Thursday, April 16, 2026

UK invests £2.5bn in nuclear fusion energy development plan

Good news! When will nuclear fusion take over nuclear fission to generate power?

"The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) has released its five-year plan to accelerate the growth of the UK nuclear fusion industry and ‘maintain the UK’s position as a global thought-leader in the field’.

In March, the UK government announced £2.5 billion for the fusion sector between 2026 and 2030 as part of its industrial strategy.

UKAEA’s plan – released earlier this month – assigns
£1.3 billion for the next phase of the UK’s prototype fusion power plant in West Burton, Nottinghamshire, as well as 
£920 million for building and operating fusion research facilities across the UK. The rest of the budget is set for projects that foster international collaboration and develop the next generation of fusion scientists. ..."

UK invests £2.5bn in nuclear fusion energy development plan | Chemistry World


Hosting the Joint European Torus experimental fusion reactor has helped to make the UK a leader in this technology


Math long resisted a digital disruption. AI is poised to change that

Food for thought! I also had the impression that the queen of science was kind of aloof and resisted machine learning & AI to some extent. However, we may see a revolution in the making!

"Mathematician ... is training computers how to prove one of the most famous problems in math history: Fermat’s last theorem.

Resolving the problem isn’t the point. There’s already an accepted proof that was finalized in 1998. That work is a tortuous maze of mathematics that fills about 130 pages over two papers. It spans mathematical fields and unites abstract ideas that previously seemed to have little to say to one another. ... 

Now, the explosion in artificial intelligence has propelled efforts, spearheaded by technology companies, to combine large language models with theorem provers to develop systems capable of autoformalization. In theory, such systems may ultimately be able to do things that humans can’t. ..."

AI could radically change how math proofs are verified "Modern formalization, supercharged by AI, could radically change the way people do mathematics"




Ist Donald Trump ein Faschist? Wirklich!

Wann wird die FAZ diesen peinlichen Journalisten (Frauke Steffens) endlich entlassen!

Wieder mal Schrott Journalismus aus der Bananenrepublik Deutschland! Oder ist es Trump Derangement Syndrome?

Quelle



European police agency Europol sends emails and letters to 75,000 people asking them to stop DDoS attacks

What took so long! For the past several decades there should have been more aggressive law enforcement action against cyber crime like DDOS attacks!

"A coalition of global law enforcement agencies have sent emails to more than 75,000 alleged cybercriminals who paid for a service to launch cyberattacks that can knock websites offline.

On Thursday, Europol announced the coordinated operation against several distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) for-hire services, which allow criminals to launch cyberattacks without needing to have any hacking skills, nor the need to run their own infrastructure. 

Part of the law enforcement action — dubbed Operation PowerOFF — included Europol sending warning emails and letters to more than 75,000 people who are suspected of using these DDoS-for-hire services. 

Europol said it obtained information about the alleged cybercriminals by raiding and seizing servers associated with these services, allowing the police to identify their registered users.

The action also resulted in four arrests, the takedown of 53 domains, and police executing 24 search warrants. ..."

European police email 75,000 people asking them to stop DDoS attacks | TechCrunch

Nature might have a universal rhythm for communication signals across species

Amazing stuff!

"... In a new study, ... scientists found that communication signals across a wide range of species tend to repeat at about 2 hertz, or roughly two beats per second.

The researchers propose this tempo might reflect a shared biological constraint. Animal brains, including humans, may be naturally tuned to process signals arriving at that pace. In other words, two beats per second may be a rhythmic "sweet spot" that enables brains to detect signals more easily and process communication more efficiently. ..."

"Why it matters: Understanding this potentially universal tempo could help scientists better interpret animal signaling and social behavior across species. ..."

From the abstract:
"During fieldwork in Thailand, we observed nearly identical tempos of co-located flashing fireflies and chirping crickets.
Motivated by this, we survey published data showing that an abundance of evolutionarily distinct species communicate isochronously at ~0.5–4 Hz, suggesting that this might be a tempo “hotspot.”
We hypothesize that this timescale may have a universal basis in the biophysics of the receiver’s neurons.
We test this by demonstrating that small receiver circuits constructed from elements representing typical neurons will be most responsive in the observed tempo range."

Nature might have a universal rhythm

Nature might have a universal rhythm (original news release) "From insects to birds to mammals, communication signals follow a common tempo"



Fig 1. Tempo comparison across scales, taxa, modalities, and media.


Fig 3. Schematic of the modeling methodology.


The Overlooked Black American Pioneers of the Western frontier

Recommendable!

"... For African [???] Americans, the frontier could be a place of hardship, but it also offered opportunity—a chance to construct new identities and exercise personal agency.

Consider the stories of three enslaved men who headed west to acquire skills as trappers, traders, and navigators during the first half of the nineteenth century. ...

All three men bore firearms during a time when Louisiana Purchase Territory codes generally forbade enslaved people from possessing guns or other weapons. While crossing the continent with the Corps of Discovery from 1804 to 1806, York expertly hunted bison and geese using his own rifle. Meriwether Lewis recorded that the firearm “belonged to Capt. Clark’s black man,” providing evidence that Clark did not merely loan him the weapon. ..."

The West’s Overlooked Black Pioneers — The Coolidge Review








Former President Obama is not cheap

He rarely makes the news since he is out of office! My impression is that his wife made more news since then.

"$30
The price of adult admission to Barack Obama’s new presidential center. That’s more than any other U.S. presidential library, a WSJ review shows. The Chicago attraction, which is scheduled to open June 19, also will set at least two other modern-era records for a former White House occupant: time taken to be completed and project cost."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Scientists capture superconductivity's 'dancing pairs' for first time, revealing missing pieces in a decades-old theory

Amazing stuff! 

What makes me wonder is that this study was done on atoms instead of electrons. What difference does it make going from electrons to atoms when it comes to superconductivity?

"For the first time, scientists have directly imaged the quantum process underlying superconductivity, a phenomenon in which paired electrons cause electric current to flow without resistance at sufficiently low temperatures. ...

the scientists directly imaged individual atoms pairing up in a special gas cooled nearly to absolute zero — the unreachable limit to how cold things can get. The type of gas, called a Fermi gas, allows scientists to substitute electrons with atoms and probe the physics of superconductors in a controlled way.

Surprisingly, the scientists found that after pairing up, the atoms moved in a synchronized dance, with their positions dependent on those of other pairs — a phenomenon not predicted by the 70-year-old, Nobel Prize-winning theory of superconductivity. ...

Using a newly developed imaging method, the experimental physicists captured snapshots of the relative positions of the pairs. The scientists used a special gas mixture made of lithium atoms, cooled to just a few billionths of a degree Celsius above absolute zero. At these temperatures, the atoms act as fermions, a fundamental class of particles that includes electrons. Since these fermions all follow the same physics of pairing, the atoms are suitable substitutes for studying electron behavior in superconductors.

The imaging revealed that the positions of paired atoms became influenced by those of other pairs. The paired atoms maintained a separation from other paired atoms, just as dancing couples keep their distance from other dancers in a ballroom ... This finding adds a new understanding of these systems that was missing from the historic BCS theory. ..."

"... From these observations, theorists have developed models—notably the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory, which assumes that the zero-resistance flow in a superconductor arises from electrons forming so-called Cooper pairs. This theory has been successful in explaining a large class of superconductors, but ... colleagues have now observed behavior that contradicts BCS predictions. Using a recently developed technique called atom-resolved continuum quantum gas microscopy, the researchers directly observed spatial correlations in cold atoms that mimic superconducting electrons. These high-precision measurements revealed an unexpected anticorrelation between opposite-spin atoms, implying deficiencies in the BCS theory. This and other surprising results demonstrate once again how new observational lenses can put long-standing theoretical models into question. ...

Predicting the collective behavior of electrons within materials is a formidable challenge. The many-body problem for classical particles is already difficult, but it is made unbelievably more complex for electrons and other fermions by the infamous “sign problem”: The wave function of fermionic particles changes sign upon particle exchange. This antisymmetric behavior gives rise to Pauli’s exclusion principle and makes modeling fermionic many-body systems incredibly challenging. ..."

From the abstract:
"In this Letter, we explore two-dimensional attractive Fermi gases at the microscopic level by probing spatial charge and spin correlations in situ.
Using atom-resolved continuum quantum gas microscopy, we directly observe fermion pairing and study the evolution of two- and three-point correlation functions as interspin attraction is increased.
The precision of our measurement allows us to reveal nonlocal anticorrelations in the pair correlation function, fundamentally forbidden by the mean-field result based on BCS theory but whose existence we confirm in exact auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo calculations.
We demonstrate that the BCS prediction is critically deficient not only in the superfluid crossover regime but also deep in the weakly attractive side.
Guided by our measurements, we find a remarkable relation between two- and three-point correlations that establishes the dominant role of pair correlations. Finally, leveraging local single-pair losses, we independently characterize the short-range behavior of pair correlations, via the measurement of Tan’s contact, and find excellent agreement with numerical predictions.
Our measurements provide a novel microscopic view into strongly correlated two-dimensional Fermi gases in the continuum."

Scientists capture superconductivity's 'dancing pairs' for first time, revealing missing pieces in a decades-old theory "Analysis of a first-of-its-kind experiment reveals missing pieces in the decades-old theory of superconductivity."

Scientists Capture Superconductivity’s ‘Dancing Pairs’ for First Time, Filling Gap in Decades-Old Theory (original news release) "Analysis of a first-of-its-kind experiment reveals missing pieces in the decades-old theory of superconductivity."

Superconductor Theory Under Cold-Atom Scrutiny "Snapshot measurements of cold-atom gases reveal hidden spin correlations that could force an update of some superconductivity theories."




Figure 1: A continuum quantum gas microscope can image a 2D collection of cold atoms (left). In the case of a fermionic gas, the technique can differentiate between spin-up and spin-down atoms. Using the microscope data, researchers can compute the correlation function (right). The observations (solid orange line) disagree with the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory (dashed yellow line) in that they show an anticorrelation “dip” for opposite spin atoms at a particular interparticle distance.


How high glucose impairs cognitive function in patients with diabetics

Good news!

"... Patients with type 2 diabetes are nearly three times as likely to develop cognitive impairment, and up to one in five patients over 60 develops dementia. Despite this, the cellular mechanisms linking high blood sugar to cognitive decline have been difficult to isolate.

A new study ... combines patient data with mouse experiments to map a pathway connecting elevated glucose to the death of memory-forming neurons. In a cohort of more than 2000 older adults with type 2 diabetes followed for nearly 5 years, higher levels of lactate, a byproduct of how the body processes glucose, were associated with an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment.

To probe causality, the researchers turned to mice, focusing on neurons from the hippocampus, a region central to learning and memory.
Under high glucose conditions, these neurons overstabilized a protein called Creb3, which, in turn, ramped up production of an enzyme that generates lactate. The excess piled up, overwhelming the cell’s energy systems and disrupting mitochondria, eventually triggering neuronal death.
These changes were then reflected in behavior; in tests like the Morris water maze, which measures spatial learning and memory, diabetic mice performed worse than controls.

Interrupting this pathway with a specially designed peptide reversed the damage. In diabetic mice, the treatment lowered lactate levels, protected hippocampal neurons, and improved performance on memory tests. Because the peptide can cross the blood-brain barrier, it points to a potential strategy for slowing or preventing diabetes-related cognitive decline. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Cognitive impairment is an unfortunately common complication of diabetes. Xu et al. investigated the underlying mechanisms in mouse models of diabetes.
In hippocampal neurons from these mice, the transcription factor Creb3 was stabilized by O-GlcNAcylation, a modification that is often enhanced by high glucose conditions, leading to greater lactate production through increased expression of the Creb3 target gene Ldha.
High amounts of lactate in the hippocampi of diabetic mice induced neuronal apoptosis and cognitive impairment.
These effects were attenuated by Ldha deficiency or by blocking the O-GlcNAcylation of Creb3 with a small peptide, suggesting that this pathway could be therapeutically targeted to preserve cognitive function in patients with diabetes.  ...

Abstract
The high glucose levels characteristic of diabetes can lead to increases in glucose metabolism through the process of glycolysis, resulting in greater production of lactate and in a monosaccharide-based posttranslational modification called O-GlcNAcylation.
Here, we identified O-GlcNAcylation and lactate production as the molecular mechanisms underlying high glucose–induced cognitive impairment, a prevalent complication of diabetes.
A prospective observational study revealed that elevated plasma concentrations of lactate were an independent risk factor for predicting mild cognitive impairment in patients with diabetes.
High-glucose treatment of mouse hippocampal neurons increased the O-GlcNAcylation of the transcription factor Creb3, which stabilized the protein by preventing its ubiquitination. The increase in Creb3 subsequently up-regulated the expression of the downstream target gene Ldha, which encodes the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase. As a result, lactate production was increased during glycolysis, triggering neuronal apoptosis and cognitive dysfunction in mouse models of type 1 and 2 diabetes.
Expression of a Creb3 mutant that could not be O-GlcNAcylated at Ser325 or competitive blockade of the O-GlcNAcylation of Ser325 in Creb3 with a short peptide alleviated these effects.
This study elucidates a mechanistic link between high glucose–induced Creb3 O-GlcNAcylation and Ldha-mediated lactate production, offering a potential therapeutic strategy for managing diabetes-related cognitive dysfunction."

ScienceAdviser

Kernkraft statt Schweröl: Renaissance der Atomfrachter

Gute Nachrichten!

Hinweis, ein längerer Artikel, den ich nicht ganz gelesen habe.

"... Weltweit wollen gleich fünf Unternehmensgruppen das Zeitalter der Atomfrachter zurückholen,
das 1962 mit der amerikanischen „Savannah“ begann und 
1979 mit der Stilllegung der deutschen „Otto Hahn“ endete.
Seitdem fahren Hochseeschiffe weitgehend mit Schweröl, das Umwelt und Klima stärker belastet als jeder andere fossile Brennstoff. ...

Am weitesten vorn liegt aktuell der australische Schiffsdesigner Seatransport in Runaway Bay im Bundesstaat Queensland. Er hat konkrete Pläne für den Nuklearantrieb eines 73 Meter langen Landungsboots Lloyd’s Register vorgelegt, einer Schiffs-Klassifikationsgesellschaft in London, die weltweit Dienstleistungen zur Risikobewertung und -minderung auf dem Meer anbietet.

Diese sind Grundlage für die Versicherungsprämien für Schiffe. Lloyd’s hat dem australischen Entwurf die grundsätzliche Genehmigung (Approval in Principle, AiP) erteilt. ..."

SMR statt Schweröl: Renaissance der Atomfrachter "Atomfrachter mit SMR-Reaktoren sollen Schweröl ersetzen und die Schifffahrt nahezu CO₂-frei machen. Mehrere Unternehmen treiben die Technik voran."

Elektrisches Fliegen: Fraunhofer-Motor liefert 750 kW unter 100 kg

Gute Nachrichten! Dem deutschen Ingenieur ist nichts zu schwör! 😊

"Forschende des Fraunhofer-Institut für Integrierte Systeme und Bauelementetechnologie (IISB) haben einen Elektromotor vorgestellt, der 750 kW leistet und nur 94 kg wiegt. Damit erreicht er ein Leistungsgewicht von 8 kW/kg. Das ist deutlich mehr, als bisherige Flugmotoren leisten können. Entwickelt wird der Antrieb im Rahmen des EU-Projekts AMBER für hybrid-elektrische Regionalflugzeuge. ...

Zur Steigerung der Effizienz nutzt der Motor eine Hairpin-Wicklung, bei der flachgepresste, isolierte Kupferleiter eng in den Stator eingebracht werden. Das erlaubt eine etwa 20 % höhere Kupferpackungsdichte, was zu einem stärkeren rotierenden Magnetfeld und einer besseren Energieumwandlung führt. ...

Ein weiterer technischer Fortschritt liegt in der Materialwahl: Der Motor verwendet 0,15 mm dünnen NO15-Elektrostahl, der etwa halb so dick ist wie konventionell eingesetztes Material. Diese Reduktion minimiert Wirbelstromverluste und die Joulesche Wärmeentwicklung, was insbesondere bei Drehzahlen bis 21.000 U/min den Wirkungsgrad verbessert.

Für das Thermomanagement kommt eine Ölkühlung zum Einsatz, die eine kontinuierliche Leistungsabgabe trotz kompakter Bauform ermöglicht. Die schnelle Wärmeabfuhr ist ein zentrales Kriterium bei der Entwicklung luftfahrttauglicher Elektromotoren, da bereits geringe Überhitzungen die Zuverlässigkeit beeinträchtigen können. ..."

Elektrisches Fliegen: Fraunhofer-Motor liefert 750 kW unter 100 kg "94 kg leicht, 750 kW stark: Ein neuer Fraunhofer-Motor soll den Traum vom hybrid-elektrischen Fliegen näher an die Praxis bringen. Was steckt dahinter?"


Das Innere der bärenstarken E-Maschine für Regionalflugzeuge des Fraunhofer IISB.


First complete genome loaded onto a quantum computer

Amazing stuff!

"Since the landmark decoding of the human genome in the early 2000s, DNA sequencing has exploded. Traditional computers have struggled to keep pace with the deluge of data and soaring processing demands, creating a bottleneck in scientists’ capacity to mine the myriad variations in DNA for biological insights—and a push for alternative solutions.

Now, one option, quantum computing, may be a step closer to helping. In an announcement last week, researchers say they have for the first time encoded a complete, albeit small, genome, that of the hepatitis D virus, into a quantum computer, proving in principle these weird machines could one day aid genomics research. ...

The approach may hold promise for studying the immense genetic variation found in humans and other organisms. Although geneticists have long relied on reference genomes represented by single linear sequences, they’re increasingly turning to “pangenomes,” which capture many possible DNA or RNA sequences within a species by branching into alternative versions. Pangenomes are seen as key to personalized medicine and understanding pathogen evolution, for example, but they’re computationally complex. ..."

"... The breakthrough comes from a collaboration between the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Melbourne, with Kyiv Academic University as an additional partner. The genome was loaded onto an IBM quantum computer, powered by the company’s latest 156-qubit Heron processor. ...

The goal of the Quantum Pangenomics project within Q4Bio was to perform a range of genomic processing tasks for the most complex and variable genomes and sequences – a task that can go beyond the capabilities of current classical computers, including the use of artificial intelligence. These tasks include assembling genomes and pangenomes from DNA sequence data, as well as mapping DNA fragments into reference genomes, which is key for studying genetic variation.

A pangenome is a collection of genome sequences from many individuals of the same species and they are particularly challenging to analyse using classical computing methods.2 Rather than representing a single reference genome, pangenomes capture the genetic diversity across many populations, which provides a more complete view of genetic variation. However, analysing multiple genomes at once dramatically increases computational complexity: as more genomes are incorporated into a pangenome, the burden on classical tools grows rapidly. ..."

First complete genome loaded onto a quantum computer | Science | AAAS "Researchers encode the tiny hepatitis D virus in an early step toward “quantum genomics”"

Genome loaded onto a quantum computer in world first (original news release) "Sanger Institute team and their collaborators have successfully loaded the Hepatitis D viral genome on a quantum computer "

Massive Ancient-DNA Study Reveals Natural Selection Has Accelerated in Recent Human Evolution

Amazing stuff!

"At a glance
  • Applying new analytic methods to nearly 16,000 ancient genomes reveals natural selection has acted on hundreds, not dozens, of genes in West Eurasia over the last 10,000 years.
  • More than half of the genes have known links to disease risk and other traits today, although it’s not yet clear what made each gene advantageous in prehistoric contexts.
  • The work demonstrates the power of ancient DNA to illuminate human biology and medicine in addition to history.
A massive study of ancient DNA from nearly 16,000 people across more than 10,000 years in West Eurasia reveals that natural selection has shaped modern human genomes far more than previously thought. ...

Combining an unprecedented amount of ancient genomic data with novel computational methods, the new analysis shows instead that directional selection has driven the spread or decline of hundreds of gene variants in West Eurasia since the end of the Ice Age and that selection has actually accelerated since people transitioned from hunting and gathering to farming. ...

Since 2010, when the first genome-wide data was recovered from ancient human remains, ancient-DNA research has expanded understanding of the relationships among people living in different time periods and regions of the world.

But geneticists struggled to realize the technology’s promise to illuminate how natural selection has shaped human genetic variation even over the last 10,000 years, when there is enough well-preserved genetic material to support large-scale studies.

The new study broke through that barrier using two innovations.

First, the Reich Lab spent seven years building a collection of DNA sequences from ancient people living in West Eurasia — what is now Europe and parts of the Middle East — that would be comprehensive enough in size and time span to support the work. ...

The lab collaborated with more than 250 archeologists and anthropologists to report new DNA data from 10,016 ancient individuals from West Eurasia. They added those to another 5,820 published ancient sequences and 6,438 modern ones.

“This single paper doubles the size of the ancient human DNA literature,” ...

The second innovation — and even more important to the success of the study, ...  development of computational methods to isolate the signal of directional selection from other causes of gene frequency changes, such as human migration, population mixing, and random genetic fluctuations that occur in small populations. ..."

From the abstract:
"Ancient DNA has transformed our understanding of population history, but its potential to reveal as much about human evolutionary biology has not been realized because of limited sample sizes and the difficulty of distinguishing sustained rises in allele frequency increasing fitness—directional selection—from shifts due to migrations, population structure, or non-adaptive purifying or stabilizing selection.
Here we present a method for detecting directional selection in ancient DNA time-series data that tests for consistent trends in allele frequency change over time, and apply it to 15,836 West Eurasians (10,016 with new data).
Previous work has shown that classic hard sweeps driving advantageous mutations to fixation have been rare over the broad span of human evolution.
By contrast, in the past ten millennia, we find that many hundreds of alleles have been affected by strong directional selection.
We also document one-standard-deviation changes on the scale of modern variation in combinations of alleles that today predict complex traits. This includes decreases in predicted body fat and schizophrenia, and increases in measures of cognitive performance. These effects were measured in industrialized societies, and it remains unclear how these relate to phenotypes that were adaptive in the past. We estimate selection coefficients at 9.7 million variants, enabling study of how Darwinian forces couple to allelic effects and shape the genetic architecture of complex traits."

Massive Ancient-DNA Study Reveals Natural Selection Has Accelerated in Recent Human Evolution | Harvard Medical School (Caveat: I did not read the entire, long article) "Hundreds of genes selected in West Eurasia since farming began, many linked to health"

In Africa 500 million+ children have accessed routine vaccination since 2000, preventing 4 million+ deaths each year

 Good news!

"Africa’s Monumental Vaccination Gains 

The first-ever comprehensive analysis of immunization in Africa has found that 500 million+ children have accessed routine vaccination since 2000, preventing 4 million+ deaths each year, reports the AP. 

Key breakthroughs detailed in the analysis, which was published by the WHO and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance:  

Measles vaccinations halved deaths from the virus, saving ~20 million lives since 2000, per UN News. 

The eradication of wild poliovirus in 2020 was a “historic milestone.” 

Meningitis deaths have fallen by nearly 40%. 

Maternal and neonatal tetanus have been eliminated in most countries.  

In 2024 alone, vaccines saved ~2 million lives. ...

10 countries account for 80% of children who haven’t received any vaccine in the region  ...

Meanwhile, health systems face growing vulnerability amid drastic funding cuts, particularly from the U.S; and global conflicts including the Iran war are disrupting critical supply chains." (Source)

Disclaimer

Since end of February, I  am 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.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Chipmakers AMD, Arm, and Qualcomm are all investing in this buzzy self-driving tech startup called Wayve

When will Waymo and Wayve merge? 

What will the new company be called? Waymove?

"Chipmakers AMD, Arm, and Qualcomm have invested $60 million into U.K. self-driving technology startup Wayve as part of an extension to its recent $1.2 billion Series D funding round, the companies announced Wednesday.

Wayve already brought in a who’s who of strategic investors for its Series D round, including Mercedes-Benz, Nissan, and Stellantis, and returning backers Nvidia, Microsoft, and Uber.
Other earlier investors like Eclipse, Balderton, and SoftBank Vision Fund 2 also joined the round, which could grow again; Uber has committed another $300 million in a milestone-based investment contingent on deploying robotaxis outfitted with Wayve’s tech in London. ..."

Chipmakers AMD, Arm, and Qualcomm are all investing in this buzzy self-driving tech startup | TechCrunch

NATO Allies Pledge $60 Billion in Military Aid to Ukraine for 2026

Good news!

"... Too few countries share too much of the burden, and we have to address this. Supporting Ukraine’s fight is important – as important as ever,” [NATO Secretary General] Rutte said.

The Ramstein meetings have become the primary platform for organizing and sustaining military assistance to Ukraine, bringing together more than 50 countries to align weapons deliveries, training programs, and logistics support.

Prior to Wednesday’s meeting
Germany announced a €4 billion ($4.7 billion) defense package that includes hundreds of Patriot missiles, while the
UK announced its largest drone package with over 120,000 drones. ..."

NATO Allies Pledge $60 Billion in Military Aid to Ukraine for 2026 "The pledge is in addition to the EU’s €90 billion loan package, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said."

Von der Leyens Kinderschutz-Lüge: EU startet den Ausweiszwang im Netz

Wird endlich jemand die Flintenuschi in Rente schicken!

Kinderschutz ist wohl vornehmlich Aufgabe der Eltern und nicht der Obrigkeit!

Von der Leyens Kinderschutz-Lüge: EU startet den Ausweiszwang im Netz "Heute meldet die EU-Kommission unter hehren Floskeln den Vollzug: Die EU-Altersnachweis-Anwendung ist technisch fertig, bald im Einsatz, eingerichtet mit Ausweis oder Pass. Kinderschutz, so heißt es. Gemeint ist das Ende der Anonymität aller und der Zensur-Griff nach dem Netz."

Russia's war losses and casualties in the Russo-Ukrainian War in one chart

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

Source



Psychiatric Overdiagnosis: The Price of Prosperity and abundance?

Recommendable! Food for thought! This subject has been debated for several decades in Western countries.

Is the modern world and/or too much leisure time behind the increased diagnosis of mental health issues around the world?

Or do we have too many doctors specialized on mental health always trying to make a living by diagnosing new occurrences and having more patients?

Are we unable to properly distinguish rather harmless from severe cases of mental health issues in too many cases?

Caveat: Behind the Great Firewall of China, I am unable to access this article.

Psychiatric Overdiagnosis: The Price of Prosperity? "Abundance, loose criteria, and perverse healthcare incentives turned normal struggles into a diagnosable epidemic"

Bursting bubbles break down PFAS

Good news! Human ingenuity can handle PFAS anytime!

The daily alarmism and hysteria about the so called forever chemicals like PFAS is totally over the top and reminds of superstition!

How dangerous are these pollutants really except that they are called forever chemicals? A case of demagoguery?

"The sea-dwelling mantis shrimp strikes its prey with enough force that even if it misses, it creates bubbles of gas that rapidly collapse, sending shockwaves that can stun or kill.

Mantisonix – a spin-out from the University of Surrey, UK – is using a similar technique to break down persistent fluorochemicals with high-frequency sound waves. ..."

Bursting bubbles break down PFAS | Business | Chemistry World


Bubble cavitation generates extreme local temperatures and pressures that can break very strong C–F bonds


The Kings College Alum Who Helped Write the Declaration of Independence

What a rare meeting of great minds it was about 250 years ago!

"On June 11, 1776, with the American Revolution raging, the Second Continental Congress convened in Philadelphia and appointed five men to draft a statement declaring a break from Great Britain. This group, known as the Committee of Five, comprised lawyer and lead author Thomas Jefferson, of Virginia; lawyer John Adams, of Massachusetts; Postmaster General Benjamin Franklin, of Pennsylvania; judge Roger Sherman, of Connecticut; and lawyer Robert Livingston 1765KC, of New York.

Though only twenty-nine, four years younger than even the rising star Jefferson, Livingston was chosen for his legal acumen. His insights informed the document’s litany of abuses charged to King George III and its conclusion that “a Prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.” The colonies adopted the text, soon to be known as the Declaration of Independence, on July 4, and fifty-six delegates signed it.

But Livingston, recalled to New York to draft the state constitution with his law partner, John Jay 1764KC, and his friend Gouverneur Morris 1768KC, missed the signing ceremony, and his name does not appear on the parchment. ..."

The Columbia-Educated Lawyer Who Helped Write the Declaration of Independence | Columbia Magazine "Robert Livingston 1765KC may have missed the document’s official signing, but his anti-tyranny legal philosophy still resonates today."


Declaration of Independence authors Adams, Sherman, Livingston, Jefferson, and Franklin.


Iran Update regarding blockade of Iranian ports and second round of negotiations

Good news!

"Key Takeaways:
  • US naval forces continued to enforce the blockade on Iranian ports. US Central Command (CENTCOM) reported on April 15 that no vessels had breached the blockade on Iranian ports during the first 48 hours of enforcement.
  • The United States has reportedly set two preconditions for another round of negotiations:
    first, Iran must fully “reopen” the Strait of Hormuz, and
    second, the Iranian negotiating delegation must have “full authority” to finalize a deal.
    The second precondition comes amid reports of intra-regime conflict and corroborates ... assessment that the United States is negotiating with a divided council of hardliners and pragmatists rather than a singular, unified authority.
    ...
  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated on April 14 that the United States and Israel have decided that removing the enriched uranium from Iran is a "threshold condition" for ending the US-Israeli campaign.
..."

Iran Update Evening Special Report, April 15, 2026 | Critical Threats

Estonia raids combat-vehicle funds to buy more drones, air defenses

I bet, the prospect of more future drone warfare will significantly reshuffle a lot of national defense budgets in coming years!

"Estonia’s government has decided to put on hold its planned acquisition of new infantry fighting vehicles.

The Baltic nation will instead direct the funds toward drones, counter-drone measures and air-defense systems, while squeezing more service life out of the country’s existing fleet of second-hand CV90 vehicles. ..."

Estonia raids combat-vehicle funds to buy more drones, air defenses

Self defense, pacifist Japan begins its biggest arms export opening since WW II

Good news! Bravo! Coming out of the shadows of WW II!

"Japan’s imminent easing of arms export rules has sparked strong interest from Warsaw to Manila, Reuters reporting found, as President Donald Trump wavers on security commitments to allies and the wars in Iran and Ukraine strain U.S. weapons supplies.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s ruling party approved the changes this week as she tries to invigorate the pacifist country’s military industrial base. Her government will formally adopt the new rules as soon as this month, three Japanese government officials told Reuters. ..."

Rattled by Trump, US allies eye Japan’s biggest arms opening since WWII

Germany gets a front-row seat to German weapons’ performance in Ukraine

Good news!

"Germany is formalizing a system under which its defense industry will receive unprecedented access to combat performance data from its own weapons fighting in Ukraine, as part of a sweeping €4 billion ($4.72 billion) defense package signed in Berlin on Tuesday.

The battlefield data memorandum, described by Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov as the first agreement of its kind for Ukraine, covers performance data from the PzH 2000 self-propelled howitzer, the RCH 155 wheeled artillery system and the IRIS-T air defense launcher. Ukraine also provides Germany access to its real-time DELTA battlefield management system and other digital platforms for developing AI models and analytical tools. ..."

Berlin gets a front-row seat to German weapons’ performance in Ukraine


A Ukrainian serviceman of the 43rd Artillery Brigade sits inside a 155mm self-propelled howitzer Panzerhaubitze 2000 (PzH 2000), towards Russian positions at a front line near Bakhmut, Donetsk region on June 15, 2023, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.


Iran acquired Chinese spy satellite to monitor US military bases

When communists aid fanatic, suicidal islamists and terrorists!

"Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite, giving the Islamic Republic a new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.

The TEE-01B satellite, built and launched by the Chinese company Earth Eye Co, was acquired by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Aerospace Force in late 2024 after it was launched into space from China, the report said, citing leaked Iranian military documents. ...

Last week, CNN reported that US intelligence suggested China was preparing to deliver new air defense systems to Iran in the coming weeks, citing three sources familiar with recent intelligence assessments. ..."

Iran acquired Chinese spy satellite to monitor US military bases | The Jerusalem Post "A new report reveals Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite, giving it the ability to monitor US military bases in the Middle East during the recent war, including air and naval facilities."

Image of the day

A day at work of a police officer!

Once more body cameras worn by police officers turn out to be very useful!

Female slashes face of 3-year-old boy she kidnapped at Walmart — and police officers open fire (Source)


 

On Gemini Robotics 1.5: Pushing the Frontier of Generalist Robots with Advanced Embodied Reasoning, Thinking, and Motion Transfer

Recommendable! Well done paper by Google published in October 2025!

From the abstract:
"General-purpose robots need a deep understanding of the physical world, advanced reasoning, and general and dexterous control. This report introduces the latest generation of the Gemini Robotics model family:
Gemini Robotics 1.5, a multi-embodiment Vision-Language-Action (VLA) model, and Gemini Robotics-ER 1.5, a state-of-the-art Embodied Reasoning (ER) model. We are bringing together three major innovations.
First, Gemini Robotics 1.5 features a novel architecture and a Motion Transfer (MT) mechanism, which enables it to learn from heterogeneous, multi-embodiment robot data and makes the VLA more general.
Second, Gemini Robotics 1.5 interleaves actions with a multi-level internal reasoning process in natural language. This enables the robot to "think before acting" and notably improves its ability to decompose and execute complex, multi-step tasks, and also makes the robot's behavior more interpretable to the user.
Third, Gemini Robotics-ER 1.5 establishes a new state-of-the-art for embodied reasoning, i.e., for reasoning capabilities that are critical for robots, such as visual and spatial understanding, task planning, and progress estimation.
Together, this family of models takes us a step towards an era of physical agents-enabling robots to perceive, think and then act so they can solve complex multi-step tasks."

[2510.03342] Gemini Robotics 1.5: Pushing the Frontier of Generalist Robots with Advanced Embodied Reasoning, Thinking, and Motion Transfer




Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Mark Zuckerberg Is Building two AI Clones to Replace Him in Meetings or to interact with staff and an agent to be his personal CEO assistant

Happy cloning! When will anybody get a clone? 😊

When will the clone look like a humanoid robot?

"The Meta chief is personally involved in training and testing his animated AI double, which could hold conversations with employees and offer them feedback, according to one person with knowledge of the project.
They added that the character is being trained on the billionaire’s mannerisms, tone and publicly available statements, as well as his own recent thinking on company strategies, so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it.

The project remains at an early stage and is distinct from Zuckerberg’s separate effort to build a “CEO agent” to assist him in his role, for instance by retrieving information quickly, an idea first reported by the Wall Street Journal. ..."

Report: Mark Zuckerberg Is Building an AI Clone to Replace Him in Meetings "Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg could soon have an AI clone of himself to interact with and provide feedback to employees, according to a report from the Financial Times."

Leukemia cells use a sugar-coated protein to hide from the immune system

Good news! Cancer is history (soon)!

"Highlights
  • Study reveals previously unrecognized way for cancer to evade the immune system. 
  • Other cancers could also be using sugar-coated proteins to shield themselves from immune attack.
  • Findings suggest CD43 is a potential target for new cancer immunotherapies.
...
Now, researchers have identified a key part of the cancer’s disguise: a protein called CD43 on the surface of leukemia cells that is coated so heavily in sugar molecules that it forms a physical barrier, shielding the cells from immune attack. ..."

From the abstract of the Perspective:
"Immune cells continually detect, engulf, and destroy invasive microbes and cancer cells. This process, called phagocytosis, is carried out by macrophages that must distinguish between proengulfment signals and inhibitory (“don’t-eat-me”) warnings.
Cluster of differentiation 47 (CD47), a cell-surface receptor, is the archetypal don’t-eat-me signal.
Many cancers upregulate CD47 expression to escape phagocytosis, and CD47 blockade promotes phagocytosis of cancer cells in mice.
However, CD47 blockers have not shown clinical benefits in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an aggressive cancer of blood immune cells. This discrepancy has raised the possibility that the molecular programs that inhibit phagocytosis differ between mice and humans. On page 174 of this issue, Chung et al. report that the mechanisms that control macrophage function in human and mouse cells are indeed different. They also identify cluster of differentiation 43 (CD43) as a potential target for human AML treatment."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Phagocytosis is a process used by immune cells called macrophages to destroy pathogens and cellular debris.
Tumor cells can evade killing by macrophage-mediated phagocytosis by deploying decoy signals to the immune system.
Chung et al. performed a CRISPR screen of human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells to identify phagocytic regulators ... 
The surface protein CD43 was found to be coated in a high-density shield of sialic acid residues that effectively functioned as a “don’t eat me” signal to limit immune clearance.
Inactivation of CD43 function restored the ability of macrophages to phagocytize AML. Strategies that disable sialylated glycans may therefore have potential to enhance phagocytosis and targeting of AML. ...

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Macrophages in the tumor microenvironment exert antitumorigenic effects through phagocytosis and/or direct tumoricidal activity.
Phagocytosis of tumor cells occurs through both antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) and antibody-independent cellular phagocytosis (AICP) mechanisms. Despite the strong evidence that macrophages can mediate tumor control in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other diseases, therapeutic agents that enhance macrophage phagocytosis, including anti-CD47 neutralizing antibodies, have not led to improved clinical outcomes. Thus, a more comprehensive understanding of the tumor-intrinsic factors that suppress human macrophage phagocytosis is needed.

RATIONALE
To systematically identify the key pathways that regulate phagocytosis by human macrophages, we performed genome-scale knockout CRISPR screens in human AML cell lines cocultured with human monocyte-derived macrophages.

RESULTS
We performed in vitro genome-wide loss-of-function CRISPR screens to identify the major pathways that regulate ADCP and AICP by human macrophages. Unexpectedly, we found that the classic “don’t eat me” signal CD47 has minimal impact on human macrophage phagocytosis.
By contrast, CD47 strongly suppressed mouse macrophage phagocytosis. Additionally, we identified the major histocompatibility class I complex (MHC class I) as the most potent negative regulator of ADCP.
By integrating results from the AICP and ADCP screens, we discovered that the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways negatively regulate both AICP and ADCP.
CD43, a heavily sialylated cell surface glycoprotein, was the major mediator of the inhibitory effects of the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways.
The inhibitory activity of CD43 was dependent on its sialic acid residues and the length of its ectodomain but independent of the canonical sialic acid–binding receptors SIGLEC-1, SIGLEC-7, and SIGLEC-9. CD43 expression reduced the avidity of interactions between immune effector cells and leukemia cells, consistent with a model where CD43 forms a steric or electrostatic glycocalyx barrier that reduces interactions with the leukemia cell surface.
We found that CD43 is overexpressed in AML patient samples, and inhibition of CD43 with antibodies enhances phagocytosis of AML cell lines and patient-derived samples.
Finally, we found that CD43 not only restrains human macrophage phagocytosis but also human natural killer (NK) and human T cell cytotoxicity.

CONCLUSION
The cell surface glycoprotein CD43 is a potent inhibitor of innate and adaptive antileukemic immunity. The inhibitory activity of CD43 on immune cells is dependent on posttranslational sialic acid modifications that are added through the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways. Thus, sialylated CD43 is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of AML."

Leukemia cells use a sugar-coated protein to hide from the immune system | Broad Institute "Targeting this protein, called CD43, could offer a new path to treatment for leukemia and other cancers."

The sialic shield of leukemia cells (Perspective, no public access)



Genome-scale phagocytosis screens identify sialylated CD43 as a potent inhibitor of antileukemic immunity.


Ex-Kanzlerin Merkel: 64.700 Euro Steuergeld seit Juni 2024 für Friseur und Visagisten

Das hilft der schrecklichen SED Altkanzlerin auch nicht mehr!

Leider erwähnt der Artikel wenig was die gewöhnlichen Spesen von Altkanzlern für solche Leistungen sind.

"... Für Ex-Kanzler Olaf Scholz fielen nach dessen Ausscheiden aus dem Amt hingegen keine entsprechenden Kosten an. ..."

Ex-Kanzlerin Merkel: 64.700 Euro Steuergeld seit Juni 2024 für Friseur und Visagisten "Seit Sommer 2024 hat die Bundesregierung knapp 64.700 Euro für Friseur- und Visagistenleistungen für Altkanzlerin Angela Merkel ausgegeben. Das geht aus einer Antwort des Bundeskanzleramts auf eine Kleine Anfrage der AfD-Bundestagsfraktion hervor, über die die Junge Freiheit berichtet. Demnach wurden allein im Jahr 2025 36.354 Euro für das Styling der Ex-Kanzlerin aus Steuermitteln aufgewendet."


SED Altkanzlerin Angela Merkel



The US Supply Chain Shakeup away from China before and After President Trump's Tariffs, in Five Charts

Very recommendable! Apparently, US companies have already significantly diversified their supply chains away from China before President Trump's second term.

The research study is in so far flawed as it was already published in November of 2025 (revised April 2026), which means it is able to evaluate only a very few months of foreign trade data since President Trump imposed new tariffs on 4/2/2026. Probably, to little data!

"Last year’s US-imposed tariffs sped up significant trade shifts—toward Mexico and away from China—that began years earlier and have diversified American imports among top partners.

While the Trump administration’s major tariff announcement on April 2, 2025, was billed as “Liberation Day,” research by Harvard Business School ... suggests that companies were already positioned to adjust to the levies. The recalibration of supply chains has been so profound that US imports from China have returned to near-2001 levels, when the country entered the World Trade Organization. ..."

From the abstract:
"This paper documents stylized facts about the “Great Reallocation” in US supply chain trade following the 2018–2019 tariff shocks and the April 2025 Liberation Day announcements.
We find that:
(i) The US has decoupled from China but not from the world overall.
(ii) US imports diversified mainly among its top-20 partners, rather than expanding to new source countries.
(iii) Local linear projections confirm ongoing declines in China’s import shares, with compensating increases from Vietnam, Mexico, and Taiwan.
(iv) Most of this shift occurred along the product-level intensive margin, though extensive margin adjustments became more pronounced for Vietnam and India from 2021-2024.
(v) After a period of “wait and see”, the decline in import shares from China spread to contract-intensive and relationship-sticky goods by 2021-2024.
(vi) Trade reallocation has already accelerated after Liberation Day, in favor of trade partners facing lower additional tariffs and with geographically proximate supply networks.
Together, these findings show that the US-China tariff shocks have unwound the US’ sourcing from China back to where it stood at the time of China’s WTO accession."

The US Supply Chain Shakeup After Tariffs, in Five Charts | Working Knowledge "Research ... documents how US imports have shifted away from China and toward Mexico and other top partners."

CRISPR takes a bold leap toward silencing Down syndrome's extra chromosome

Good news!

P.S. Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar (see screen print below) do not yet list this research paper published on 4/13/2026 as of writing this blog. This paper was published in the prestigious PNAS!

"Scientists have taken an important step toward a gene therapy that could one day turn off the extra genetic material that causes Down syndrome (DS). Down syndrome is a genetic condition caused by an extra chromosome 21 (and consequently hundreds of triplicate genes) that leads to developmental and neurological issues. ...

The team used a modified version of the gene-editing technique CRISPR/Cas9 ...  to insert the XIST gene into the extra chromosome 21 to silence it.

They tested their technique in the lab using human stem cells that contained an extra chromosome 21. After running several experiments, the team found that CRISPR was effective at pasting the XIST silencing gene exactly where it needed to go. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Significance
Down syndrome (DS) results from trisomy 21 and remains without a molecularly targeted therapy. 
Prior work demonstrated that ectopic expression of the long noncoding RNA XIST could epigenetically silence the extra chromosome 21, but technical limitations, including low gene integration efficiency, have hindered translational progress.
Here, we present a CRISPR-based approach that markedly improves the efficiency and specificity of XIST integration into an extra copy of chromosome 21. By engineering Cas9-exonuclease fusion, designing SNP-specific sgRNAs, and enhancing donor–acceptor DNA pairing, we achieve a significant improvement in silencing efficiency. Our findings demonstrate partial transcriptional correction of trisomic gene dosage and offer a scalable, targeted platform for chromosomal therapy in DS and other aneuploidies.

Abstract
Down syndrome (DS) is one of the most common developmental human genetic disorders and is due to triplication of chromosome 21 (HSA21).
Although previous studies using epigenetic suppression of HSA21 by the long noncoding RNA XIST showed a potential for DS treatment, integration efficiency of XIST by conventional zinc finger nucleases is too low to allow for practical implementation.
Here, we report a modified CRISPR/Cas9 approach, which enhances the efficiency of XIST gene integration.
First, a codon-optimized λ-phage exonuclease (exo) was fused with Cas9 to create 5’- and 3’-end overhangs at cutting sites of donor DNA and acceptor chromosome DNA.
Second, four sgRNAs, two of which selectively targeted each the acceptor or donor DNA, were assembled tandemly into one Cas9 plasmid (PX459) to increase the Cas9-cutting efficiency and promote donor DNA integration.
Third, sgRNAs were designed by searching for unique single nucleotide polymorphism nucleotides distinct between the three HSA21 copies, as a protospacer adjacent motif site to specifically target one HSA21 copy.
Fourth, donor DNA plasmid containing XIST was modified to disable replication and inhibit transcription function and allow for inducible expression.
Our modified CRISPR method significantly enhanced the integration efficiency (20 to 40%) of long XIST gene (14 kb) into an extra chromosome 21 (HSA21), as was identified with PCR, cell cloning, immunostaining, and FISH.
RNA sequencing results showed that imbalance of gene transcription across extra HSA21 can be partially corrected by XIST gene integration. The modified CRISPR method with XIST paves a road for therapeutic treatment for DS."

CRISPR takes a bold leap toward silencing Down syndrome's extra chromosome