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Category Archives: Transhuman News

15 Libertarianism – Video

Posted: April 16, 2014 at 12:42 pm


15 Libertarianism

By: phil instructor

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15 Libertarianism - Video

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Thoughts on the The Transhumanist Wager by Zoltan Istvan. – Video

Posted: at 12:41 pm


Thoughts on the The Transhumanist Wager by Zoltan Istvan.
On Amazon http://www.amazon.com/The-Transhumanist-Wager-Zoltan-Istvan-ebook/dp/B00AQQSY60.

By: aeolisticwill

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Thoughts on the The Transhumanist Wager by Zoltan Istvan. - Video

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[Blender Addon] – Futurism Addon Killed! – Video

Posted: at 12:40 pm


[Blender Addon] - Futurism Addon Killed!
There is a way for replace this addon with drivers!!! This technique is interactive.

By: oscurart

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[Blender Addon] - Futurism Addon Killed! - Video

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Futurist Gerd Leonhard: The Future of Media, Advertising and Communications – Video

Posted: at 12:40 pm


Futurist Gerd Leonhard: The Future of Media, Advertising and Communications
owned by the berrics please dont flag.

By: Business

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Futurist Flight Radio #8 – Video

Posted: at 12:40 pm


Futurist Flight Radio #8
We #39;re back with a new Radio Show, and we #39;re kicking off with an anthem that changed the world, Martin Garrix #39;s Animals. Troughout this week #39;s work, we #39;re sli...

By: DJ Night Eagle

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Futurist Flight Radio #8 - Video

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Station Supply Ship Launches from Kazakhstan #Nasa #Roscosmos – Video

Posted: April 15, 2014 at 4:47 pm


Station Supply Ship Launches from Kazakhstan #Nasa #Roscosmos
New Space Station Supply Ship Launches from Kazakhstan. The unpiloted Russian ISS Progress 55 cargo craft launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan...

By: w1TenMinutes

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Station Supply Ship Launches from Kazakhstan #Nasa #Roscosmos - Video

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KSP – Stock International Space Station – Part 3: Zvezda – Video

Posted: at 4:47 pm


KSP - Stock International Space Station - Part 3: Zvezda
This series is still in the making so your comments could make all the difference! Stage 3 is adding the Zvezda service module. Firstly please notice an erro...

By: GameplayReviewUK

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KSP - Stock International Space Station - Part 3: Zvezda - Video

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NASA OKs space station visit despite dead computer

Posted: at 4:47 pm

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) NASA is pressing ahead with Monday's planned launch of a supply ship despite a critical computer outage at the International Space Station, promising the situation is safe.

Mission managers decided Sunday to proceed with the countdown for the SpaceX capsule, Dragon, already a month late in delivering more than 2 tons of cargo.

"We're good to go," said NASA space station program manager Mike Suffredini.

Suffredini noted the many important supplies aboard the Dragon, including a new spacesuit and repair parts for the older spacesuits already in orbit. Much-needed food is also packed away.

"There's a certain amount of urgency to go ahead and get these vehicles" at the space station, he told reporters. These shipments have to fit around other space station operations, like crew comings and goings.

"Things start to bunch up," Suffredini said, "and so we're just trying to fly as soon as we safely can, which is what we believe we're doing."

This backup computer, located on the outside of the space station, mysteriously failed to work when activated Friday. The main computer kept operating perfectly, and the six-man crew was never in any danger. NASA debated whether to delay the SpaceX mission and, on Sunday, determined the station has sufficient redundancy to safely support the visiting vessel.

A spacewalk will be required, meanwhile, to replace the bad computer. Engineers don't know why it failed.

Suffredini said the spacewalk will be conducted by a pair of astronauts on April 22, using suits outfitted with new fan components to avoid the near-disaster that occurred last summer. An Italian astronaut almost drowned when his helmet flooded with water from the suit's cooling system.

An April 22 spacewalk will give SpaceX two chances to get its unmanned Dragon capsule flying. Good weather is forecast for Monday's 4:58 p.m. launch. If that doesn't work, the next launch attempt for the California company's Falcon rocket would come Friday.

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Research suggests scale of disruptive behaviour in schools is underestimated

Posted: at 4:46 pm

9 hours ago

(Phys.org) The true extent of poor pupil behaviour in schools is seriously underestimated, according to an academic from the University of East Anglia.

Prof Terry Haydn argues that until the scale, nature and complexity of the problem is acknowledged, shortfalls in the working atmosphere in classrooms are likely to continue.

Research by Prof Haydn questions the positive picture of behaviour presented by the government. He says recent Department for Education and Ofsted reports suggesting it is at least satisfactory in 99.7% of English schools and good or outstanding in 92% of schools are misleading. He warns that even the acknowledgement last year by Her Majesty's chief inspector of schools, Sir Michael Wilshaw, that disruptive behaviour is impeding the learning of 700,000 pupils may seriously underestimate the extent to which poor classroom climate limits pupil achievement.

Published today in the journal Review of Education, Prof Haydn's findings are from four studies conducted over 10 years. The research aimed to gain a more accurate insight into the extent to which deficits in the working atmosphere limit educational achievement and equality of educational opportunity in English schools. It also explored the difficulties schools and teachers face in reconciling the tensions between educational inclusion - that is, not removing difficult pupils from classrooms and schools - and the right to learn of all pupils in an environment which is most beneficial to learning.

Three of the studies focused on teacher perspectives on classroom atmosphere. They involved surveying 243 trainee teachers, who were also asked about their experiences as former pupils. Interviews were conducted with another 118 teachers, including 13 headteachers, across 80 schools. The fourth study surveyed the views of 708 secondary school pupils aged 11-15, from five schools.

The research used a 10 point scale, developed by Prof Haydn, which attempts to provide an indication of the extent to which deficits in classroom climate may hamper learning, with level 10 being where the working atmosphere is completely conducive to learning and level one being classrooms where learning is severely limited by pupil disruption. Many of the teachers interviewed felt that learning started to be affected as soon as the atmosphere fell below level eight on the scale, and this was a not uncommon occurrence. The research also indicates that the problem of behaviour is not limited to 'low level' disruption. Teacher and headteacher testimony suggested that schools and teachers often have to make difficult decisions about how to deal with 'pupils with problems', without simply excluding them, passing them on to other schools, or avoiding the challenge of admitting difficult pupils.

Prof Haydn, from the School of Education and Lifelong Learning at UEA, questions the view that any deficit in classroom climate can be attributed to inadequate teachers or poor headteachers. "This is not an aspect of education that is straightforward or susceptible to simple solutions or quick fixes. The suggestion that there are easy answers to the problems posed by challenging pupils underestimates the complexities of the issue, and the fact that cultural and 'out of school' factors are part of the problem, for example, unsupportive parents," he said. "The idea that level 10 is a natural or default state of affairs in terms of classroom climate, or that it is easy to create a classroom climate where all pupils behave and are keen to learn and do well, with any group of pupils, is simplistic and unhelpful."

The research raises the question of the extent to which there is a right to learn in classrooms in England, for pupils who are keen to learn and do well. Prof Haydn argues that behaviour cannot be interpreted as satisfactory if some pupils are impeding the learning of others and if teachers are not able to teach the class in a way that focuses primarily on optimising pupil learning rather than on control issues.

"There is a real danger that underestimating the complexity of these issues might lead to a failure to work constructively to address them, or a tendency for politicians of all parties to simply blame schools and teachers for anything that falls below level 10," said Prof Haydn. "The reality is that schools and teachers will always have to work hard, and with considerable initiative and ingenuity, to minimise the problem of disruptive behaviour. In England, as elsewhere in the developed world, there are many pupils who are not perfectly socialised and are not wholeheartedly committed to learning."

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Celera Researchers Investigating Genetic Risk Signature to Predict Atrial Fibrillation

Posted: at 4:46 pm

Ahmad Khalil started out studying how to build things like rocket engines and other mechanical systems as a mechanical engineering major in college. But, he added, he also took a liking to biology and the idea of applying engineering ideas to the study of living systems.

His PhD mentor, Angela Belcher at MIT, impressed upon him the reverse as well, that biological systems could also be used to engineer materials, and from her, he said, is where he got his "inspiration for bio-inspired engineering."

In his new lab at Boston University, Khalil is studying how cells respond to various environmental conditions and stressors.

"We develop engineering approaches and technologies to broadly study how cells behave, how they grow, how they develop, how they communicate," Khalil said, "and, in turn, to also re-direct those behaviors for useful applications for human health and energy and societal problems."

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Celera Researchers Investigating Genetic Risk Signature to Predict Atrial Fibrillation

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