Sunday 19 February 2012

Week 7 - 12 February to 18 February

I got sick of hearing all the doom and gloom given to us as 'news' by the media so decided to look every day for some good news. Sometimes it's quite difficult to find. I post the good news for the day on Twitter and every week I plan on posting a summary here.

Found some good news? If I didn't spot it please feel free to add it.

Well here goes - the 7th week of 2012


12th February 2012 - Researchers produce brain tissue from skin cells
Genetic scientists claim to have made a major breakthrough. They have persuaded skin cells to turn to stem cells and from them made brain cells. The hope is that these cells will be of major use in the study of brain disorders and lead to cures for Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy and strokes.


Full story at http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/researchers-produce-brain-tissue-from-a-few-scratches-20120212-1szpg.html

13th February 2012 - A poor day for good news (Well it was Monday)
So let's concentrate on what didn't happen. In 1866 a series of bank robberies occured in the USA. The bank in Liberty, Missouri was robbed of $15,000, on 13th February. A fortune in those days and worth almost $250,000 today. It was believed to be the first of a series of robberies committed by Jessie James. The good news is that there isn't a modern Jesse James equivalent. (Unless you count Wall Street bankers.)

Full story: 




14th February 2012 - Real steak but not from a cow.
I came across this article from ABC Australia, about growing steak without involving raising and killing cattle. It's a subject I've been following for a while, since we introduced it in our book series A Vested Interest. The idea is that by taking a biopsy from a cow (or any other animal) it should be possible to culture the meat. The result will be real beef/pork/chicken e.t.c. (Not fake as the article says). The article is a little behind the times because a hamburger has already been produced. At the moment it's an expensive process with that hamburger costing thousands of dollars. It will become less expensive and more flavour intensive though. In the future you should be able to buy a cultured steak which tastes delicious but has not involved the death of a cow or the use of the 70% of arable land currently used for raising livestock.


Full story: http://www.abc.net.au/environment/articles/2012/02/13/3428033.htm

15th February 2012 -  Genetically modified fly gut bacteria used to fight sleeping sickness
A lot of people are against genetic modification. It has, however a huge potential for eradicating disease. Now scientists have come up with a possible way of ridding the world of the scourge of sleeping sickness. The disease is caused by a parasite spread by the tsetse fly. Without treatment it's a fatal disease. With treatment 20% still die and it is an unpleasant process which victims describe as being like having fire in your veins. 


The new method developed involves modifying a bacteria normally found in the tsetse fly gut to destroy the parasite before it can infect humans.


    16th February 2012 - Cleaning up Space.
    For years we've been sending satellites into space and in the process have put a lot of space junk there also. Space junk can range from the fleck of paint, which left a crater half the depth of Space Shuttle Challenger's front window, to defunct satellites. There is concern that as these objects collide the amount of junk will increase to the point where it would be dangerous to travel through that area.


    Now the Swiss are developing a satellite to capture and destroy space junk. It's something we must do if we are to continue with space exploration and essential if we are ever to produce a space elevator.


    Full story and video: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17068279


    17th February 2012 - Creating a 'DNA robot' to target cancer cells.
    Scientists at Harvard have come up with a way of folding up DNA to trap cancer fighting drugs within it. The DNA can then be made to unfold and release the drugs next to the cancer cells they are designed to fight. This means better drug action and fewer side effects for cancer patients.
    18th February 2012 - European Court of Justice blocks net-filtering bid.
    The European Court of Justice has blocked a move by Belgian music royalty collecting firm SABAM to require the social network Netlog  stop users infringing copyright. 


    The ruling will have an impact on other court decisions relating to social networks.


    Full story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-17060112

    Take a touch of humour, add some genetic science and nanotechnology. Steep with conspiracy and stir in murder and despair. Season with romance between three people in a secret location. Garnish with morality.
    The result is 'A Vested Interest', a novel series by John and Shelia Chapman
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    (Until March 2012)

    Sunday 12 February 2012

    Week 6 - 5th to 11th February 2012

    I got sick of hearing all the doom and gloom given to us as 'news' by the media so decided to look every day for some good news. Sometimes it's quite difficult to find. I post the good news for the day on Twitter and every week I plan on posting a summary here.

    Found some good news? If I didn't spot it please feel free to add it.

    Well here goes - the 6th week of 2012


    5th February 2012 - Why is Sunday such a poor day for good news?.
    A massive earthquake DIDN'T strike Southern Italy and Sicily today and 30,000 people were NOT killed as a result. That makes quite a change from what happened in 1783 when a series of earthquakes devastated the area.


    Full story at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1783_Calabrian_earthquakes

    6th February 2012 - 3D Printer used to create a new jawbone
    We are all familiar with computer printers. There's probably one in your home if you are reading this. For the last few years though, 3D printers have started to appear. At the moment they are relatively expensive. Give it a few years though and you'll probably have one.


    Today, the use of a 3D printer was in the news because it was used to create a new jawbone for an 83 year old woman.



    Full story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-16907104



    Want a 3D printer? You can get a kit of parts to build one yourself for about $1,100 and could then use it to make the parts for another printer. It's perhaps not what you would need for a tungsten jawbone though http://store.makerbot.com/thing-o-matic-kit-mk7.html


    7th February 2012 - Google 'attention grabbing'?.
    Google has created a project designed to help solve huge problems by the application of breakthrough science and technology.


    The remarkably cynical news article I found suggests they were 'attention grabbing'. I prefer to think that Google now has the money and means to solve major problems 


    Hey Google - How are you getting on with your space elevator project?


    Full story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-16925842

    The image left is for a book on the space elevator produced by the Liftport group. get it from Amazon.com
    Liftport - The Space Elevator: Opening Space to Everyone


    8th February 2012 -  Gene Therapy Restores Vision in Both Eyes
    The University of Pennsylvania's Mahoney Institute of Neurological Sciences has managed to restore sight to patients with Leber's congenital amaurosis. This rare genetic disease leads to total blindness. Mutant forms of the RPE65 gene prevent the production of a crucial enzyme needed for sight.


    The researchers used a virus to carry normal copies of the gene into the victim's eyes which began producing the enzyme needed.


      9th February 2012 - New hope for Alzheimer's Disease.
      A cancer drug given to mice eliminates brain-damaging proteins, leading to improved cognition within days. The drug is already approved for human use - it's used to treat skin cancer, but will it work in humans?


      Many people are at risk of this debilitating disease so let's hope that there's something to this report in Scientific American


      Full story: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=alzheimers-disease-sympto


      10th February 2012 - Volunteers with spare time help plug holes in the climate record.
      Between 1915 and 1942 HMS Foxglove, a British minesweeper, patrolled the South Pacific. Each day weather measurements were taken and recorded in the ship's log. They formed a unique record of the climate in an era not covered by ice cores and before modern records of climate. 


      Transcribing the hand written records would have taken years. A group of volunteers split the task up and completed it in six months.


      You can help, if you have the time, just go to http://oldweather.org to find out more (NB the link shown in the Scientific American article is incorrect)
      11th February 2012 - 61 couples fall for each other at the Love Hearts factory.
      In New Mills, Derbyshire, England you'll find a candy manufacturer Swizzels Matlow. One of their products is a tube of slightly fizzy candy, each one with a raised romantic message in a heart shape. They are called 'Love Hearts'.


      It seems the romance theme is catching because no fewer than 61 couples, working at the factory have tied the knot.


      Full story: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/love-hearts-factory-where-61-couples-681158

      Take a touch of humour, add some genetic science and nanotechnology. Steep with conspiracy and stir in murder and despair. Season with romance between three people in a secret location. Garnish with morality.
      The result is 'A Vested Interest', a novel series by John and Shelia Chapman
      New Mills, Derbyshire

      Sunday 5 February 2012

      Week 5 - 29 January to 4 February

      I got sick of hearing all the doom and gloom given to us as 'news' by the media so decided to look every day for some good news. Sometimes it's quite difficult to find. I post the good news for the day on Twitter and every week I plan on posting a summary here.

      Found some good news? If I didn't spot it please feel free to add it.

      Well here goes - the 5th week of 2012
      29th January 2012 - Iran being reasonable? Iran admits nuclear inspectors to it's supposed weapons site.
      US view of Iran's nuclear program
      Iran and the US seem to have been spoiling for a fight for some time. Since October 2010 there has been concern that Iran was developing a nuclear capability and that action needed to be taken to prevent this. Iran has always insisted that this wasn't the case and that they were developing a nuclear reactor to generate power. This seems unlikely to many since Iran is floating on a sea of oil. 


      We've seen attacks on Afghanistan and on Iraq. Afghanistan because the ruling Taliban supported terrorists and Iraq because non-existent weapons of mass destruction were being developed. In the case of Afghanistan there might have been some justification for action against a country ruled by religious frenzy who apparently saw it their duty to punish the 'evil' in the world. In Iraq's case a despot didn't see the writing on the wall and didn't give UN inspectors sufficient access.


      Iran seems to be a combination of religious frenzy and refusal to bow to the will of the UN. The last thing they needed to do was to give anyone an excuse to invade. Today they agreed to allow UN inspectors to examine their nuclear facilities for evidence of weapons research. Hopefully that will calm things down a little in a volatile area. My only concern is that Gaddafi in Libya toed the line at one point but that didn't save him.


      Full story at http://www.thejournal.ie/un-nuclear-inspectors-start-investigation-in-iran-340568-Jan2012/

      30th January 2012 - Not quite as dangerous as the media says.
      Remember walking to school on your own? There was a time when it was considered safe for young children to do this. Today many people feel their children are at risk if they are allowed unsupervised outside their garden. 


      Is the risk as great as the media would have us believe? This is a story in which one mother took action to put the risk to children in a small town in its true perspective.


      Full story: http://freerangekids.wordpress.com/2012/01/30/theres-hope-for-mayberry-yet/

      31st January 2012 - Donors rally round 101 year old victim of eviction.
      Would you evict a 101 year old woman and leave her sitting in the street with all her possessions in a dumpster? It seems some finance companies will. They did realise their mistake but then people found out that the house in question was in an appalling state. Neighbours rallied round to help. 


      Full story: http://www.freep.com/article/20120126/NEWS01/201260526/Donations-roll-in-for-101-year-old-Detroit-woman-who-was-evicted

      1st February 2012 - Researchers seem to have made significant advance in mental control of a computer.
      I don't know about you but I hate keyboards so the news that researchers in California have made significant advances in allowing the brain to control a computer directly has to be good. 


      At the moment the process is a little severe. It requires electrodes to be implanted in the brain. The method was discovered with the co-operation of patients undergoing brain surgery. It offers hope to those completely disabled  of being able to control and interact with the world. The obvious next step will be mental control of computers for everyone. 


      So long as it's me controlling the computer and not the other way round that's fine by me. Electrodes in the brain? Maybe not.


      Full story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-16811042

      2nd February 2012 -  Quote - "The Cost of Cigarettes is Killing Me".
      I came across this story in The Huffington Post. In it a smoker bemoans the fact that she has to pay £7.04 (US $11.13) for her daily fix of cigarettes. Now to me that's excellent news because maybe she'll quit her addiction.


      Now don't get me wrong - I'm not in favour of forcing anyone to do anything and the last thing we should do is create another law to make smoking illegal. I agree - smokers have a right to kill themselves if they want to. What I don't support is their right to affect others.


      Apart from a brief experiment at the age of 14 I have never smoked. I tried but very quickly realised 1. I didn't like it. 2. I couldn't afford it. 3. Anything which made people cough obviously wasn't good for them. 4. People had problems quitting even though they wanted to quit so obviously it was addictive. 5. People who smoked didn't smell nice. I made the choice never to smoke and haven't regretted it.


      Despite never smoking myself I've been faced with:

      • The death of two relatives whose smoking put us through unnecessary traumatic experiences.
      • Coming home stinking of tobacco because I walked through a room where people were smoking.
      • Seeing impressionable children pick up the habit because they see others smoking and think it's a way of making themselves seem more adult (in their eyes) and rebelling against being forbidden to smoke.
      • finding out that my home insurance premiums are higher to pay for fires in houses caused by the presence of smoking materials.
      • Finding out I pay more for health insurance to pay for the medical treatment of smokers.
      • Having to daily clear up the mess by smokers who think nothing of throwing out their empty cartons onto the grass outside my house.
      So paying for cigarettes is killing her? That's excellent news! Quit!

      3rd February 2012 - 9-year-old girl back home after 6 organs are replaced in groundbreaking surgery.
      A 9-year-old girl is finally home after a four year battle with cancer destroyed her stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas, and part of her esophagus. They were all replaced by a transplant operation in October. 

      Alannah Shevenell is well enough to go sledging and building a snowman.


      4th February 2012 - A South African's view of Singapore where 'everything just works'.
      Singapore http://www.bestcities.net/Singapore.aspx 
      We hear so much of the failure of government, industry and people that it's nice to hear of a place where 'everything just works'. Donovan Kretsman, from South Africa, visited Singapore and thinks we could learn from the people there.
      Full story: http://www.news24.com/MyNews24/A-Different-Perspective-20120202
      Take a touch of humour, add some genetic science and nanotechnology. Steep with conspiracy and stir in murder and despair. Season with romance between three people in a secret location. Garnish with morality.
      The result is 'A Vested Interest', a novel series by John and Shelia Chapman