Reprogramming Nature: How Gene Editing Could Rescue the Species We’ve Already Failed

For decades, conservation has been about slowing the bleeding—captive breeding, protected habitats, desperate triage for species spiraling toward extinction. But what if we stopped trying to preserve nature like a museum exhibit and started engineering its comeback?

A new wave of scientists thinks we can. And they’re not talking about protecting animals—they’re talking about reprogramming them.

In a landmark paper published in Nature Reviews Biodiversity, an international team of researchers argues that gene editing—yes, the same tech used to make drought-resistant corn and revive mammoths—can now be applied to rescue endangered species. Not metaphorically. Literally.

This isn’t about keeping a few more pandas alive. This is about restoring lost genetic diversity, reversing evolutionary collapse, and using 21st-century tools to solve problems we created in the 20th.

Let that sink in: We may soon edit animals back to health.

Continue reading… “Reprogramming Nature: How Gene Editing Could Rescue the Species We’ve Already Failed”

The Death of Google Search: Why Google’s Results Are Now Worse Than Its Competitors

If you’re wondering if Google search is not as good as it used to be, you’re not alone. Try searching for anything meaningful these days—a product review, a technical question, even basic factual information—and you’ll likely find yourself swimming through a sea of AI-generated spam, affiliate marketing garbage, and Reddit threads that somehow rank higher than actual expert sources. Want proof? Try doing the same search on Bing, DuckDuckGo, Startpage, Searx, or even Yandex. The results are often vastly different, and increasingly, they’re better.

What you’re witnessing isn’t just your imagination or nostalgia for simpler times. It’s the documented collapse of what was once the internet’s most trusted gatekeeper, and the cause isn’t some inevitable decay of the web. It’s corporate panic, greed, and a series of deliberate decisions that prioritized short-term revenue over the very quality that made Google indispensable in the first place.

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At what age do you become ‘old?’ Here’s what four different generations think

old-age-start-chart 1

If age really is just a number, what number marks old age? Well, the answer to that depends on how old you are now.

Millennials hold the least generous views on aging, saying that you are old beginning at just 59, according to a new study by U.S. Trust. Older groups, however, put the starting point further out.

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Inside the Mind of a Futurist – Secret Process for Understanding the Future Revealed

Thinking about the future matters t65r

On April 10-14 the newly launched DaVinci Tech Academy will be hosting an intensive week-long workshop called “Inside the Mind of a Futurist.” Throughout this event, Michael Cushman and I will be unveiling a number of unusual processes for probing into the future.

This course has been designed for corporate executives, planners, strategists, influential thinkers, and those who aspire to take on that kind of role in the future. Continue reading… “Inside the Mind of a Futurist – Secret Process for Understanding the Future Revealed”

French researchers restore the youth of cells taken from 100 year old people

hourglass

Scientists in France were able to restore the youth of cells taken from people 100 years of age and older. They reprogrammed them to stem cells stage, demonstrating that aging is in fact reversible.

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Drone design doesn’t impact people’s perception of drones: Study

drones

A University of Nevada, Las Vegas study has found that the design of a drone doesn’t actually impact people’s perceptions of drones. The study asked 647 people in the U.S. to rate their perception of drones that they saw in pictures, manipulated across four factors – color, propeller blades, legs and propeller safety guards. (Video)

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Researchers at Stanford use Google Glass to treat autism in children

google glass

Researchers at Stanford University are using the Google Glass to help autistic children recognize and classify emotions. The Autism Glass Project, a part of the Wall Lab in the Stanford School of Medicine, has launched the second phase of its study.

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New video game features create a placebo effect

video game

Whether it’s the new iPhone, a Blu-ray movie with deleted scenes or a simple firmware update people are obsessed with the new and improved, and according to researchers at the University of York, there’s a good reason: New features can create a placebo effect for an experience feeling more fun and immersive.

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The future of the burger

burger

A burger made with cultured meat.

By 2030, the average person is expected to consume around 45 pounds of meat annually, according to a study from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.  That’s a number that rises substantially in the United States. The strain that will put on the planet is extreme, to say the least. But according to developing lab science, soon you can have your burger and eat it too.

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By 2025, 50% 0f consumers under 32 won’t pay for cable

cable-subscription

By 2025, half of all adults under 32 won’t pay for traditional cable subscriptions, according to a new Forrester study. An online survey of 32,000 U.S. adults found that 76 percent subscribe to cable. Of the 24 percent who don’t pay for cable, 18 percent are cord-nevers—people who have never paid for a cable subscription—while 6 percent are cord cutters, meaning they have canceled their cable subscriptions. The report notes that this year, digital cord-nevers have surpassed cord cutters and represent “the next stage of evolution in TV viewing.”

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Discover the Hidden Patterns of Tomorrow with Futurist Thomas Frey
Unlock Your Potential, Ignite Your Success.

By delving into the futuring techniques of Futurist Thomas Frey, you’ll embark on an enlightening journey.

Learn More about this exciting program.