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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Indie Impressions – Caffeine (Preview Build) – Video

Posted: October 26, 2014 at 10:45 pm


Indie Impressions - Caffeine (Preview Build)
Today we #39;re going to have a look at an upcoming sci-fi first-person horror game called Caffeine by developer Dylan Browne. We wake up in an abandoned space station designed by big corporations...

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Indie Impressions - Caffeine (Preview Build) - Video

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Space: Watch the SpaceX Dragon leave ISS – Video

Posted: at 10:45 pm


Space: Watch the SpaceX Dragon leave ISS
Video ID: 20141025-020 W/S ISS with SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft W/S Johnson Space Center, Houston M/S Johnson Space Center, Houston W/S International Space Station with SpaceX Dragon ...

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Space: Watch the SpaceX Dragon leave ISS - Video

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Intro to Attack Of The B-Team Space station! Ep. 1: Captian’s Section! – Video

Posted: at 10:45 pm


Intro to Attack Of The B-Team Space station! Ep. 1: Captian #39;s Section!
Finally! An Attack of The B-Team Ep.!

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Intro to Attack Of The B-Team Space station! Ep. 1: Captian's Section! - Video

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Propagator Test: Dragon undocking the International Space Station – Video

Posted: at 10:45 pm


Propagator Test: Dragon undocking the International Space Station
Actually i wanted to work over the new propagator as i noticed that the Dragon was just begining to undock from the ISS. I imediately chose to capture this event while running the propagator,...

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Propagator Test: Dragon undocking the International Space Station - Video

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SpaceX cargo ship returns to Earth after station visit

Posted: at 10:45 pm

A view of the SpaceX Dragon cargo ship moments after its release from the International Space Station's robot arm Saturday.The spacecraft, loaded with 3,276 pounds of equipment and experiment samples, splashed down in the Pacific Ocean west of Baja California five-and-a-half hours later. Alexander Gerst/NASA

A commercial cargo ship loaded with some 3,276 pounds of equipment and experiment samples, believed to include mice that were on board as part of a muscle atrophy study, returned to Earth Saturday to close out a five-week visit to the International Space Station.

Astronaut Reid Wiseman, operating the station's robot arm, detached the solar-powered Dragon spacecraft from the forward Harmony module around 8 a.m. EDT (GMT-4), maneuvered it into position and released it to open space at 9:57 a.m.

SpaceX flight controllers at the company's Hawthorne, Calif., plant then uplinked commands to fire the spacecraft's braking rockets at 2:43 p.m., putting the capsule on course for a fiery plunge back into the atmosphere.

The Dragon's re-entry systems apparently worked normally, parachutes deployed and the cargo ship splashed down in the Pacific Ocean 265 miles west of Baja California at 3:38 p.m.

Recovery crews standing by aboard a ship in the landing zone planned to haul the spacecraft back to Long Beach, Calif., where time-critical research samples will be offloaded and turned over to NASA.

The capsule then will be shipped to SpaceX's McGregor, Texas, facility where the rest of the cargo, including computer gear, spacewalk equipment and other hardware, will be removed.

This was SpaceX's fourth station resupply flight under a $1.6 billion contract with NASA that calls for 12 missions to deliver some 44,000 pounds of cargo to the International Space Station.

The Dragon departure sets the stage for the undocking of a Russian Progress cargo ship from the Pirs module at 1:39 a.m. Monday. Unlike the Dragon capsule -- the only station resupply craft capable of carrying cargo back to Earth -- the Progress will burn up in the atmosphere later in the day.

Orbital Sciences plans to follow the Progress and Dragon departures with launch of a commercial Cygnus cargo craft from Wallops Island, Va., on Monday at 6:45 p.m. Making the company's third operational resupply flight, the Cygnus is expected to be captured by the station's robot arm and berthed at the Harmony port just vacated by the Dragon spacecraft on Sunday, Nov. 2.

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SpaceX cargo ship returns to Earth after station visit

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SpaceX Dragon Comes Home After Mouse Delivery

Posted: at 10:45 pm

A SpaceX Dragon cargo ship ended a monthlong stay at the International Space Station on Saturday and made a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman and Barry Wilmore used the stations robotic crane to release the capsule, built and operated by California-based SpaceX, as the two vehicles soared 260 miles (418 kilometers) over Australia.

"Dragon is free," mission commentator Rob Navias said during a NASA broadcast.

Several hours later, the gumdrop-shaped Dragon made a parachute descent into the Pacific Ocean, about 300 miles (500 kilometers) west of Mexico's Baja California. "Splashdown is confirmed!" SpaceX tweeted.

The capsule carried about 3,800 pounds (1,724 kilograms) of science experiments and equipment no longer needed aboard the station. It blasted off aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on Sept. 21 with more than 5,000 pounds (2,268 kilograms) of food, supplies, experiments and equipment including a prototype 3-D printer and 20 live mice that are being used in medical experiments to assess bone and muscle loss during long-duration spaceflights.

Dragon also delivered a $26 million NASA science instrument called RapidScat that was attached to the outside of the station to measure wind speeds over the oceans.

SpaceX and Orbital Sciences Corp. resupply the space station under the terms of commercial contracts totaling $3.5 billion. Orbital is due to launch a Cygnus freighter toward the station on Monday.

First published October 25 2014, 9:54 AM

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SpaceX Dragon Comes Home After Mouse Delivery

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SpaceX Dragon returns safely from ISS, splashes into Pacfic Ocean

Posted: at 10:45 pm

Oct. 25 (UPI) -- The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft that was residing at the International Space Station for the past month has successfully returned to Earth. It landed just over 300 miles off the coast of Mexico in the Pacific Ocean as planned.

The CRS-4/SpX-4, as it's known, launched from Cape Canaveral on September 21 and returned October 25. It carried nearly 5,000 pounds of supplies, including a 3D printer, 20 mice and two Extravehicular Mobility Unit batteries, to the station. It is returning with almost 4,000 pounds of unneeded equipment and supplies.

The 3D printer sent to the ISS was custom designed for printing in low gravity and has been used to print test parts that have been sent back with the Dragon capsule. The 20 mice are on the space station to study the "long-term effects of microgravity on mammalian physiology." The two EMU batteries, which are rechargeable lithium-ion batteries that power communication devices and oxygen circulation in space suits, have already been used for two spacewalks.

The capsule also brought the ISS-RapidScat instrument to the space station, a device to monitor ocean winds to help with weather prediction, including identifying hurricanes and tropical storms. The RapidScat is a replacement to the QuikScat, which was a satellite that served the same function for 10 years until it was decommissioned in 2009.

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SpaceX Dragon returns safely from ISS, splashes into Pacfic Ocean

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Rotten Potatos and the national intelligence genius genetic engineering study group – Video

Posted: at 10:45 pm


Rotten Potatos and the national intelligence genius genetic engineering study group
So look i know you bloody americans need help from time to time so heres a nice little place to go, Rotten Tomatos, ill give ya some stats on it and we can go from there. until next time i...

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Rotten Potatos and the national intelligence genius genetic engineering study group - Video

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The cost of cognition: The blessing and curse of human brain complexity

Posted: at 10:44 pm

By Shane Huntington

Neuroscientist Prof Seth Grant explains how genetics gave rise to the modern human brain, and how the very complexity that characterises our brains makes them vulnerable to neurological diseases that reveal themselves in mental illness.

SHANE HUNTINGTON

I'm Dr Shane Huntington. Thanks for joining us. Our ability to comprehend the environment around us, to adapt rapidly the changing conditions and to imaginatively express ourselves through art are all outstanding outcomes of an evolutionary process that has generated human brains of stunning complexity. But what is it that enables our grey matter to achieve such feats? Are these features solely the territory of human beings or do we share similar traits with other life forms? As with any mechanism, be it electrochemical or mechanical, added complexity leads to potential problems that are correspondingly complex to resolve. Diseases that affect the way we think and use our bodies are many and stem from a variety of causes but almost always situated in the brain. Today on Up Close we're joined by neuroscientist Professor Seth Grant to explore how the evolution of synapses has given vertebrates like us the ability to think and learn whilst also making us susceptible to mental illness and diseases of the brain. Seth Grant is Professor Molecular Neuroscience in the Centre for Neuroregeneration at the University of Edinburgh. He is in Melbourne to speak at the 2014 Melbourne Brain Symposium, an event jointly organised by the Melbourne Neuroscience Institute and the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health. He is also delivering the annual Kenneth Myer Public Lecture as a guest of the Florey Institute. Welcome to Up Close, Seth.

SETH GRANT

Yes, thank you, Shane.

SHANE HUNTINGTON

I think we'll start with just the role that synapses actually play in the brain. Can you give us a description of where they fit in?

SETH GRANT

Well most people will realise of course that all organs in the body are made from cells and there's very large numbers of them but the nerve cells in the brain are very unusual compared to other cells in other parts of the body because they have specialised junctions between them which are called synapses. Now not only do they have junctions between them but the nerve cells in the brain have very long extensions or fibres which have names like axons and dendrites. Those long axons and dendrites have on them about 10,000 synapses per cell which means then that every nerve cell in the brain can contact as many as 10,000 other nerve cells. Just contrast that with a liver cell for example. A liver cell may only touch another 10 or 20 cells so nerve cells and the synapses are what make the brain different to all other organs.

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The cost of cognition: The blessing and curse of human brain complexity

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DNA: Boxer Sarita Devi in trouble after AIBA’s suspension – Video

Posted: at 10:44 pm


DNA: Boxer Sarita Devi in trouble after AIBA #39;s suspension
AIBA has suspended India boxer L Sarita Devi and her coaches for an indefinite period because of her Asian Games protest. Also watch: Shiv Sena leader Ramesh...

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