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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Ax-1, 1st all-private crewed flight to ISS, aims to blaze trail for future missions – Space.com

Posted: February 28, 2022 at 7:48 pm

Axiom Space aims to set a standard for future crews with its pioneering mission to the International Space Station (ISS) next month.

Axiom's Ax-1, the first all-private crewed mission to the orbiting lab, is scheduled to launch on March 30 and last for 10 days. Ax-1's four spaceflyers three paying customers and Axiom's Michael Lpez-Alegra, who's commanding the mission will fly inside a SpaceX Dragon capsule, which will lift off atop a Falcon 9 rocket.

"There have been individuals that have flown on government flights, but never a completely private flight [to the ISS] ... So we're very excited about this being the very first one of those," Michael Suffredini, president and CEO of Axiom, said during a livestreamed press conference Monday (Feb. 28).

Axiom ultimately aims to operate its own commercial space station, and the Houston-based company plans to launch a private module to the ISS in about two years to start building on that goal, Suffredini said.

He said Ax-1, however, will be the first of "probably hundreds of missions" during the buildout of the Axiom space station and of other missions for services in low Earth orbit. This first crew, he added, has an ambitious research agenda in mind that will not be focused on having the members "paste their nose on the window."

Photos: The first space tourists

The Ax-1 crewmembers are gearing up for such work as they enter the home stretch of their training, Lpez-Alegra, a former NASA astronaut, said during the same briefing.

For now, the spaceflyers are focused on refresher training and on "collection of data for the experiments that we do; generally they like doing some pre-flight, in-flight and post flight," he said. (This is especially true of medical experiments that focus on how spaceflyers' bodies change due to the rigors of spaceflight.)

Lpez-Alegra added that the Ax-1 training has been broadly similar to that he experienced when preparing for NASA missions. "Our focus is always safety and mission success, and that's really unchanged," he said.

Lpez-Alegra noted that his crew is seeking to be "standard bearers" for how private astronauts should conduct themselves on the ISS, seeking to "set the bar very, very high" because they know they will be guests on the orbiting complex.

Lpez-Alegra said his relationships with space tourists in the past, when he was a NASA astronaut, were positive. But he also recognized the potential for disruption. "We're super sensitive to that, and we think that's a very good example to be setting for future crews. Everybody on the crew is ... very dedicated, very committed, very professional in this, and we really are taking this very, very seriously. It's not tourism."

The International Space Station: Facts, history and tracking

The crew's time will be largely spent on a "collection" of life science and technology demonstrations, Christian Maender, Axiom's director of in-space research and manufacturing, said during the press conference. More announcements will be forthcoming in future weeks, he added.

The medical investigations will include work with stem cells and cardiac health, and one of the key tech demonstrations will be in-space spacecraft assembly, which proponents hope reduces the costs involved with getting equipment up and running in orbit. (Officials noted that the work may also generate some good videos for public engagement.)

Looking ahead to the Axiom space station, Suffredini said the planned launch date for the first module will be in September 2024. The company should wrap up critical design reviews for the first two modules this summer, he added.

Among the modules that Axiom plans to launch is a research facility, which will help take over some of the in-orbit science responsibilities when the "ISS is ready to retire ... about a year before that happens," Suffredini.

Suffredini, who was NASA's International Space Station program manager from 2005 to 2015, said that it's possible Axiom's modules could support a mission as soon as 2028 if necessary. "We do have some flexibility there," he said.

Axiom will launch its modules to the ISS initially. The private facility will eventually detach from the ISS and become a bona fide space station of its own.

NASA wants to extend the ISS agreement to 2030, but that is pending pledges from the various partners that make up the multinational pact to extend beyond the current end date of 2024.

The largest partner, Russia, is now facing severe international sanctions in space (among many other industries) due to a military invasion of Ukraine last week. The invasion has been condemned by the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), among others; many NATO partners have also implemented industry and financial sanctions.

During Monday's call, Kathy Lueders, NASA's associate administrator of space operations, emphasized that NASA and Russia continue to work together as usual on the ISS and are committed to continuing that relationship.

"We as a team are operating just like we were operating three weeks ago," she said. "The teams, the controllers are still talking together. Our teams are still talking together. We're still doing training together. We're still working together."

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter@howellspace. Follow us on Twitter@Spacedotcomor Facebook.

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Science News Roundup: NASA shrugs off Roscosmos leader’s rant over U.S. sanctions and space station; Fossil of dinosaur with hard head and tiny arms…

Posted: at 7:48 pm

Following is a summary of current science news briefs.

NASA shrugs off Roscosmos leader's rant over U.S. sanctions and space station

NASA on Friday shrugged off public comments from the head of its Russian counterpart suggesting U.S. sanctions imposed against Moscow over the Ukraine crisis could "destroy" U.S.-Russian teamwork on the International Space Station (ISS). Dmitry Rogozin, director-general of Russian space agency Roscosmos, took to Twitter on Thursday denouncing new constraints on high-tech exports to Russia that U.S. President Joe Biden said were designed to "degrade their aerospace industry, including their space program."

Fossil of dinosaur with hard head and tiny arms found in Argentina

Scientists have unearthed in Argentina the remains of a previously unknown species of meat-eating dinosaur that lived about 70 million years ago that had puny arms and may have used its powerful head to ram its prey. The fossil skull of the Cretaceous Period dinosaur, named Guemesia ochoai, was discovered in Argentina's northwestern Salta province. The researchers said it likely belongs to a carnivorous group of dinosaurs called abelisaurs, which walked on two legs and possessed only stub-like arms, even shorter than those of North America's Tyrannosaurus rex.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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International Space Station to retire by crashing into Pacific Ocean by 2031 | Times of Oman – Times of Oman

Posted: at 7:48 pm

NASA laid out the details of how it plans to retire the International Space Station (ISS) in an official transition plan for the station that was sent to US Congress this week.

The US space agency intends to retire the landmark research outpost within the next eight to nine years, plunging the massive structure into a remote part of the Pacific Ocean, nicknamed Spacecraft Cemetery.

How will the ISS retire?

NASA is aiming for the space station's re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere in January 2031, according to the agency's budget estimates.

The ISS mission control will lower its altitude, before performing a final maneuver to ensure it lands in the "South Pacific Oceanic Uninhabited Area (SPOUA)," in an area known as Point Nemo.

"ISS operators will perform the ISS re-entry burn, providing the final push to lower ISS as much as possible and ensure safe atmospheric entry," according to the transition plan.

A symbol of international cooperationThe space station travels at a speed of five miles per second (8 kilometers per second), orbiting Earth every 90 minutes at a distance of 400 km (248 miles) above the surface.

It is run by five space agencies with 15 countries involved, making it a symbol of decades of international cooperation.

The first module of the ISS was launched into orbit in November 1998, and three years later, the first crew took up residence there.

Since then, the space station has served as a hub for scientific research and has been staffed by a rotating crew of three to six astronauts.

Commercial space stationsNASA has described the retirement of the ISS as a "transition to commercial services."

The space station will be replaced by "one or more commercially-owned and -operated" space platforms, NASA said in a statement.

"The private sector is technically and financially capable of developing and operating commercial low-Earth orbit destinations, with NASA's assistance," Phil McAlister, director of commercial spaceflight at NASA headquarters.

"We look forward to sharing our lessons learned and operations experience with the private sector to help them develop safe, reliable, and cost-effective destinations in space," he said.

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Russia Intensifies Censorship Campaign, Pressuring Tech Giants – The New York Times

Posted: February 26, 2022 at 11:12 am

On Feb. 16, a Roskomnadzor official said companies that did not comply by the end of the month would face penalties. In addition to fines and possible shutdowns or slowdowns, the penalties could disrupt ad sales, search engine operations, data collection and payments, according to the law.

For those companies that have not started the procedure for landing we will consider the issue of applying measures before the end of this month, Vadim Subbotin, deputy head of Roskomnadzor, told the Russian Parliament, according to Russian media.

Human-rights and free-speech groups said they were disappointed that some of the tech companies, often viewed inside Russia as less beholden to the government, were complying with the law without public protest.

The ulterior motive behind the adoption of the landing law is to create legal grounds for extensive online censorship by silencing remaining opposition voices and threatening freedom of expression online, said Joanna Szymanska, an expert on Russian internet censorship efforts at Article 19, a civil society group based in London.

Mr. Chikov, who has represented companies including Telegram in cases against the Russian government, said he met with Facebook last year to discuss its Russia policies. Facebook executives sought advice on whether to pull out of Russia, he said, including cutting off access to Facebook and Instagram. The company complied with the laws instead.

Mr. Chikov urged the tech companies to speak out against the Russian demands, even if it results in a ban, to set a wider precedent about fighting censorship.

There have been times when the big tech companies have been leaders in terms of not only technology but also in civil liberties and freedom of expression and privacy, he said. Now they behave more like big transnational corporations securing their business interests.

Anton Troianovski and Oleg Matsnev contributed reporting.

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Racism, censorship, and sexism: The price of being conservative in college – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 11:12 am

Faced with racism, censorship, and sexism, life for a conservative on an American college campus is harder than ever, according to students from around the country.

With few allies for them at school, conservative students have come to the 2022 Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Florida, to tell their stories.

"It's not fun. We've been persecuted several times," Preston Parra, a 20-year-old student at the University of West Georgia said. "I actually had to take a case up to the vice president. I didnt report anyone specifically, but I was called a racial slur on campus."

WATCH: 'FREEDOM CONVOY' TRUCKER REACTS TO BEING BEATEN BY OTTAWA POLICE

Everyone expects white conservatives to be racist, he said, but Parra, who is of Colombian descent, endures the most attacks from his campus's self-proclaimed liberals and other people of color, including the individuals who called him the slur, he said.

"They happened to actually be black. You see all the time in the media that white people are portrayed as the enemy and the most racist, but growing up as a brown kid in middle school and elementary school, I got bullied more from people of my own color or black people than I ever did by white people," Parra said. "So it's very important we see there is such a double-standard when it comes to racism. People are going around saying the N-word on the liberal side of things, but if you ever heard it on the conservative side, it is a blowup."

"I, myself, am brown. I come from a minority community, and I reported [the incident] to the vice president. I told him, 'Hey, this is going on on campus. Its got to stop.' He nominated me as chairman of the code of conduct board," he continued.

Many conservatives do not feel comfortable speaking up, but doing so can put them in positions to make change, Parra said.

Sexism is another major challenge facing conservatives, especially women, on America's campuses, according to Rachel Ress, a student at Florida Atlantic University.

Ress, 19, said she was originally slated by the school to live in the same residence as a male student.

When she explained to school officials that the arrangement made her uncomfortable, she said they said the only thing wrong with the situation was her attitude.

"I was housed initially with a boy and told that I was the problem because of my Christianity and not wanting to embrace the situation," according to Ress.

"I was like, 'I'm a girl. I want to be with girls.' I had never had an experience like that. I'm glad we sorted it out, but it was hard to be shamed for traditional values in such an untraditional setting."

Georgetown University is an example of a left-leaning school that can be unwelcoming to tradition, according to 22-year-old Andrew Alfonso.

"Theres definitely a lot of assh**** and a lot of real aggression coming from kids on more of the Left," Alfonso said. "I know one time we had a conservative speaker on campus, and a lot of kids ended up protesting that, and it got pretty ugly.

"Weve kind of been siloed," he continued. "It can definitely be difficult at times."

Inside the classroom, life doesn't get easier for conservatives, several students lamented.

"There are some times where I will want to write an essay about one thing, and then I have to hold myself back," Deanna Mancuso, a 20-year-old FAU student, said.

Censorship, whether it be imposed by professors or the students themselves, is a common denominator among America's institutions for higher learning, students agreed.

"I definitely feel at times I cant portray who I am completely because of the fear of judgment," said 19-year-old Dalia Calvillo of FAU.

"But that is something you have to deal with, and you always have to stand up for yourself."

Parra echoed Calvillo's sentiment.

"Many times, professors have tried to censor us on campus. Were not letting that happen," he said. "We're fighting against it, we're shining a light on it, and were publicizing it. Thats the key. You have to publicize all this stuff."

CPAC offers young conservatives the chance to learn about tools they can take back with them and use to make a difference at their schools and in their communities, according to Parra.

"I came to CPAC last year and took back a lot of values then," he said. "So now Im running for [state House] District 64 in Georgia, and were just doing everything we can to make sure we are preserving all the values that are important to true God-loving Americans."

Both Calvillo and Mancuso said they want to use what they learn in Orlando to become better leaders on campus.

"I hope to learn a little bit more about what it takes to be a great leader and show that at my university," Calvillo said.

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It's not just important to be a leader, Mancuso argued. A leader "has to be someone who is unapologetically who they are."

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Take One Step This Week Toward Combating Censorship: This Weeks Book Censorship News, February 25, 2022 – Book Riot

Posted: at 11:12 am

If youre fired up about book challenges and want to do one actionable thing about it that requires little more than a few minutes of time, this ones for you.

One of the several possible ways to fight book challenges is being tuned into your local school and library boards. School boards tend to be elected offices, while public library boards can either be elected or can be appointed. In the case of elections, you, as a voter and citizen of your community, can not only choose to endorse a candidate who cares about intellectual freedom, but you can run for those positions yourself. If your board utilizes the appointment system, you can submit an application for open positions.

While running for and sitting in those positions can take a lot of time, voting for those positions is part of civic duty.

Heres your action step this week: look up your local school and public library board. Who is sitting on it? How did they get there was it election or appointment? How long is their term? When do elections for open positions happen? Its likely a board seat on either may be up for spring elections in April or May this year, and/or there may be open positions during the fall election season in October or November.

If you find there are open positions coming up for election, research the candidates. What language do they use to talk about how they see themselves in the role? By now, youre likely conscious of some critical words that define those seeking to censor educators and the materials they use or have available in schools and libraries (look for words such as parental rights or oversight, among others).

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It might feel like a small step, but many small steps taken add up. The more information you know about your own community, the more youre able to be an active participant in it. The death of local news has been a tremendous detriment to so many towns, and where information used to be readily shared through those sources has fallen instead to partisan-aligned social media outlets. Were all much more responsible for our own civic education in the wake of it.

The only way the war against intellectual freedom is going to be won is by being armed with information that allows you to understand the responsibility and the power in using your voice at the poll, in the community, and at or on these local boards.

A favor to ask before diving into the roundup for the week. Once youve done this work and looked up your school and library boards and the policies around them, can you share that information? This handy form is anonymous but will help compile a resource for people across the country to be better informed. Bonus: you can use it as your personal template for this research send yourself a copy of the form for your own records.

Want to do something for the authors and books being challenged that doesnt cost money and doesnt require you to leave your couch? This set of recommended actions is great, and it acknowledges the inherent privilege in the idea buying books is the solution.

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Take One Step This Week Toward Combating Censorship: This Weeks Book Censorship News, February 25, 2022 - Book Riot

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Painting Black History in the Time of Censorship for Young Readers: A Conversation with Nikkolas Smith, Illustrator of 1619 Project’s Born on the…

Posted: at 11:12 am

In Born on the Water, the childrens picture book accompaniment to The 1619 Project, Smiths paintings bring the cultures of West Africans to life, showing the pre-enslavement history often omitted from classrooms.

One of the things that me and Nikole talk about is theres so much rich history, and culture, and so much joy in these tribes and these people that were stolen from their land, Smith told The 74. You really have to understand all of that to understand how heavy it was, and how tragic it was We really just wanted to show that life.

From his plant-filled Los Angeles home, Smith paired Hannah-Jones and Watsons poetry with family traditions, beautiful hair, dances, imagery that evoked death and spirits. Using a digital speed-sketch style, his illustrations began as monochrome shapes and skeletons in Photoshop, impressions of how he felt after reading and internalizing their verses.

The book hit shelves last fall amid a wave of proposed state laws aimed at preventing students from learning a mythical critical race theory and divisive concepts. In at least four states, legislation attempted to ban the 1619 Project explicitly. So far, Florida has succeeded.

While a vocal minority of lawmakers and parents believe school aged children are too young to grapple with just how violence against Black people was intrinsic to the nations founding, many more yearned for the content. Born on the Water topped bestseller lists as families headed into 2022, looking for ways to talk to children about the country theyll inherit.

Smiths artistic approach seemed a natural fit. In digital paintings, he added layer after layer of color and symbols clouds modeled after picked cotton, the shape of a person sinking underwater, or a green toy tied to a tree, the only sign of life left after colonizers stole a tribe to convey anger and fear in ways young readers could feel without being traumatized by explicit violence.

Long-inspired by Nina Simone to reflect the times, hed balanced trauma and life in childrens illustrations for years, painting Tamir Rice, Elijah McClain and others killed by police.

His second book, My Hair is Poofy and Thats Ok, explored the internalized hatred young Black children develop from racism and microaggressions.

Through his work, which he describes as art as therapy, he tries to help himself and viewers heal the broken bones of society.

For them to say, we have a book about the transatlantic slave trade and slavery, and all of these very heavy things that we as Black people in America, we think about it all the time I felt like thats one of the biggest broken bones in America, he said.

Remember that these werent slaves that were taken, these were brilliant people, and they did some amazing things They knew how to design and build cities, they built this country, and thats why they were stolen, because they were brilliant and good at what they do. We just want to remind people of that, and also how much they fought and resisted and got their freedom back.

And [for] the young folks who are not Black, theres no shame in anything were saying. We want people to grow up having an accurate understanding of what happened in this country. I feel like its really not until we address all of these things openly and honestly that were gonna really grow and move forward as a nation.Nikkolas Smith

Smith blurred linear understandings of time by using symbols across generations, to help young readers understand that [ancestors] vision of the future, their wildest dreams are now embodied in us [were] having to take that mantle and move forward.

And in faces, Smith balanced the world of feelings bound up in the Black experience: from shame, when the protagonist cannot make a family tree beyond three generations, to pride, after her grandmother recounts the rich history of tribes pre-enslavement. Her hair, in Bantu knots, and clothing give reference to past generations.

Ultimately, Smith hopes his work can help the next generation of Black youth have a sense of pride. Over the next few months, hell paint scenes of Ruby Bridges, the first young person to integrate a Southern school in 1960. And next year, hell collaborate with celebrated author Timeka Fryer Brown on a picture book about the Confederate flag.

He expects both will end up on some banned lists.

All we can do is keep putting the truth out there, Smith said, and itll get into the right hands.

All paintings are illustrated by Nikkolas Smith for Born on the Water, a publication of Kokila, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers.

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Nicky Beer – Must We Become the Pitiless Censors of Ourselves? – Lavender Magazine

Posted: at 11:12 am

In many ways, the modern audience has grown accustomed to trusting in lies. Weve been suspending our disbelief to enjoy an evening of theatre for millenniawhether were witnessing Medea fly away on a chariot pulled by dragons or turning a blind eye to slapdash producorial edit in the latest episode ofDrag Race. What matters to a modern audience is less about the verisimilitude of the show and more the emotion of the moment, and, in the right light, an illusion can feel as true as anything.

Nicky Beers latest poetry collection,Real Phonies and Genuine Fakes, explores the transformative and necessary power of illusion. This third collection follows Beers 2015 book,The Octopus Game, which examines the fluid and elusive sea creature, among other things.Real Phoniesis a continuation of the idea that subterfuge and fakery exists in the real and natural world, but unlike our cephalopod counterpart, we obtain our disguises from this world and splice them into our identities. Octopuses are masters of camouflage, Beer explains, so camouflage and illusion were something that I was very interested in in [The Octopus Game], and I realized . . . I wanted to keep exploring concepts of deception and illusion. Fans of Beers poetry will note some significant continuity between the two worksMarlene Deitrich appears in both, for exampleas Beer moves us from the seafloor to the mainstage.

InReal Phonies, Beer immediately pulls readers into an amusement park of masquerade (the first poem entitled Drag Day at Dollywood is flush with the fabulous and claustrophobic language of impersonation). What follows is a tour of the funhouse, featuring such notable characters as Dolly Parton, Marlene Deitrich, Batman, and, briefly, David Bowie. Were invited to marvel at these people and the masks they wear in one space, and directed to consider our own masks in the next. Much like gazing into a funhouse mirror, Beers poetry is as equally fascinated with artifice as it is the distorted person underneath it, and readers are often asked to consider these twoi.e., the mask and the person underneathin conversation.

Because, from Beers perspective, our real selves are connected deeply with a myriad of false faces we employ, sometimes subconsciously, in order to live. In the same way that we choose to believe Dolly Partons iconic hair is her own, we have learned to put some trust in certain falsehoods for our own sakes. When asked if there is such a thing as a trustworthy illusion, Beer excitedly replies thatReal Phoniesis an endeavor to examine our relationship with fakery and illusion, and including, I think, self-deception. Whats the degree to which we come to depend on or trust lies that we tell ourselvesaboutourselves? And how do we depend on those lies to navigate or survive the world? Much like the octopus, we learn to disguise ourselves in certain dangerous situations, but unlike the octopus, were far more likely to deceive ourselves in the process.

As is often the case, the truth is often hidden in the details, and readers ofReal Phoniesare privy to the genuine emotions behind Beers marvelous imagery. This book is the first time Im writing explicitly about my mental illness, Beer reveals, describing her experience of performing wellness in her daily life while masking the real depression and anxiety that was causing her pain. Beers poetry captures the strangely backwards way we protect ourselves from outer scrutiny, even when we need help:

Shes been nominated for an Emmy for her portrayal of

the concerned line between your doctors eyebrows

as he listened to the giant, sodden moth trapped

between your shoulders, the ruin you carry

around with you like a speech youre always prepared

to give. (from Cathy Dies)

Beyond the desire to seem healthy and happy to the outside world,Real Phoniesspends a significant amount of time contemplating the way in which women and queer people regularly perform to live in a heteronormative, male-dominated world. In one poem, a female speaker confronts Bruce Wayne and laughs at his unoriginal idea to wear a mask in dangerous places: . . . the world is a dark alley / hiding a gun in its mouth. / It has more than enough / reasons to make you/cover your face (Dear Bruce Wayne,). For the outsider, the world is a foreign and often hostile place, and Beers poetry acknowledges these experiences with a mix of delightful humor and deep, delicate sadness.

Real Phoniesis critical of the facades we choose to believe in, sure, but underneath it all is Beers genuine love of performance and the transformative, healing power of suspending disbelief in the right moments. Like the drag queens in the opening poem Drag Day at Dollywood, Beer invites us to join the parade of pretenders for a moment and feel the fantasy (or, at least, to sit back and enjoy the show): Thousands of pairs of Dolly lungs breathe in / gasoline and grease, breathe out glitter.

Real Phonies and Genuine Fakesis available now for pre-order fromMilkweed Editions, and poetry fans in the Denver area can join Nicky Beer atbookbarfor a release party on March 8th. For more information on Nicky Beer, visitnickybeer.com.

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Pandemic, Elon Musk, Squid game and Metaverses The Puzzle Has Been Completed | Bitcoinist.com – bitcoinist.com

Posted: at 11:11 am

In the last century, the world has seemed to have gone crazy: problems with overpopulation, food shortage, environmental disasters, geopolitical conflicts, depletion of natural resources In the 21st century, new technologies have brought new challenges. Just think about it Bitcoin mining consumes more electricity annually than the whole of Argentina, which is about 121.36 terawatt-hours of electricity per year. And this is just the top of the iceberg. The coronavirus pandemic, which broke into the lives of billions of people in November 2019, exacerbated the situation many times over. It seemed that we were witnessing the decline of civilization, and humanity was threatened with extinction. Not on our life. It should be noted that people have a great ability the ability to adapt to any situation, including the most toxic ones. Thanks to this, millions of years ago, people became the dominant species on the Earth, and it is possible that such skills will allow them to dominate other worlds in the future.

By the way, about other worlds talks about the colonization of planets have long ceased to be science fiction. Given the deplorable state to which mankind has brought the Earth, the idea of resettlement to other planets is increasingly becoming the subject of discussion in scientific society. We are witnessing a growing interest in this topic in almost all spheres of life. Films are mass-produced: The Martian, Mission to Mars, Five Years on Mars, books are published: Flight to Mars, One Way Ticket, The Future of Humanity. Elon Musk officially announces that by 2050 he plans to send 1 million people to Mars. On the colonized planet, it is planned to mine diamonds and various unique minerals that are abundant under the surface, as well as to launch mining on an industrial scale, which will allow blockchain technologies to continue developing without loading the Earths energy networks. Hundreds of TV shows are devoted to the prospects of colonization of the red planet. Of course, the gaming industry does not stand aside either: Entropia Universe, RimWorld, Beyond Earth and dozens of other games have firmly taken their place in the hearts of gamers.

If all of the above topics row your boat, then we recommend you to pay attention to a completely new product that intriguingly stands out against the background of other innovations in the IT industry. We are talking about the MIMIspace project. Surely you ask what is so unique that a computer game can offer?

Firstly, MIMIspace is not just a game, but a game universe, or, a metaverse.

Secondly, MIMIspace has a well-developed plot backstory (Lore), in which the creators tried to clearly show where the world is rolling and what awaits humanity in the future if nothing is done.

Thirdly, the MIMIspace metaverse is built in such a way that everyone will find something interesting:

As you can see, the project is really large-scale and impresses with its scope.

A little intrigue is added by the project team, which, in accordance with the best traditions of cypherpunk, decided to remain anonymous. This choice has a fair amount of sense, given that already at the stage of preliminary synthetic tests, MIMIspace Chain demonstrates TPS indicators that are several times higher than the capabilities of competing Web 3.0 solutions by Solana, Cosmos, Polkadot. One can only guess who exactly are the developers of the new mega-powerful blockchain.

In certain circles of the GitHub community, there were rumors about possible connection between the start of the MIMIspace Chain development and the mysterious transaction of 50 BTC (mined in the first month of the Bitcoin launch and staying idle for 11 years), which in 2020 made a lot of noise and excited the international crypto community. Rumors or insider knowledge time will tell.

You can endlessly talk about the benefits of MIMIspace and discuss the prospects. But as the saying goes, seeing is believing. Therefore, we recommend visiting the official website of the project and perform pre-registration. By the way, the team promises encouraging bonuses to users who register under the early access program.

http://www.mimispace.iohttps://twitter.com/mimispace_iohttps://t.me/MIMIspace_iohttps://m.youtube.com/channel/UC-ukucGvZKN7w9l9aUid4ZA

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Pandemic, Elon Musk, Squid game and Metaverses The Puzzle Has Been Completed | Bitcoinist.com - bitcoinist.com

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Stop in Cleveland? City makes its way into Elon Musk joke on The Tonight Show – cleveland.com

Posted: at 11:11 am

CLEVELAND, Ohio Cleveland wound its way into a gag on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Thursday night.

Well, guys, heres some really sad news, the host said in his monologue. I read that in the past few days Elon Musks net worth dropped below $200 billion. Thats right, Elon Musk is no longer worth over $200 billion. Now when he flies to space he has to connect in Cleveland.

Elon was shocked he lost billions, then went back to his latest project - teaching Teslas how to mamba.

Musk is, of course, the maverick financier-entrepreneur behind the electric Tesla cars and is the force behind SpaceX, which promotes civilian space flights and colonization of Mars.

The Wall Street Journal reported this week the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Musk on suspicion of insider trading. Teslas stock has fallen about 33% since Musk began selling billions of dollars worth of shares on Nov. 8 after he Tweeted a poll asking if he should sell 10% of his stock in the carmaker. Musks brother, Kimbal Musk, sold $108 million worth of shares in the company right before the poll was issued.

Wednesday, Teslas stock closed at $764.04 on Nasdaq before rising to $800.77 on Thursday.

Kimbal Musk co-founded The Kitchen Restaurant Group, which operated the now-closed restaurant Next Door, which was located in the Pinecrest development in Orange Village.

I am on cleveland.coms life and culture team and cover food, beer, wine and sports-related topics. If you want to see my stories,heres a directory on cleveland.com. Bill Wills of WTAM-1100 and I talk food and drink usually at 8:20 a.m. Thursday morning. Twitter: @mbona30.

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Stop in Cleveland? City makes its way into Elon Musk joke on The Tonight Show - cleveland.com

Posted in Mars Colonization | Comments Off on Stop in Cleveland? City makes its way into Elon Musk joke on The Tonight Show – cleveland.com

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