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Submission + - Souped-up Immune Cells Force Leukemia into Remission

parallel_prankster writes: Augmented immune cells have made an impressive impact on the survival of people with leukemia. Thirteen people with a form of the cancer called multiple myeloma were treated with genetically engineered T-cells, and all improved. Cancers often develop because T-cells have lost their ability to target tumour cells, which they normally destroy. To retune that targeting, a team led by Aaron Rapoport at the University of Maryland in Baltimore engineered T-cell genes that coded for a receptor on the cell's surface. They extracted T-cells from each person, then inserted the engineered genes into these cells and re-injected them. The souped-up cells were better able to recognise proteins called NY-ESO-1 and LAGE-1, found on myeloma cells but not healthy ones. All 13 people also had the standard treatment for multiple myeloma, which boosts white blood cell count.
Three months after the injection, 10 of the 13 were in remission or very close to it – a 77 per cent response rate – and the others showed drastic reduction in their cancer. Standard treatment alone gives a response rate of between 33 and 69 per cent. The original paper is available here . The work is encouraging, but a trial that does not include the standard therapy is needed, says Holger Auner, a myeloma specialist at Imperial College London.
Science

Submission + - Has the mythical unicorn of materials science finally been found? (nature.com)

gbrumfiel writes: "For years, physicists have been on the hunt for a material so weird, it might as well be what unicorn horns are made of. Topological insulators are special types of material that conduct electricity, but only on their outermost surface. If they exist, and that's a real IF, then they would play host to all sorts of bizarre phenomenon: virtual particles that are their own anti-particles, strange quantum effects, dogs and cats living together, that sort of thing. Now three independent teams think they've finally found the stuff that the dreams of theoretical physicists are made of: samarium hexaboride."

Comment Re:Product Quality change? (Score 1) 491

You started off on the right track but then towards the end your reply sounds more like it is the fault of the US that an average Indian student is not up to par or something. Again, I did not want to generalize all Indian workers,, I have met some here, a lot of them are brilliant and hardworking, but it seems like there are far too many Indian engineers available to do the jobs at cheap prices simply because due to the culture in India, most guys (almost forcibly) seem to end up in a few fields. This was actually mentioned by Indians who work here. That was a culture difference I was talking about. You accused me of generalizing, yet you point out that Americans are not willing to work hard or long hours ? I have plently of American friends who dis-agree with that statement. I think that also is part of the cultural difference between Indians and Americans whereby Americans seem to be more willing to express their dis-comfort over being "exploited" a lot. I have seen that culture in San Jose as well. Indian engineers are always willing (almost forcibly) during Thanksgiving/Christmas holidays. Regarding conditions in India, why do you think that just because Americans have big houses means they are always happy. We have our own issues to deal with. They may not be issues like starvation etc that are seen in other countries but we do have personal and work issues here as well. You think sending kids to colleges here is easy in the US? Have you seen the tuitions of any good colleges these days?

Comment Product Quality change? (Score 1) 491

I understand that IBM wants to cut costs but with this scale work force migration to India, is that going to affect product quality ? I have worked with a ton of folks from India and I have absolutely nothing against Indians but I do see a difference in skill levels between American engineering grads and Indians (apart from those who come from the top institutions in India like IIT etc.) Most folks from India I have worked with are very sincere but they do not have a good understand of underlying concepts. Dont get me wrong, they are always willing to pick up, but there is always a ramp up time. My gut feeling is that since most guys in India opt for Engineering/Science backgrounds, sometimes we get folks that do not have their hearts genuinely in it.(I am sure there are folks who will show me that I am wrong about this.) The thing that is great about them is that they are willing to work night and day to get things done, but again that leads to patch work kind of solutions. Coming back to the main topic, has IBM had to undergo changes in its management style for India? Has quality been affected adversely or has it been better lately? There is also another thing about India. As good as the workers are in India, the government and the process itself can be a big hurdle. When you have to bribe 15 officials for every little expansion project, things can very easily get tied up in the bureaucratic process. How long is this effort going to be sustainable?

Comment Re:Did you ever wonder why (Score 2) 881

Actually, it is the other way around. If you look at major commercial news polling sites, their job is not to tell you who is winning, their job is to tell you that the elections are close. If they don't do that most people won't visit their sites and their traffic will be down. Nate Silver on the other just takes their data and is really just seeing an Obama victory from the same results, instead of calling the results close or whatever!

Comment Re:As a Canadian (Score 1) 881

Romney is not just hard to pin down, he is like a pin in a haystack. I cannot for the life of me, figure out what will Romney do when/if he becomes president. Most of the times I have seen him wiggle with his plans that I cannot even label him as Republican so much. With Obama, I have seen at least a desire to fix things. It is hard to blame all that is wrong with our country today on just Obama, I have seen numerous examples of congressmen not budging from their 50 year old ideas to work with Obama at all which I think is just because he is not from the same race as most of them. Regarding your health care concerns, I do think that it will increase the burden on some people, but overall the goal is to reduce the costs of healthcare to the nation by making it available to all and more importantly by reducing the number of people that cannot make healthcare payments. The way I see health care in the US is that it is inherently loss making unless people just don't fall sick at all. Insurance companies will obviously try to avoid making payments because that cuts into their profits and when people cannot make those payments themselves, they cause problems by declaring bankruptcy etc etc. With the health care law, Obama is trying to make everyone pay a little more so that health insurance companies get money but at the same time making sure that they are also forced to provide more healthcare to everyone.

Comment Re:I flunked out of electoral college (Score 1) 881

Apparently the thinking is like this: if you vote for someone who lost, then your vote "doesn't count." From that I conclude that since all the losers' votes votes didn't count, the winner is always unanimously elected. You can't get a stronger mandate than that, so it's our way of telling the winner that 100% of America agrees with them on 100% of issues. -- Incorrect, you are confusing between before and after the results. If the day before the results come out, it is very likely that your candidate is not going to get even 5% of the votes, then you may be throwing your vote away. I dont completely agree with this though. I just wanted to point out that your analogy is wrong. To me, people who are voting third party/green etc. are seeders. If in this election there is some marginally significant voting for these 3rd/4th party candidates then other folks will take notice and maybe 1 or 2 elections down the line these parties will get some decent voting maybe enough to win. But until then the votes are wasted on this years election. Just my 2 cents.

Comment Re:Dirt Proof? (Score 3, Funny) 167

Really, then why the hell are these paintings being developed? Why don't Europeans just drive properly through the black snow shit! I am tired of the Europeans can drive nonsense. The US just has far more drivers and far more emphasis on driving a person vehicle as compared to other countries and hence it gets a bad name. The point of this article is not that, the point in making these improvements is to remove any human errors out of the equation. Now what is the best way to provide current weather conditions to the driver. By painting the roads or via some technology in their car??

Comment Dirt Proof? (Score 2) 167

What happens when a really dirty set of tires goes over these markings on the road continuously? If they are not visible, will that lead to more accidents? It seems like a "smarter" thing to do would be to somehow network these highways electronically or using WiFi or something so that you can then use the computer in your car or smartphone to get very localized information about the conditions on the road on which you are driving.

Comment San Jose (Score 2) 795

Is anyone really surprised with this report? I know people who have worked as "contractors" with H1 B and if you ever see the way these IT contracting companies exploit the system, you will be shocked. It is a machinery in place in pretty much all of California and North East where folks that cannot get jobs here apply. Once they get in, they are given a quick training on some IT stuff and then their resumes are modified to make them look like "experts" in that area. After that they are fitted into companies mostly banks in NE and big companies like Cisco/IBM ( because there they are just 1 in a hundreds of thousands of employees and no one cares how they got in.) by way of contracting. Half of their pay is docked by the contract firms as part of the agreement and they are not given any health benefits. But hey, with even what those people make, they somehow still survive. They would rather be here than go back!

Comment There will be options later right? (Score 4, Insightful) 866

This guy is acting like as if his son will be forced to take chemistry all his life. There are some basic classes everyone takes and then as kids progress through school the curriculum becomes more and more flexible. Now if he is super interested in other classes I am sure he can point his kids towards simpler startup classes in coursera etc that might help. May be some thing is available for public speaking also. Or he has the option of homeschooling his kid.

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