought nearly 3,000 kilograms of cargo to the station, including the Bishop commercial airlock developed by Nanoracks.

The CRS-21 mission was the first to use the new version of the Dragon cargo spacecraft, based on the vehicle SpaceX developed for the commercial crew program. It includes additional cargo volume and on-orbit lifetime, and can dock and undock autonomously, rather than be berthed by the stations robotic arm.

The new cargo Dragons also splash down off the Florida coast. Original cargo Dragon missions splashed down in the Pacific, southwest of California, and could take a day or more to return to port. On the CRS-21 mission, time-sensitive cargo from the Dragon was transported by helicopter to a lab at the Kennedy Space Center within six hours.

The Dragon is the second cargo spacecraft to depart the station in as many weeks. Northrop Grummans NG-14 Cygnus spacecraft left the station Jan. 6, three months after its arrival. That spacecraft remains in orbit performing experiments, including one testing combustion in weightlessness, and will reenter Jan. 26.

Weve really hit our stride. This is our new normal, Robyn Gatens, acting ISS director at NASA Headquarters, said at a Jan. 13 meeting of the NASA Advisory Councils human exploration and operations committee. Lots of vehicles coming and going, lots of activity on the station.

The seven-person crew currently on the station, including four NASA astronauts, is enabling what she called significant more crew time for what can be dedicated to utilization, or research activities there. She noted that had long been the goal of the commercial crew program, which enables the station to support seven people rather than the six it could traditionally accommodate when the only means to travel there was via Russias three-person Soyuz spacecraft.

NASA has not yet set an end date for the Crew-1 commercial crew mission currently docked there. Gatens said its likely to end some time in May, about six months after its launch. It will overlap with the next Crew Dragon mission, Crew-2, whose launch is no earlier than March 30.

That date may slip, though, to accommodate the second uncrewed test flight of Boeings CST-100 Starliner spacecraft. Thats scheduled to launch March 29, although Phil McAlister, director of commercial spaceflight at NASA Headquarters, said at the same committee meeting that the Starliner launch could move up a few days to March 25.

The CRS-21 Dragon brought back to Earth a variety of scientific experiments, ranging from heart tissue cells tested on the station to fiber optic cables produced in microgravity. It also brought back a very different commercial payload: 12 bottles of red wine flown to the station in late 2019 by European company Space Cargo Unlimited. The wine, along with 320 snippets of grape vines also flown on the station, will be shipped to a facility in Bordeaux, France, to see how they were affected by their time in space. That will include what the company called a private, organoleptic wine tasting to compare the wine flown in space to wine that remained on Earth.

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Bad weather on Earth delays SpaceX Dragon’s return from space station – Space.com

Posted: at 1:46 pm

Poor weather on Earth forced a SpaceX supply ship to wave off the opportunity to make the first successful autonomous undocking from the International Space Station on Monday (Jan. 11).

The upgraded Dragon cargo ship, hauling 5,200 lbs. (2,500 kilograms) of scientific experiments and other supplies, was supposed to depart the orbiting complex at 10 a.m. EST (1500 GMT).

NASA and SpaceX decided to abandon the attempt at 9:53 a.m. EST (1453 GMT) due to poor weather at the craft's splashdown site in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Daytona, Fla. The two entities will decide later when to make the next undocking attempt, officials said on NASA TV, which broadcast the undocking attempt live.

SpaceX's upgraded Cargo Dragon capsule can carry 20% more cargo (and experiments) compared to its predecessor and can splash down in the Atlantic Ocean rather than the Pacific, making for a faster turnaround time on science since experiments can arrive at the nearby NASA Kennedy Space Center in as little as four hours. The new Dragon can also remain on station twice as long as previous cargo Dragon types, allowing for longer science investigations.

Video: See SpaceX's 1st automated uncrewed docking at space stationRelated: SpaceX launches upgraded Cargo Dragon to space station for NASA

This Cargo Dragon launched on Dec. 6 and made SpaceX's first autonomous supply ship docking at the International Space Station about 24 hours later. This mission, called CRS-21, marked the first time a Cargo Dragon did not use the Canadarm2 robotic arm to berth to the space station.

This mission also marks the first time two Dragon spacecraft were docked at the space station simultaneously, NASA said on NASA TV, since a Crew Dragon is currently parked at the orbiting complex after ferrying four astronauts to the station in November.

In a statement, NASA officials said the CRS-21 Dragon will bring "significantly more science back to Earth than possible in previous Dragon capsules" due to upgrades in the cargo spacecraft. Dragon's return near NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida will also be the first time such an event has happened since the agency's space shuttle fleet retired in 2011, allowing the science to be processed there.

A selection of the returning experiments includes:

NASA added that the ground teams will need to work quickly to bring the precious science back to Earth as the effects of gravity take hold on the experiments.

"After a SpaceX boat scoops the capsule out of the water, a waiting team pulls time-critical science out of the spacecraft and loads it onto a waiting helicopter," NASA said in the same statement. "The helicopter will deliver this science to shore a few hours after splashdown. Any remaining scientific cargo will come back either in a second helicopter load or stay aboard the boat and be removed at the port."

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Debate Rages Over Whether Single Speeding Cheeto Could Destroy Space Station – Futurism

Posted: at 1:46 pm

Ultimate Showdown

Who would win in a fight: the International Space Station (ISS) or a single Cheeto Puff orbiting the Earth?

Its an argument that raged online this morning after a Reddit users seven-year-old daughter asked whether one Cheeto could destroy the ISS in a head-on collision. Thankfully, the overwhelming consensus even among several self-identified aerospace engineers and one scientist who helped design the ISS is that the Cheeto doesnt stand a chance and that the ISS crewmembers would be safe.

But there is room for debate, it seems, over how much destruction the cheesy projectile would cause along the way.

The question seems silly, butanything hurtling toward the space station at 9.3 miles per second poses a risk even a greasy cheese snack. Space collisions are a real risk, and the ISS recently had to dodge out of the way of incoming space junk that ultimately passed within 1.4 kilometers of the station.

Neither NASA nor PepsiCo, the maker of Cheetos, responded to Futurisms inquiry by press time. But the Cheeto would likely be less dangerous than orbital debris, in part because when Frito creator Charles Doolin invented the Cheeto in 1948, he probably didnt have hypervelocity impacts or space travel in mind.

Upon impact, according to the consensus view on Reddit, the brittle Cheeto would likely break down into a cloud of plasma and disperse. That makes a collision far less dangerous than one with a solid, compact object.

Certainly, I would expect the spongy/porous/very low-density material of the Cheeto puff to have far less of an effect than a denser material of the same mass, Letter_13, a self-identified aerospace engineer who weighed in on the debate told Futurism.

Letter_13 declined to share their real identity and professional affiliation due to security concerns at their job.

Things get tricky when you bump things together so hard that they turn into rapidly expanding clouds of superheated gases, Letter_13 told Futurism.

Being in space would only make the Cheeto more fragile, Letter_13 told Futurism.

[The Cheeto] would absolutely become more brittle in space many of the oils contained in the Cheeto puff would begin to boil off and evaporate in a vacuum, drying the unfortunate snack out even further and making it more brittle, they explained. This would be accelerated dramatically if the Cheeto were orbiting the earth in direct sunlight (which could potentially cook/bake the thing into just a hunk of carbon).

Depending on where it hit, it may leave a dent, though more than likely it would just leave a bit of an orange stain (if that), Letter_13 wrote in the original thread.

Really, it comes down to where the Cheeto hits the ISS, according to a Redditor who goes by danielravennest and claims to be part of the team that designed the ISS.

Danielravennest didnt respond to Futurisms request for comment but did argue in the thread that the Cheeto probably wouldnt even dent an ISS module. However, it would be able to take out a solar cell or two if it crashed into a panel.

At the typical impact velocities in orbit, objects are moving faster than the speed of sound and carry more kinetic energy than it takes to turn them into plasma, danielravennest wrote. Critical areas of the ISS are protected by Meteor/Debris Shields (Whipple Shields). These are sheet metal spaced away from the module hull, air tanks, etc. So on impact, the object and the part of the shield they hit are both turned to plasma, and sprays out in a cone. So the module hull isnt damaged unless it were a large object.

The solar arrays are the largest part of the Station by area, but they are a thin plastic backing with thin solar cells attached, danielravennest added. They have been hit several times. All that happens is you punch a hole and lose one or two cells.

More on space collisions: Experts Predict Sizeable Chance of Epic Space Junk Collision Tonight

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