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Medicine

Sea Sponge Extract Conquers Resistant Bacteria 132

Science News has an article on research into a compound found in a particular kind of sea sponge that seems to have the ability to restore antibiotics' effectiveness against resistant bacteria. The hope is that, since the compound is not itself deadly or even harmful to bacteria, it may skew the antibiotic-bacteria arms race in our favor. "Chemical analyses of the sponge's chemical defense factory pointed to a compound called algeferin. Biofilms, communities of bacteria notoriously resistant to antibiotics, dissolved when treated with fragments of the algeferin molecule. And new biofilms did not form. So far, the algeferin offshoot has, in the lab, successfully treated bacteria that cause whooping cough, ear infections, septicemia and food poisoning. The compound also works on... [MRSA] infections, which wreak havoc in hospitals. 'We have yet to find one that doesn't work,' says [one of the researchers]."

Comment Don't smash it, build something stupid out of it! (Score 1) 527

Wind chimes! Coasters! Frisbees! These things: http://www.instructables.com/id/Twitchy_Your_E_waste_Friend/ ...if that isn't safe enough, your data is too important and you should immediately quit your job and sever all ties with society and go live in a tent with a squirrel. Trust me, you'll feel better: Squirrels are great.

Comment HG Wells... (Score 1) 1419

I just re-read a bunch of HG Wells, Edgar Rice Burroughs... Raphael Sabatini wrote some great adventure books (I got several public domain texts from archive.org, reading them using my old Palm 5!). Also, Frankenstein and Dracula, they're all public domain now! Great stuff. A few other suggestions (from my kids): Mistmantle Chronicles (about squirrels) and Warriors (about cats). Have a great trip!

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