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Girl’s heart regenerates thanks to artifical heart

This is a pretty cool story from my homeland. Doctors implanted an artificial heart in a 15 year old girl while they waited for a replacement human heart to transplant. In the meantime, the girl’s own heart regenerated.

New progress in fighting Alzheimer’s

News via Eureka Alert Draining away brain’s toxic protein to stop Alzheimer’s Scientists are trying a plumber’s approach to rid the brain of the amyloid buildup that plagues Alzheimer’s patients: Simply drain the toxic protein away. That’s the method outlined

Aging as a Computing Problem

This week, Dr. Gordon Lithgow, associate professor at the Buck Institute, showed up in San Francisco and spoke to a packed house on aging, new technologies and why interdisciplinary connections are helping to unravel the mysteries of growing old. While

The Long Street View

Google’s mapping service just introduced a new feature called “Street View,” offering detailed photos of addresses in San Francisco, New York, Las Vegas, Denver and Miami. While the company might not be breaking any privacy laws, the service raises concerns

Teleporting data — getting closer to a star trek world

The Independent reports that “Scientists have set a new record in sending information through thin air using the revolutionary technology of quantum teleportation – although Mr Spock may have to wait a little longer for a Scotty to beam him

Watson’s genome deciphered and made public

Well, except for the part that contains his apolipoprotein E gene, which predisposes a person toward Alzheimer’s disease. Maybe he thinks he will get the disease. I saw him on Charlie Rose a few months ago and he said, “Right

Soft drinks can cause DNA damage = aging

UK aging expert Professor Peter Piper recently spoke out against what he believes is a major health problem. It seems that the sodium benzoate used to preserve soft drinks may also be responsible for DNA damage. When Piper applied the

Retiring isn’t what people expect

HSBC released a new study yesterday called “The Future of Retirement,” showing that early retirement is no longer very popular. They interviewed 21,000 people in 21 countries, and in the US, the study says that, “older people contribute $19.2 billion