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Comment Re:LinkedIn (Score 2) 169

I am on LinkedIn every day. I work in publishing, and each magazine in my company has a group on LinkedIn specific to their publication. In addition, each publication has a group for each event they put on (executive summits). People have extended conversations about the goings-on in the industry in these groups (the industry I'm in is enterprise mobility). So yes, there is an active user base, but it's a lot smaller than the number of registered users who just post their resume and do nothing else with the site until they need to find a job.
Robotics

Snakelike Robot To Treat Soldiers During Battle 130

Al writes "Technology Review has an article about a snake-like robotic arm that could soon be used to treat injured soldiers as they lie on the battlefield. Developed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, the snakebot attaches to a stretcher and is controlled remotely using a joystick, allowing a doctor to assess a soldier's injuries as the bullets fly by. In future, the robotic arm will be fitted with sensors allowing it to measure vital signs and probe for internal bleeding. Here's a brief video of a prototype arm in action. The arm will become part of the US military's high-tech stretcher, called the Life Support for Trauma and Transport system. This is essentially a portable intensive-care unit, with a ventilator, defibrillator, and other physiological monitors, and it's currently being used in areas of Iraq and Afghanistan."

Comment not quite... (Score 1) 1271

You *can* control your genes, according to a new study...

Change your genes in 90 days...sounds impossible, right? Maybe not. A new study by researchers at the Univ. of California San Francisco (UCSF) shows that good nutrition in combination with stress management and exercise can "turn off" disease-promoting genes linked to cancer, heart disease, and inflammation and can "turn on" protective disease-preventing genes.

In this study, 30 men with prostate cancer decided to forego conventional treatments such as surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, instead opting for comprehensive lifestyle changes including a plant-based diet, moderate exercise (walking 30 minutes per day), stress-management techniques, and participating in a weekly one-hour support group. After three months, not only had these men lost weight and lowered their blood pressure, but the activity in over 500 of their genes had changed. The changes included increased activity in health-promoting genes and the shutting down of disease-promoting genes, including some related to prostate and breast cancer.

The authors of the study believe that its implications are not just limited to men with prostate cancer. What that means for the rest of us is that good eating habits and exercise can not only stop or reverse the progression of heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and other chronic conditions, it just might improve our genetic destinies as well. It means that the excuse of "I have bad genes, there's nothing I can do about it" is out the window. Genetic predisposition to any condition is only that: a predisposition, not a certainty set in stone. Making positive lifestyle changes with respect to diet and exercise can not only improve our current health but, through these newly discovered genetic changes, improve our possibility of good future health. It looks like it's not just all in our genes after all.
User Journal

Journal Journal: Earth Day: another inconvenient truth

http://www.rdmag.com/ShowPR~PUBCODE~014~ACCT~1400000100~ISSUE~0804~RELTYPE~PR~ORIGRELTYPE~EDNT~PRODCODE~00000000~PRODLETT~JW.html

Earth Day: another inconvenient truth
April 22, 2008
User Journal

Journal Journal: Bringing fun into science

http://www.rdmag.com/ShowPR~PUBCODE~014~ACCT~1400000100~ISSUE~0804~RELTYPE~PR~ORIGRELTYPE~EDNT~PRODCODE~00000000~PRODLETT~GK.html

April 15, 2008

Bringing fun into science

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