Wednesday, April 08, 2026

TII Releases Falcon Perception: A 0.6B-Parameter Early-Fusion Transformer for Open-Vocabulary Grounding and Segmentation from Natural Language Prompts

Recommendable!

"In the current landscape of computer vision, the standard operating procedure involves a modular ‘Lego-brick’ approach: a pre-trained vision encoder for feature extraction paired with a separate decoder for task prediction. While effective, this architectural separation complicates scaling and bottlenecks the interaction between language and vision.

The Technology Innovation Institute (TII) research team is challenging this paradigm with Falcon Perception, a 600M-parameter unified dense Transformer. By processing image patches and text tokens in a shared parameter space from the very first layer, TII research team has developed an early-fusion stack that handles perception and task modeling with extreme efficiency. ..."

From the abstract:
"Perception-centric systems are typically implemented with a modular encoder-decoder pipeline: a vision backbone for feature extraction and a separate decoder (or late-fusion module) for task prediction. This raises a central question: is this architectural separation essential or can a single early-fusion stack do both perception and task modeling at scale?
We introduce Falcon Perception, a unified dense Transformer that processes image patches and text tokens in a shared parameter space from the first layer, using a hybrid attention pattern (bidirectional among image tokens, causal for prediction tokens) to combine global visual context with autoregressive, variable-length instance generation. To keep dense outputs practical, Falcon Perception retains a lightweight token interface and decodes continuous spatial outputs with specialized heads, enabling parallel high-resolution mask prediction.
Our design promotes simplicity: we keep a single scalable backbone and shift complexity toward data and training signals, adding only small heads where outputs are continuous and dense. On SA-Co, Falcon Perception improves mask quality to 68.0 Macro-F compared to 62.3 of SAM3. We also introduce PBench, a benchmark targeting compositional prompts (OCR, spatial constraints, relations) and dense long-context regimes, where the model shows better gains. Finally, we extend the same early-fusion recipe to Falcon OCR: a compact 300M-parameter model which attains 80.3% on olmOCR and 88.64 on OmniDocBench."

TII Releases Falcon Perception: A 0.6B-Parameter Early-Fusion Transformer for Open-Vocabulary Grounding and Segmentation from Natural Language Prompts - MarkTechPost

Falcon Perception (open access)




Pairs of atoms observed existing in two places at once for the first time

Amazing stuff!

"... "This result confirms the predictions of over a century ago that matter can be in two locations at once, and it can interfere with itself even in those locations," ..."

From the abstract:
"Nonlocal entanglement between pair-correlated particles is a highly counter-intuitive aspect of quantum mechanics, where measurement on one particle can instantly affect the other, regardless of distance. 
While the rigorous Bell’s inequality framework has enabled the demonstration of such entanglement in photons and atomic internal states, no experiment has yet involved motional states of massive particles.
Here we report the experimental observation of Bell correlations in motional states of momentum-entangled ultracold helium atoms. Momentum-entangled pairs are first generated via s-wave collisions. Using a Rarity-Tapster interferometer and a Bell-test framework, we observe atom-atom correlations required for violation of a Bell inequality.
This result shows the potential of ultracold atoms for fundamental tests of quantum mechanics and opens new avenues to studying gravitational effects in quantum states."

Pairs of atoms observed existing in two places at once for the first time (This article was not very helpful!)

Spooky quantum helium atoms give hope for a Theory of Everything (original news release. However webpage did not open properly, see screenshot below)



Fig. 1: Schematic of the experimental procedure in momentum space.





Did Trump loose the war on Iran? Really!

Is Iran the winner? Apparently, numerous Western media apparently suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome are very busy to disseminate such absurd stories in large numbers.

Clearly, the military campaign by Israel and the US against weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iran were a great success. Whether the theocratic dictatorship in Iran will survive is still an open question and it is too early to judge.


How T cells amplify signals: New study reveals key molecular switch

Amazing stuff!

"... New research by immunologists in Germany is shedding light on how that amplification occurs in T cells, revealing a key molecular mechanism that helps trigger immune responses—and may also contribute to inflammatory conditions. ...

identified a crucial step in the production of a "second messenger," an internal signal that relays and amplifies messages received at the cell surface. Because external signaling molecules cannot enter the cell, second messengers translate those cues into powerful intracellular responses.

In T cells, that process depends on NAADP (nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate), a molecule that drives calcium (Ca²⁺) signaling—an essential step in T cell activation. Without it, T cells cannot become the effector cells needed to fight serious threats, such as infections or cancer.

"T cell activation critically depends on the calcium ion (Ca²⁺)–mobilizing second messenger NAADP," ... "NAADP induces localized Ca²⁺ signals that expand into global cellular responses." ...

identified critical signaling events that induce the generation of a calcium-mobilizing second messenger in a study involving a human T cell line and another line of mouse T cells. ...

The team found that NAADP is produced at the immunological synapse—the contact point between T cells and other cells, such as antigen-presenting dendritic cells, by the enzyme DUOX2. But fully activating DUOX2 requires more than a simple trigger.

Instead, the researchers discovered that multiple signaling pathways converge to switch the enzyme on. One pathway involves PKCθ, activated downstream of the T cell receptor at the synapse. Another involves protein kinase A (PKA), activated through adenosine A2A receptors at sites away from the synapse.

Together, these pathways modify DUOX2 through phosphorylation, enabling it to generate sufficient NAADP to drive calcium signaling. ..."

From the significance and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Generation of the second messenger NAADP by the enzyme DUOX2 induces the formation of Ca2+ hotspots that ultimately lead to T cell activation.
Winterberg et al. sought to understand how NAADP synthesis by DUOX2 is stimulated during T cell activation. DUOX2 was activated by Ca2+ itself. However, the phosphorylation of the same residue in DUOX2 by the protein kinases PKA Cβ2 and PKCθ was necessary for the full NAADP-synthesizing activity of DUOX2 in T cells. Whereas PKA Cβ2 was activated downstream of adenosine A2A receptors, PKCθ was activated downstream of the T cell receptor. These results suggest that NAADP production by DUOX2 is regulated by the integration of signals from the T cell receptor and other pathways during T cell activation. ...

Abstract
T cell activation critically depends on the calcium ion (Ca2+)–mobilizing second messenger NAADP (nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate), which induces the formation of Ca2+ microdomains that initiate global Ca2+ signals. NAADP is produced in immune synapses in T cells by dual NADPH oxidase 2 (DUOX2). Here, we investigated the mechanisms that stimulate DUOX2 activity in T cells. DUOX2 activity was enhanced by a modest increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, similar to that induced by Ca2+ microdomains that arise in resting T cells through different T cell receptor (TCR)–independent mechanisms.
In addition, DUOX2 was activated in vitro by phosphorylation of threonine-789 mediated by PKA Cβ or PKCθ, and genetic deficiency of PKA Cβ2 or PKCθ decreased NAADP-dependent Ca2+ microdomain formation in T cells. PKA Cβ2 was activated downstream of adenosine A2A receptors, independently of the TCR. In contrast, PKCθ was activated by the tyrosine kinase LCK downstream of TCR stimulation. Inhibition of A2A receptors or PKCθ to prevent full DUOX2 activation decreased the production of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-17 by effector T cells.
Thus, full stimulation of NAADP signaling that is critical for T cell activation requires integration of multiple TCR-independent and -dependent signals with different spatiotemporal characteristics by DUOX2, a fine-tuning mechanism that could be relevant for inflammation."

How T cells amplify signals: New study reveals key molecular switch

Anthropic's Project Glasswing to defend world's most critical software

Good news! Serious stuff!

"ZDNET's key takeaways
  • AI found thousands of hidden bugs in critical systems.
  • Tech rivals unite to secure shared infrastructure risks.
  • Cyberattack timelines shrink from months to minutes.
Today, a group of the world's biggest tech companies is announcing what is essentially an AI-driven cybersecurity Manhattan Project.
..."

"Anthropic on Tuesday released a preview of its new frontier model, Mythos, which it says will be used by a small coterie of partner organizations for cybersecurity work. In a previously leaked memo, the AI startup called the model one of its “most powerful” yet.

The model’s limited debut is part of a new security initiative, dubbed Project Glasswing, in which 12 partner organizations will deploy the model for the purposes of “defensive security work” and to secure critical software, Anthropic said. While it was not specifically trained for cybersecurity work, the model will be used to scan both first-party and open source software systems for code vulnerabilities, the company said. ..."

"... We formed Project Glasswing because of capabilities we’ve observed in a new frontier model trained by Anthropic that we believe could reshape cybersecurity. Claude Mythos Preview is a general-purpose, unreleased frontier model that reveals a stark fact: AI models have reached a level of coding capability where they can surpass all but the most skilled humans at finding and exploiting software vulnerabilities. ..."

"The project is named for the glasswing butterfly, Greta oto. The metaphor can be applied in two ways: the butterfly’s transparent wings let it hide in plain sight, much like the vulnerabilities discussed in this post; they also allow it to evade harm—like the transparency we’re advocating for in our approach."

Apple, Google, and Microsoft join Anthropic's Project Glasswing to defend world's most critical software | ZDNET


Project Glasswing Securing critical software for the AI era (original news release) "Today we’re announcing Project Glasswing1, a new initiative that brings together Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorganChase, the Linux Foundation, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks in an effort to secure the world’s most critical software."

Study advances safe, reversible male contraceptive without hormones

Good news! Why did men have to wait for so many decades since the contraceptive pill for women came out!

"A proof of principle study in mice, six years in the making, shows how targeting a natural checkpoint in meiosis, the process by which sex cells reproduce, safely stopped sperm production. ...

The researchers made use of JQ1, a small molecule inhibitor that was developed as a research tool to study cancer and inflammatory disease. Because of its neurological side effects, it wasn't a viable therapy for disease, or as a final contraceptive, but it's known to disrupt a stage of meiosis called prophase 1. This enabled Cornell researchers to provide the first proof of principle that meiosis – and sperm production – can be targeted safely and reversibly. ..."

"... In the study, the researchers administered JQ1 in male mice for three weeks. They found that the mice produced no sperm, and that all the molecular parameters of meiosis were disrupted, including chromosomal behavior during prophase 1.

Then they stopped delivering JQ1, and within six weeks, most of the healthy parameters of prophase 1 returned, along with normal sperm production. They then bred those mice and found they were all fertile, and bred the pups to show that they too were fertile, yielding healthy offspring. ..."

From the significance and abstract:
"Significance
Few reversible male contraceptives have advanced toward clinical translation, largely because the optimal biological stage for safe intervention remains undefined.
Meiosis represents a natural checkpoint in sperm production where transient inhibition could achieve precise and reversible fertility control.
Using the small-molecule BRDT inhibitor (+)-JQ1, we demonstrate that brief suppression of meiotic prophase I halts spermatogenesis yet permits complete recovery of germ-cell differentiation, recombination fidelity, and fertility after withdrawal. While acknowledging the need for robust future safety assessments of any candidate drugs, these studies provide a blueprint for developing new contraceptive approaches that act safely and selectively within the germline.

Abstract
Developing safe, reversible, and nonhormonal male contraceptives has been hindered by the lack of defined biological windows that can be transiently interrupted without compromising long-term fertility.
Here, we tested whether meiotic prophase I can serve as such a window by pharmacologically inhibiting the testis-specific chromatin reader BRDT using the small-molecule bromodomain inhibitor (+)-JQ1 as proof-of-principle.
Short-term JQ1 administration (3 wk) selectively disrupted the pachytene transcriptional program, depleted postmeiotic germ cells, and induced a reversible arrest in spermatogenesis.
Upon drug withdrawal, prophase I cytological markers normalized within 6 wk, accompanied by restoration of testis architecture and germ-cell composition. Crossover metrics and transcriptional programs recovered more gradually, reaching full normalization by 30 wk alongside complete restoration of fertility and fecundity.
These results demonstrate that meiotic prophase I can be transiently inhibited to suppress spermatogenesis reversibly without inducing lasting genomic or reproductive defects, defining a stage-specific framework for the rational design of nonhormonal male contraceptives."






Fig. 1 Three-week JQ1 treatment causes postmeiotic cell loss with full recovery after withdrawal.



Cross‑section of testis tubules showing stages of spermatogenesis: green meiotic cells, pink developing sperm (dots in top right corner) and pink mature sperm (long cells in middle left), and the pre-meiotic white/gray spermatogonia along the basement membrane (lower left) are stem cells the researchers aim to preserve.





The implications of overshooting 1.5 °C on Earth system tipping elements—a review

Again a science journal publishes some rubbish about global warming! Fact is that climatology is a very complex science that we still do not understand very well. 

When pseudo scientists engage in alarmism and hysteria like with this article! Was this done for more funding?

1.5 °C is a joke by charlatans not scientists! Nobody is able to measure global atmospheric temperature with such accuracy!

"Tipping elements" or "tipping points" what is that? Smells a lot like junk science!

This article appears to repeat a litany of claims by environmentalists like "deforestation in the Amazon" etc.

From the abstract:
"Due to insufficient emission reductions in recent years, it is increasingly likely that global warming will exceed the 1.5 °C temperature limit in the late 2020s or 2030s. As a result, several Earth system tipping elements [???] could, at least temporarily, have their tipping points [???] surpassed, posing risks of large-scale and profound structural change.
Tipping does not always occur immediately upon crossing such a critical threshold. If the length of time the driver is beyond the critical level is short enough, tipping could still be avoided for some slow-responding elements of the climate system.
An improved understanding is therefore needed of whether tipping remains avoidable, for which systems, and under what conditions. Here, we review how minimising the magnitude and duration of any temperature overshoot beyond 1.5 °C could decrease tipping risks.
Tipping elements with fast response times, such as warm-water coral reefs, are especially vulnerable to overshoot. In contrast, those with slow response times, such as polar ice sheets, may be less sensitive to temporary overshoot. Potential interactions between tipping elements and additional human pressures, such as deforestation in the Amazon or pollution and overfishing of coral reef habitats, may further lower tipping points, narrowing the range of overshoot trajectories that can still avoid it.
The vulnerability of many tipping elements, even under shorter overshoot conditions, underscores that global warming must peak below 2 °C [???] above pre-industrial levels, return to below 1.5 °C as quickly as possible (i.e. within this century), and to around 1 °C thereafter to limit tipping point risks."

The implications of overshooting 1.5 °C on Earth system tipping elements—a review - IOPscience


Fig. 2. Overshooting 1.5 °C risks crossing Earth system tipping points. Illustrative temperature overshoot pathways, exceeding and then returning to below 1.5 °C (solid black line) and other stabilisation pathways (dashed black lines), dependent on uncertainties in future emissions and Earth system feedbacks.


On possible overdiagnosis of traumatic brain injury in the US military

Yesterday, PBS Newshour aired a long, dubious report about new TBI cases during the ongoing war on IranWas this a case of Trump Derangement Syndrome by PBS?

PBS left it very ambiguous about how many TBI cases were actually diagnosed so far in the ongoing Iranian war. 

Since US personnel is not involved in ground combat operations there is actually little reason to suspect any new TBI cases with the exception perhaps TBI affecting those US military personnel stationed and attacked in Gulf States.

Supposedly, there were over 540,000 TBI cases diagnosed in US military personnel since 2020. This seems to be awfully many cases. 

This seems to be a very serious case of overdiagnosing TBI in US military personnel.  The reported TBI symptoms are very common symptoms like headache, dizziness. Apparently, there is no specific, accurate diagnosis available for TBI other than exposure of a soldier to some explosion and these common symptoms.

Disclaimer

I  am currently blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.

My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.

Tuesday, April 07, 2026

Russian government hackers broke into thousands of home routers around the world to steal passwords

The megalomaniac and war criminal Putin the Terrible attacks the rest of the  world!

"A group of Russian government hackers have hijacked thousands of home and small business routers around the world as part of an ongoing campaign aimed at redirecting victim’s internet traffic to steal their passwords and access tokens, security researchers and government authorities warned on Tuesday.

This is the latest tactic by the long-running Russian hacking group known as Fancy Bear, or APT 28, known for its high-profile hacks and spying operations, including the breach of the Democratic National Committee in 2016 and the destructive hack that hit satellite provider Viasat in 2022. Fancy Bear is widely believed to be part of Russia’s intelligence agency GRU.

The hacking group targeted unpatched routers made by MikroTik and TP-Link using previously disclosed vulnerabilities according to the U.K. government’s cybersecurity unit NCSC and Lumen’s research arm Black Lotus Labs, which released new details of the campaign Tuesday. ..."

Russian government hackers broke into thousands of home routers to steal passwords | TechCrunch

Iranian hackers are targeting American critical infrastructure, US agencies warn

Was this part of the just agreed upon 14 days cease fire agreement?

"The U.S. government is warning that Iran-backed hackers are escalating their tactics by targeting American critical infrastructure systems with the aim of causing disruption.

In a joint advisory published Tuesday, the FBI, the National Security Agency, the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the U.S. Department of Energy collectively warned that Iranian government hackers have been exploiting internet-facing systems used across a range of sectors. These include water and wastewater utilities, as well as energy and local government facilities. The agencies did not specifically name any of the targets but said that the hacks were aimed at causing “disruptive effects within the United States” and had already resulted in “operational disruption and financial loss.”

The hackers targeted programmable logic controllers and supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) products ..."

Iranian hackers are targeting American critical infrastructure, US agencies warn | TechCrunch

NATO and the EU are paper tigers and unreliable allies

It has become very obvious when no European country offered immediately their navy to assist the US to protect the ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz after President Trump attacked Iran.

Shame on Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron (and his old, rich wife), Giorgia Meloni, and Friedrich Merz!

Giorgia Meloni even refused the use of Sicily by the US military! Very disappointing!

Perhaps, except the Ukraine.

Latest US labor force participation rate

The dip of and the historically low level of the labor force participation rate (LFPR) seems to be the latest hot topic in economics.

What seems to be obvious is that the LFPR dropped significantly during the administration of the senile and demented 46th President and has not recovered since. The massive illegal immigration of several millions during his presidency surely has something to do with it. 

Wall Street Journal What's news



Kristi Noem is out, but her new, expensive government jet stays

 Maybe she is out, because she did not want to share this jet? Just kidding!

"The White House is hanging onto the controversial $70 million jet Kristi Noem leased during her tenure as DHS secretary, according to a department spokeswoman and other officials familiar with the matter.

 The administration plans to use the plane, which is nicer than most other government jets, for travel by select cabinet secretaries and Melania Trump, some of the officials said. The White House referred a request for comment to DHS. Trump fired Noem last month. Some administration officials and outside supporters have questioned using ICE money—bolstered for Trump’s promised mass deportation—for a plane that isn’t going to be used for immigration enforcement." (Wall Street Journal What's news)

Time has not been kind to VHS videocasettes

How many VHS videos were recorded by individuals over time! Maybe 100s of millions or more of hours?

"Before streaming, before Blu-ray, and before DVDs, the VHS videocassette was the king of video. First launched in Japan in 1976, the format, short for Video Home System, was easy to use, compatible with any television, and affordable

After winning the battle for dominance with the Betamax cassette, the VHS ushered in an era of amateur filmmaking, home movie collections, and video store rentals. Recognizing the value of the new format, Harvard curators quickly began amassing materials on VHS. Though no single tally of Harvard’s VHS holdings exists, a 2018 count of audiovisual material says the figure is likely in the tens of thousands. ..."

Time has not been kind to VHS — Harvard Gazette "As tech turns 50, preservationists race to save material stored on vanishing format. Methods include … baking?"

Cambodia unveiled the world’s first statue honoring a landmine-detecting rat

Highly unusual!

"Cambodia unveiled the world’s first statue honoring a landmine-detecting rat, a rodent named Magawa who sniffed out more than 100 landmines during a five-year career before retiring and dying in 2022."

Monday, April 6, 2026 - Join The Flyover




Gravitational lensing could break the Hubble tension

Amazing stuff!

"How do you measure the distance to far off cosmic objects? That question is key to calculating the speed of the universe’s expansion and hence understanding its evolution and eventual fate. The rate of cosmic expansion, known as the Hubble constant, is so important for cosmologists that the disagreement among researchers over its value has its own name: the Hubble tension.
Astronomers measure it one way, using stars or supernovae with predictable brightness. Cosmologists have another way, studying ripples in the echo of the Big Bang and winding the clock forward to today. The two techniques have become increasingly precise, but they steadfastly disagree with each other.

A third method is needed to break the deadlock . That may come through the magic of gravitational lensing, which can cause a supernova—a star exploding at the end of its life—to appear to explode again and again. If a supernova is situated behind a large mass, such as a galaxy or cluster of galaxies, then as its light passes by the mass, its gravity bends the light along different paths, producing multiple images that show the explosion at different times when viewed from Earth. Using the time delays and path lengths, researchers can calculate the distance to the supernova and so calculate the Hubble constant.

Only a handful of such lensed supernovae have been found so far, but several upcoming survey telescopes, including the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, are expected to find them by the dozen and, hopefully, to ease the Hubble tension."

"... The idea goes back to the early 1960s, when gravitational lenses had only been theorized. But Sjur Refsdal, a graduate student at the University of Oslo, suggested a way to calculate how such a lens would bend light, using the same geometric tools used to model the paths of light through a glass lens. His thesis evaluators weren’t convinced—until he got the result published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1964. In the same issue, Refsdal also proposed a way to put his technique to work. He suggested time-delayed images of a lensed supernova could offer a handle on the Hubble constant."

ScienceAdviser





A foreground galaxy (center) acts as a lens to produce four images of a background supernova in 2014. The supernova is dubbed SN Refsdal in honor of Sjur Refsdal, who predicted this effect 50 years earlier.


Die Energiekrise ist politisch gemacht: Deutschland hat genug Gas für 25 Jahre

Die Bananenrepublik D braucht ein bisschen drill baby drill! 😊

"... Doch das muss so nicht sein, erklärt Vahrenholt. Deutschland verfügt über große Reserven an Öl und Gas. Die Förderung könnte innerhalb eines Jahres beginnen – und so die wirtschaftlichen Probleme Deutschlands lösen.

Doch das geschieht nicht: Es ist verboten, diese Ressourcen zu erschließen. Und keine Partei, nicht einmal die AfD, macht Anstalten, dies zu ändern. ..."

Die Energiekrise ist politisch gemacht: Deutschland hat genug Gas für 25 Jahre "Die Spritpreise explodieren, Arbeitsplätze gehen verloren, die Inflation zieht an: Die Sperrung der Straße von Hormus treibt Deutschland tiefer in die Krise. Doch: Deutschland muss nicht in der Krise sein; eine Förderung von Öl und Gas wäre in Niedersachsen möglich. Wenn die Politik es nur erlauben würde."

Wie „Wirtschaftsweise“ Monika Schnitzer ein ganzes Land verhöhnt

So eine dumm, dämliche Kuh ist Wirtschaftsweise? Unglaublich! Würdig einer Bananenrepublik wie D!

Natürlich drei von fünf Wirtschaftsweisen müssen Frauen sein! Ideologisch paritätisch!

"Kalt und arrogant erfüllt Schnitzer ihren Agitationsauftrag. Sie hält den Preisdeckel nicht nur nicht für sinnvoll, im Gegenteil, sie begrüßt sogar die Preissteigerungen. Wie schön, dass wir alle mehr und mehr bezahlen sollen. Dass sie in einem Staat, der immer öfter die Freiheit seiner Bürger verachtet und zum Nanny-Staat wird, einen Gouvernanten-Ton anschlägt, verwundert daher nicht. „Die Menschen“, doziert Schnitzer von oben herab, „müssen sich überlegen, wo ist es wirklich wichtig, zu fahren, wo kann ich darauf verzichten, wo kann ich eine Fahrgemeinschaft bilden, wo kann ich vielleicht mal mit dem öffentlichen Nahverkehr fahren. Also eine solche Reaktion braucht es.“

Wie viel Steinzeitkommunismus braucht es denn, Frau Schnitzer? Auf Hayalis Frage, ob es eines Fahrverbots bedürfe, wird Schnitzers ganzes Unverständnis und ganzer Zynismus deutlich:

Nein, eines Fahrverbotes braucht es nicht, wenn der Preis hoch ist. Dann passen sich die Leute selbst an. Die, die dringend fahren müssen und sich das auch leisten können, die werden dann vielleicht weiterhin so viel fahren wie bisher. Vielleicht werden sie das Tempo freiwillig ein bisschen drosseln, weil sie merken, dann sparen sie ein bisschen Sprit und wer jetzt ausweichen kann und einfach mal verzichten kann, der fährt weniger … Wir haben einfach gesehen in 2022, als wir schon mal einen Tankrabatt gegeben haben, dass die Menschen sich zu wenig angepasst haben und wir brauchen jetzt dieses Signal.“ ..."

Wie „Wirtschaftsweise“ Monika Schnitzer ein ganzes Land verhöhnt "Explodierende Spritpreise, steigende Insolvenzen, wachsender Druck auf Verbraucher und Betriebe: Monika Schnitzer verkauft den wirtschaftlichen Absturz als erwünschtes Signal. Das ist die eiskalte, arrogante Verhöhnung für durch Politik ausgebeutete Bürger eines Landes im wirtschaftlichen Sturzflug."


Monika Schnitzer (erste Frau von links mit roter Brille, Quelle)


Bauen mit Stroh: Wie Deutschland den Baustoff neu entdeckt. Wirklich!

In der Bananenrepublik D gibt es auch einige Strohdumme! Der Klimawahn macht es möglich!

"Die Zahlen sind bekannt, aber sie bleiben alarmierend. Der deutsche Bausektor verursacht rund 30 % der nationalen CO2-Emissionen und die Hälfte des gesamten Abfallaufkommens. Jährlich entnimmt die Branche gigantische Mengen mineralischer Rohstoffe aus der Natur. Dieses Modell stößt an seine Grenzen.

Die Lösung für das Problem wächst direkt vor unseren Baustellen: Stroh. Was früher als experimentelle Nische für Idealisten galt, ist im Jahr 2026 eine ernsthafte technologische Option [???]. Jährlich fallen in der Landwirtschaft etwa 30 bis 35 Millionen Tonnen Stroh an. Ziehen Sie den Bedarf für die Tierhaltung ab, bleiben 13 Millionen Tonnen für den Bau übrig. Damit könnten wir einen Großteil des deutschen Wohnungsbaus dekarbonisieren [???]. ..."

Bauen mit Stroh: Wie Deutschland den Baustoff neu entdeckt "Bauen mit Stroh erlebt ein Comeback: Der nachwachsende [???] Baustoff senkt CO₂, erfüllt Brandschutz-Normen und macht Wohnungsbau klimafreundlich."

Deutsche Anwaltverein warnt das US-Berufungsgericht vor Trump! Wirklich!

Wie bitte! Das Trump Derangement Syndrome grassiert auch in der Bananenrepublik D!

Hinweis: Ich konnte diese FAZ webpage nicht von China aufrufen!

"Europas Anwälte stellen sich gegen Donald Trump

Der Deutsche Anwaltverein warnt das US-Berufungsgericht in Washington: Wer die Unabhängigkeit der Anwaltschaft angreife, gefährde den Rechtsstaat – und beruft sich dabei auf die Erfahrungen aus der NS-Zeit [???]." 

(Quelle: FAZ)

China: Still not open/ready for tourism by foreigners

I recently travelled to a famous, ancient capital city dating back to the first dynasty located in the Henan province.

Unfortunately, English language in written or oral was very rare. Few Chinese people spoke English and those few who spoke English it was only very basic.

For example using public transportation or visiting historic sites or do grocery shopping etc. is a challenge.

Fraunhofer ISI zerlegt Wasserstoff-Mythen und zeigt die Grenzen

Empfehlenswert! Wer glaubt, das Wasserstoff die beste, machbare Lösung für die sogenannte Energiewende ist irrt sich vielleicht!

"Wasserstoff gilt vielen als Schlüssel zur Klimaneutralität. Er soll Flugzeuge antreiben, Häuser heizen und die Industrie retten. Doch wie realistisch sind diese Szenarien? Das Fraunhofer-Institut für System- und Innovationsforschung (ISI) hat in einem umfassenden Meta-Faktencheck mehr als 100 Studien ausgewertet.

Das Ergebnis ist eine deutliche Warnung vor zu viel Euphorie. Wasserstoff ist eine wertvolle Ressource, aber er ist kein Allheilmittel. Wo die Grenzen liegen und warum wir uns bei der Infrastruktur konzentrieren müssen, zeigt die aktuelle Analyse. ...

Der Befund ist klar: Wasserstoff wird eine wichtige Rolle spielen, aber er wird das Energiesystem nicht dominieren. Er ersetzt Strom nicht, sondern ergänzt ihn in bestimmten Anwendungen. Ein flächendeckender Einsatz, wie er häufig diskutiert wird, ist weder wirtschaftlich noch energetisch sinnvoll. ...

Für die Herstellung von Wasserstoff werden je nach Verfahren rund 50 bis 60 kWh Strom pro Kilogramm benötigt. Eine breite Nutzung würde den Strombedarf des Energiesystems erheblich erhöhen.

Hinzu kommen weitere Verluste entlang der Kette:
  • Erzeugung: Elektrolyse reduziert den Wirkungsgrad deutlich
  • Logistik: Kompression oder Verflüssigung kostet zusätzliche Energie
  • Anwendung: In Brennstoffzellen oder bei der Verbrennung gehen weitere Anteile verloren
..."

Fraunhofer ISI zerlegt Wasserstoff-Mythen und zeigt die Grenzen

When nature calls, diverse tree-dwelling mammals seek out the same latrine

Amazing stuff!

"All animals, regardless of habitat, must heed the call of nature. But where do wild critters go when they need to go?

Some terrestrial animals do their business in communal latrines—more rugged versions of a public bathroom. These sites can serve as communication hubs among and between species and often play an important role in shaping local ecosystems. Raccoon latrines, for example, may create an “ecology of fear” that scares off other species at risk of dying from roundworm parasites in racoon poop.

Scientists know comparatively little, meanwhile, about the habits of animals that dwell in forest canopies. Learning more would involve scaling large trees, which presents a number of dangers for researchers. ...

set up a camera trap at one latrine... the camera captured visits from an astonishing 17 mammal species , including porcupines, coatis, and several monkeys. ..."

From the abstract:
"We report the discovery of arboreal multi-species mammal latrines in montane cloud forests of Costa Rica. We surveyed 169 trees from 29 species.
Canopy multi-species latrines were only found in 11 individuals of a single tree species, Ficus tuerckheimii. Camera traps recorded 17 mammal species and a total of 181 visits over 60 days, indicating that some vertebrates frequently visit canopy latrines.
Among the most notable visitors was the two-toed sloth (Choloepus hoffmanni), a species long documented to descend to the ground exclusively to defecate.
Our findings suggest that sloths may also use arboreal latrines, challenging a long-standing assumption in sloth ecology and raising new questions about the drivers of their defecation behavior.
As with terrestrial latrines, canopy latrines may also play a role in interspecific communication, provide spatial cues, and affect nutrient dynamics in forest canopies. All these aspects highlight the potentially important role that Ficus tuerckheimii might have in these interaction points."

ScienceAdviser



Fig. 1 Canopy latrine in Ficus tuerckheimii. (A) Location of the canopy latrine used for this study, 30 m above ground. The circle indicates the latrine's position at the main branch union. (B) Feces from multiple species at the latrine. ...


Engineered tobacco plant can produce five psychedelics, including psilocybin and DMT

Amazing stuff! What are you smoking? What's growing in your flower pot or garden? 😊

"... The new study focused on engineering plants to produce five major natural psychedelics: DMT, psilocin, psilocybin, bufotenin, and 5-MeO-DMT. They first had to identify and characterize the key biosynthetic enzymes from certain plants, fungi, and the Sonoran Desert toad and combine enzymes from different species to reconstruct entire biosynthetic pathways. They then used genetic engineering to introduce these enzymes into a type of tobacco plant (Nicotiana benthamiana), which was chosen because it is easily cultivated and produces tryptophan.

After the genes required for production of the compounds were identified, they were introduced to the plant by a process called agroinfiltration, where plant leaves are injected with a suspension of bacterium to induce the expression of genes. The team used AlphaFold3, an AI model that predicts 3D structures and interactions of molecules, to guide their design of a mutant protein that substantially enhanced indolethylamine production by improving efficiency of the enzymes needed to produce it. ..."

Engineered tobacco plant can produce five psychedelics, including psilocybin and DMT



Fig. 5. Metabolic engineering strategy for complete reconstruction of psychedelic indolethylamine biosynthetic pathways in N. benthamiana.


Putin the Terrible’s invasion of the Ukraine cost so far to be about $2.5 trillion

When will the apathetic and lethargic Russian people finally get rid of Putin the Terrible!

"As Russia’s war in Ukraine enters its fifth year, debates over sanctions, negotiations and military aid increasingly hinge on a central question: How costly has the war been for Russia itself? Our analysis, using standard economic tools, finds the cost so far to be about $2.5 trillion. That doesn’t mean, of course, that Putin has borne much of that cost.

A January 2026 report by researchers from the Center for Strategic and International Studies indicates that this war has now claimed 325,000 Russian lives and 875,000 wounded (or missing). For context, roughly 15,000 Soviet military personnel were killed in the ten-year Afghan war. ..."

Putin’s $2.5 trillion gambit


What a monster looks like!


Anti-drone laser system deployed at Palm Beach airport to protect President Trump

This is only the beginning and it will go way beyond protecting US presidents!

"A mobile anti-drone defense system featuring a direct energy weapon has been installed near Palm Beach International Airport to protect President Donald Trump and civilian aircraft from drone threats. The system, equipped with sensors, radar and jammers, can identify and neutralize drones using lasers and electronic scrambling. ..."

IEEE-USA SmartBrief

What Could a Reciprocal Defense Procurement Agreement Do for U.S.-India Ties?

Good news!

Caveat: I did not read the entire long article.

"... It is also equally important to note that India already signed a Security of Supply Arrangement (SOSA) with the United States in August 2024. The SOSA, in short, provides a means for India and the United States to request priority delivery of certain defense items from each other.
How it differs from an RDPA is that a SOSA is non-binding and, accordingly, neither country is obligated to fulfil requests made under it to the other.
Additionally, an RDPA, unlike the SOSA, would make India a “qualifying country” under the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS), and this certification would smooth out additional compliance that Indian firms may need to sell to the U.S. industrial base.
Lastly, an RDPA would bring Indian vendors up to par with their counterparts in the United States when selling to the U.S. DoD and vice versa, subject, of course, to each country’s national laws and sourcing rules. This is aligned with the U.S.-India joint statement issued in February 2025, in which both sides agreed to design a new ten-year framework for the U.S.-India major defense partnership for the twenty-first century, with an RDP agreement. ...

India’s Operation Sindoor, a swift five-day military operation launched to strike at Pakistan’s terror camps and its key defense installations, showcased India’s growing weapons arsenal and military prowess, and was fairly well-received. Even the most hard-headed detractors of India’s defense preparedness concede that India’s defense missile system, including the Akashteer drone systems and the Brahmos missile system, performed very well. Reports have emerged about interest from Vietnam and Indonesia in India’s arms exports, which have also surged to an all-time high, with its latest defense exports being reported at approximately $2.75 billion. ..."

What Could a Reciprocal Defense Procurement Agreement Do for U.S.-India Ties? | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace "India and the United States are close to concluding a Reciprocal Defense Procurement Agreement (RDPA) that will allow firms from the two countries to sell to each other’s defense establishments more easily. While this may not remedy the specific grievances both sides may have regarding larger bilateral issues, an RDPA could restore some momentum, following the trade deal announcement."

China: Smoking & Spitting

Unfortunately, these two bad habits are still very widespread and pervasive. They are a very frequent common occurrence on a daily basis.

Millions of Chinese men smoke and spit in public everywhere all the time. 

Some men spit right in front of you in public even when you are e.g. eating something.

Monday, April 06, 2026

Lifestyle, Zeit, Geld, Karriere: Hund statt Kind

Auch ein Thema, dass seit mehreren Jahrzehnten immer wieder aufgegriffen wird.

"Regen, Kälte, Wind. Noch einmal sich hochraffen, um mit dem Hund Gassi zu gehen, eine letzte Runde vor dem Schlafen. Für jeden Menschen ohne Vierbeiner klingt das womöglich schon wie eine Last, viel Mühe und Einschränkung. Für Menschen mit Kindern muss es lächerlich wirken. ..."

Große Teile der Wirtschaft setzen nicht mehr auf Bundesregierung

13-jähriger Irakischer Jugendlicher prügelt 62 Jahre alten Busfahrer in Leipzig ins Koma plus Schlaganfall

Schlagzeilen aus der Bananenrepublik D!

"In Leipzig hat ein 62-jähriger Busfahrer nach einer Auseinandersetzung mit einer störenden migrantischen Jugendgruppe schwere Kopfverletzungen erlitten. Der Mann liegt im Koma. Zuvor hatte er einen Schlaganfall im Nachgang der Tat erlitten und musste notoperiert werden. Der mutmaßliche Täter ist erst 13 Jahre alt – und damit strafrechtlich nicht zu belangen."

Große Teile der Wirtschaft setzen nicht mehr auf Bundesregierung

Across the social sciences, half of research doesn’t replicate | Science | AAAS

Nothing new! This too has been studied and reported frequently over the past several decades!

"A sweeping project involving hundreds of researchers in several dozen countries showed that across the social sciences, the findings of roughly half of all papers cannot be replicated independently, and there’s no reliable way to tell in advance which ones will falter. Called Systematizing Confidence in Open Research and Evidence (SCORE), the effort investigated more than 100 papers published in dozens of leading journals in business, economics, education, political science, psychology, and sociology. The replication success rate—49% for the 164 papers evaluated, reported today in Nature—is consistent with findings from previous studies in individual fields such as psychology, suggesting the problem is pervasive in the social sciences. ..."

From the abstract:
"Pursuing replicability — independent evidence for previous claims — is important for creating generalizable knowledge. Here we attempted replications of 274 claims of positive results from 164 quantitative papers published from 2009 to 2018 in 54 journals in the social and behavioural sciences. Replications were high powered on average to detect the original effect size (median of 99.6%), used original materials when relevant and available, and were peer reviewed in advance through a standardized internal protocol.
Replications showed statistically significant results in the original pattern for 151 of 274 claims (55.1% (95% confidence interval (CI) 49.2–60.9%)) and for 80.8 of 164 papers (49.3% (95% CI 43.8–54.7%)), weighed for replicating multiple claims per paper.
We observed modest variation in replication rates across disciplines (42.5–63.1%), although some estimates had high uncertainty. The median Pearson’s r effect size was 0.25 (95% CI 0.21–0.27) for original studies and 0.10 (95% CI 0.09–0.13) for replication studies, an 82.4% (95% CI 67.8–88.2%) reduction in shared variance. Thirteen methods for evaluating replication success provided estimates ranging from 28.6% to 74.8% (median of 49.3%). Some decline in effect size and significance is expected based on power to detect original effects and regression to the mean because we replicated only positive results.
We observe that challenges for replicability extend across social–behavioural sciences, illustrating the importance of identifying conditions that promote or inhibit replicability."

Across the social sciences, half of research doesn’t replicate | Science | AAAS (no public access)

Dendritic cells power down inside tumors—re-energizing them could help treat cancer

Good news! Cancer is history (soon)!

"Dendritic cells ... By using their long projections to display fragments of protein, they summon other immune cells to attack invaders and destroy diseased cells. But when dendritic cells find themselves inside a tumor, they tend to run out of steam. According to new research, these cells stop working because their mitochondria ... become degraded.

When scientists examined mice with melanoma, they found that some dendritic cells within the animals’ tumors had perfectly healthy mitochondria, while others were debilitated.
As the tumors grew, the number of cells with active mitochondria dwindled. Although it’s unclear exactly why these organelles go on the fritz, the team did determine that a protein called OPA1 appears to be essential to their functioning. Dendritic cells that possessed this protein were much better at rallying other immune cells, while those engineered to lack it were far less effective—leading to more tumor growth.
When the researchers injected the rodents’ dendritic cells with lots of additional mitochondria, the animals were able to mount a strong antitumor response and fared better when treated with a type of immunotherapy. ..."

From the Perspective abstract:
"Dendritic cells are innate immune cells that regulate the quality, magnitude, and duration of antitumor responses. Conventional type 1 dendritic cells (cDC1s) are crucial in this capacity but are paradoxically rare and functionally impaired in most solid tumors. This is a major barrier to effective immunotherapy. The molecular underpinnings of cDC1 dysfunction within the tumor microenvironment are poorly understood. On page 55 of this issue, You et al. (1) report that mitochondrial fitness is important for cDC1 function. They also demonstrate the therapeutic rescue of cDC1 function within the tumor microenvironment in mice, which provides a framework for metabolically reprogramming dendritic cells to restore antitumor immunity."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s) promote CD8+ T cell–mediated antitumor responses. However, cDC1s can become dysfunctional in the tumor microenvironment, and the mechanisms governing cDC1 function versus dysfunction in cancer remain unclear. You et al. report that mitochondrial metabolic states and signaling direct cDC1 function in antitumor immunity (see the Perspective by Molina and Haldar). Loss of the mitochondrial protein OPA1 disrupted nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1) activity and electron transport chain integrity, leading to defects in mitochondrial bioenergetics and redox balance in cDC1s, accompanied by reduced tumor control. OPA1-NRF1 signaling progressively declined during tumor progression, and tumor-bearing mice receiving cDC1s with high mitochondrial fitness had improved antitumor responses, especially in combination with immunotherapy. Therefore, “metabolic engineering” of cDC1s may provide a mechanism for cancer immunotherapy. —Priscilla N. Kelly

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Conventional type 1 dendritic cells (cDC1s) are essential for cytotoxic CD8+ T cell responses in cancer immunity and immunotherapy. Although previous studies have suggested that mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is dispensable for DC maturation in vitro and represents a hallmark of tolerance in human monocyte–derived DCs, whether and how mitochondrial metabolism regulates cDC1-CD8+ T cell interactions in antitumor immunity remain largely unknown. In this study, we reveal that intratumoral cDC1s have discrete mitochondrial states and that mitochondrial fusion protein OPA1 dictates cDC1 antitumor immunity by facilitating mitochondrial energy and redox metabolism.

RATIONALE
Despite the success of immunotherapy in cancer treatment, therapeutic resistance or relapse occurs in a large subset of patients. cDC1s determine antitumor effects and therapeutic benefits upon immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) by orchestrating CD8+ T cell activation and function. However, cDC1s often experience metabolic stress and exhibit decreased functional fitness within the tumor microenvironment. ...

RESULTS
We established, from both mouse and human tumors, that cDC1s exhibit discrete mitochondrial states.
One subpopulation, referred to as [TMRM/MG]hi cells, contained polarized mitochondria, as demonstrated by the ratio of mitochondrial membrane potential [measured with tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester perchlorate (TMRM)] compared with mitochondrial mass [measured with MitoTracker Green (MG)]; whereas the 
other subpopulation, [TMRM/MG]lo cells, had depolarized mitochondria. Intratumoral cDC1s with polarized mitochondria more effectively primed CD8+ T cell responses than those with depolarized mitochondria.
Using unbiased profiling approaches and experimental validations, we uncovered that OPA1 orchestrates the mitochondrial states and morphology in intratumoral cDC1s.
Notably, OPA1 deletion in cDC1s led to increased tumor growth and impaired antitumor CD8+ T cell responses, corresponding to defective antigen presentation by cDC1s. Mechanistically, we established that OPA1 supports nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1) activity and expression to sustain mitochondrial OXPHOS in cDC1s. OPA1-NRF1 axis–mediated OXPHOS inhibited autophagy and lysosome–dependent degradation of major histocompatibility complex I (MHC-I) and antigen. In addition, OPA1-mediated electron transport chain (ETC) flow contributed to cDC1 immunogenicity by facilitating NADH-to-NAD+ conversion (i.e., conversion from the reduced to the oxidized form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide). These OPA1-dependent effects were antagonized by mitochondrial fission protein DRP1.
During tumor progression, intratumoral cDC1s experienced a progressive mitochondrial dysfunction, as revealed by reduction of the [TMRM/MG]hi subpopulation as well as decreased mitochondrial volume and OPA1-NRF1 signaling.
Intratumoral administration of tumor antigen–pulsed cDC1s with polarized mitochondria into tumor-bearing mice resulted in superior tumor control compared with cDC1s with depolarized mitochondria, particularly when combined with ICB therapies. Indeed, a substantial proportion of mice receiving cotreatment of tumor antigen–pulsed cDC1s with polarized mitochondria plus ICB completely rejected tumors and developed durable immune memory responses upon tumor rechallenge.

CONCLUSION
We uncovered discrete mitochondrial states and the underlying mitochondrial metabolic signaling programs in cDC1s that support their functional fitness in antitumor immunity and the establishment of durable ICB responses. These discoveries provide opportunities to reinvigorate cDC1s for improved cancer immunotherapy."

ScienceAdviser

Mitochondria power immunity against cancer (Perspective, no public access)



Mitochondrial metabolism and signaling orchestrate cDC1 antitumor responses.


Global human population is pushing Earth past its breaking point. Really!

Such or similar false apocalyptic claims have been made frequently for the past 50 years or so!

Human ingenuity has already defeated many of those and other apocalyptic claims in the past!

Look at the chart below, this is primitive trend extrapolation. Yes, the growth of human population since about 1800 AD was extreme and a miracle, but it will not continue like this!

This is superstition, not science! Alarmism and hysteria! Perhaps very lucrative for these pseudo scientists behind this study!

When scientists call for authoritarian central government watch out!

I am not sure why any journal today would publish such rubbish again!

Actually, world population may even decrease over the next several decades. The population of e.g. China and Japan is already shrinking. E.g. Germany's German population may also be shrinking. I bet also India's population growth is already slowing and so on.

"Earth has already exceeded its ability to support the global population sustainably, with new research warning of increasing pressure on food security, climate stability, and human well-being. However, slowing population growth and raising global awareness could still offer humanity some hope. ..."

From the abstract:
"The ecological concept of human carrying capacity is necessarily complicated because human beings are the ‘ultimate ecosystem engineers’ who moderate the environment for their benefit.
For at least the last few hundred years, human ingenuity, access to massive stocks of fossil fuels, and technological development have driven facilitation whereby increasing human abundance has promoted higher population growth rates.
However, this positive relationship broke down during the 1950s, and by 1962, the global human population entered a phase where the growth rate consistently declined as population increased.
The onset of this negative phase occurred 8 years before a global biocapacity deficit began in 1970. The onset of the negative phase also varies regionally, with the lowest-income and highest fertility regions entering this phase later than higher-income regions.
A Ricker logistic model fitted to the negative phase predicts that the global population could reach 11.7–12.4 billion people between 2067 and 2076. The same model fitted to the facilitation phase predicts a maximum population of 2.5 billion people that Earth might be able to maintain [???]
The negative phase also correlates strongly with the trend in global temperature anomaly, ecological footprint, and total emissions, with more of their variation explained by increasing population size rather than increasing per-capita consumption.
The Earth cannot sustain the future human population, or even today’s, without a major overhaul of socio-cultural practices [???] for using land, water, energy, biodiversity, and other resources."

Global human population is pushing Earth past its breaking point

Global human population has surpassed Earth's sustainable carrying capacity


Figure 1. Global human population size from 1000 to present (main figure) and from 1800 to present




Thirty previously unpublished verses by Empedocles discovered on a papyrus from Cairo

Good news!

"A 2,000-year-old papyrus fragment, discovered in the archives of the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo, reveals 30 previously unpublished verses by Empedocles, a pre-Socratic philosopher of the fifth century BCE. This discovery offers researchers direct access to a body of thought previously known only through quotations from later authors. The very first edition, translation, and commentary on these verses are published in the book "L'Empédocle du Caire," ... 

a papyrologist ... identified papyrus P. Fouad inv. 218 as an unknown fragment of the "Physica," the poem by the philosopher Empedocles of Agrigentum. ...

The text that has come to light deals with the theory of particle effluvia and sensory perceptions, particularly vision. Analysis of the text has revealed unexpected connections, including the probable direct source of a passage by Plutarch (2nd century), as well as a dialogue by Plato and a text by Theophrastus, a disciple of Aristotle, both from the 4th century BCE. Unnoticed echoes of Empedocles have also been detected in the comic poet Aristophanes and in the Latin philosopher Lucretius. The study further suggests that Empedocles could be regarded as a precursor of the atomist philosophers, foremost among whom is Democritus of Abdera. ..."

Thirty previously unpublished verses by Empedocles discovered on a papyrus from Cairo

Thirty previously unpublished verses by Empedocles discovered on a papyrus from Cairo (original news release) "A two-thousand-year-old papyrus fragment, discovered in the archives of the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo, reveals thirty previously unpublished verses by Empedocles, a pre-Socratic philosopher of the 5th century BCE. This discovery offers researchers direct access to a body of thought previously known only through quotations from later authors. The very first edition, translation and commentary on these verses are published in the book L'Empédocle du Caire ..."