Saturday, February 07, 2026

How stupid is German public transportation?

Since yesterday was trying to access the official website of the public transportation company of the Rhein Main Verkehrsverbund GmbH at rmv.de.

Rhein Main is a major urban, conference, trade fair, business and tourist center in Germany! The airport of Frankfurt am Main is the busiest in Germany and so on.

Google says foreign visitors are blocked from accessing this website: "The RMV website and app are currently experiencing issues, likely due to geo-blocking of non-German IP addresses, making them inaccessible for many users outside Germany or using foreign connections."

It does not get more stupid!

P.S. I did not even use any firewall etc.!




Notepad++ says Chinese government hackers hijacked its software updates for months

Nasty stuff! What about e.g. Microsoft Visual Studio Code or GNOME's default editor GEdit?

Whether it is spying on hotel rooms or software manipulation!
The Chinese Communist Party is a menace!

"The developer of the popular open source text editor Notepad++ has confirmed that hackers hijacked the software to deliver malicious updates to users over the course of several months in 2025. ..."

"... According to the analysis provided by the security experts, the attack involved infrastructure-level compromise that allowed malicious actors to intercept and redirect update traffic destined for notepad-plus-plus.org. The exact technical mechanism remains under investigation, though the compromise occurred at the hosting provider level rather than through vulnerabilities in Notepad++ code itself. Traffic from certain targeted users was selectively redirected to attacker-controlled malicious update manifests.

The incident began in June 2025. Multiple independent security researchers have assessed that the threat actor is likely a Chinese state-sponsored group, which would explain the highly selective targeting observed during the campaign. ..."

Notepad++ says Chinese government hackers hijacked its software updates for months | TechCrunch



FDA-approved drug may address a major cause of infertility

Good news! Nice example of drug repurposing!

"Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), in which the ovaries don’t mature and release eggs properly, affects about 3% of women under age 40 and typically causes infertility. But a drug already approved to treat kidney disease may one day help some of these people [women] get pregnant, a research team reports today in Science. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Premature ovarian insufficiency is associated with decreased numbers of ovarian follicles and decreased frequency of menstrual periods before age 40. This occurs in more than 1% of women and leads to what is generally considered to be irreversible infertility. By screening a library of approved drugs, Lin et al. identified a promising candidate in finerenone, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist used for kidney disease ... The authors demonstrated that finerenone decreased ovarian fibrosis in mouse models, facilitating follicular development and improving fertility, and other antifibrotic drugs showed similar effects. In a pilot clinical trial, patients treated with finerenone showed improvement in ovarian function and follicle maturation, some getting as far as in vitro fertilization, all without major side effects or risk of fetal exposure.

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) affects approximately 1 to 3% of women under the age of 40. It is characterized by symptoms such as oligomenorrhea or amenorrhea, sex steroid deficiency, elevated follicle-stimulating hormone levels, and infertility. Currently, no effective treatments exist to restore fertility in patients with POI. This is because ovarian follicular development in these patients is insufficient, typically lacking ultrasound-detectable antral follicles that are hormone-responsive. ...

RATIONALE
... we established a platform and systematically screened 1297 compounds from an FDA-approved drug library and identified finerenone as a safe and potentially effective candidate for treating POI-associated infertility.

RESULTS
We first revealed that finerenone promoted ovarian follicular development in mice, with no observed adverse effects on oocyte quality, early embryonic development, or offspring health.
Furthermore, our pilot clinical trial showed that oral finerenone administration (20 mg, twice weekly) promoted the development of follicles in patients with POI, yielding mature eggs (oocytes) and viable embryos. Mechanistically, we found that finerenone reduced collagen deposition (fibrosis) within aged ovaries, thus reducing the stromal fibrosis-mediated restriction of follicular development and creating a more permissive microenvironment for follicle activation and growth.
Based on these findings, we further identified a series of FDA-approved oral antifibrotic drugs, including nintedanib, ruxolitinib, and other drugs with established antifibrotic activity but based on distinct antifibrotic mechanisms, which were effective in promoting ovarian follicle growth. ... This broader validation across antifibrotic drugs with different mechanisms of action supports the notion that ovarian stromal fibrosis is a central, druggable, pathological condition that suppresses follicle growth in POI.

CONCLUSION
Our findings provide a starting point showing that targeting the ovarian stroma—rather than the follicles themselves—represents an effective therapeutic strategy for POI-related infertility. We propose that alleviating ovarian stromal fibrosis through repurposed antifibrotic drugs, such as finerenone, nintedanib, ruxolitinib, or other FDA-approved oral agents, offers a possible promising intervention for restoring fertility in patients with POI."

FDA-approved drug may address a major cause of infertility | Science | AAAS



Schematic model of finerenone-mediated follicle growth.
Ovarian stromal collagen suppresses the development of small follicles (left), whereas finerenone reduces the fibrotic deposits (right), relieving stromal constraints and thus enabling follicle activation and development.


China Bombshell: Patel says Biden-era FBI ‘buried’ truth about CCP’s ties to biolab on US soil

No surprise! The Chinese communist party knew too much about the compromised  corrupt, senile and demented 46th President and his clan!

China Bombshell: Patel says Biden-era FBI ‘buried’ truth about CCP’s ties to biolab on US soil | Just The News

Diffusion models in charts

 Mea culpa, I forgot to add the source and I do not remember it anymore.








Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease and they identified a key player

Good news!

"Key takeaways
  • Tau is the most common protein that aggregates in neurodegeneration diseases. However, researchers had not determined why some types of neurons are affected more than others.
  • The work identified a protein complex called CRL5SOCS4 that marks tau for degradation. The findings suggest that strengthening this natural defense mechanism could represent a new therapeutic strategy for neurodegenerative diseases.
  • Enhancing CRL5SOCS4 activity could help neurons clear tau more effectively, while strategies to maintain proteasome function during stress might prevent the formation of toxic tau fragments.
...

uncovered why certain brain cells are more resilient than others to the buildup of a toxic protein that is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias ...

used a novel CRISPR-based genetic screening approach on lab-grown human brain cells to determine the cellular machinery that controls the accumulation of tau protein in the brain. ...

Among more than 1,000 genes identified, the CRL5SOCS4 protein complex emerged as a key player that attaches molecular tags to tau, marking it for destruction by the cell’s recycling machinery.

Importantly, analysis of brain tissue from Alzheimer’s patients revealed that higher expression of CRL5SOCS4 components made neurons more likely to survive despite the accumulation of tau protein. 

The study also revealed an unexpected connection between mitochondrial dysfunction and tau toxicity. When the researchers disrupted the cellular powerhouses that generate energy, they triggered the production of a specific tau fragment approximately 25 kilodaltons in size. This fragment closely resembles a biomarker found in the blood and spinal fluid of Alzheimer’s patients, known as NTA-tau. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• CRISPR screens in human neurons reveal modifiers of tau oligomer accumulation
• CUL5 and the substrate-specific adaptor SOCS4 function as tau E3 ubiquitin ligase
• Expression of CUL5 complexes is correlated with resilience in tauopathies
• Reactive oxygen species generate a disease-relevant tau proteolytic fragment

Summary
Aggregation of the protein tau defines tauopathies, the most common age-related neurodegenerative diseases, which include Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia. Specific neuronal subtypes are selectively vulnerable to tau aggregation, dysfunction, and death. However, molecular mechanisms underlying cell-type-selective vulnerability are unknown. To systematically uncover the cellular factors controlling the accumulation of tau aggregates in human neurons, we conducted a genome-wide CRISPRi screen in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons. The screen uncovered both known and unexpected pathways, including UFMylation and GPI anchor biosynthesis, which control tau oligomer levels. We discovered that the E3 ubiquitin ligase CRL5SOCS4 controls tau levels in human neurons, ubiquitinates tau, and is correlated with resilience to tauopathies in human disease. Disruption of mitochondrial function promotes proteasomal misprocessing of tau, generating disease-relevant tau proteolytic fragments and changing tau aggregation in vitro. These results systematically reveal principles of tau proteostasis in human neurons and suggest potential therapeutic targets for tauopathies."

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease | UCLA "Study identifies cellular defense system that protects neurons from toxic tau proteins, opening door to new treatments"



Graphical abstract


Trump signs executive order quadrupling beef imports from Argentina

Good news! What is the beef with that? Amazing what you can do with Executive Orders (like putting more steaks on plates)! 😊

From TrumpRx to steakhouses within a few day? The Argentinian gauchos are back in their saddles!

"... Argentina's Foreign Ministry wrote in a statement that the new agreement, which was signed Thursday, will "grant an unprecedented expansion of preferential access for Argentine beef to its market by 100,000 tons," representing an increase of "$800 million in Argentine beef exports." ..."

Trump signs executive order quadrupling beef imports from Argentina - CBS News


Argentinian Gaucho catching cattle


Pregnancy, breastfeeding associated with higher levels of cognitive function for postmenopausal women, new research shows

Amazing stuff!

"... Researchers used data from the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study and the Women’s Health Initiative Study of Cognitive Aging, which annually assessed more than 7,000 women aged about 70 for up to 13 years.

Women are disproportionately affected by Alzheimer’s disease, something that has not been fully explained by the length of life span. Fox’s study aimed to address this question by examining the relationship between reproductive histories and cognitive function in a large group over a long period, something previous studies had not yet accomplished. ..."

"Key Takeaways
  • Pregnancy and breastfeeding may improve long-term cognitive function in women. 
  • The study found that an increase in cumulative time spent pregnant and time spent breastfeeding correlated with greater cognition, verbal memory and visual memory later in life. 
  • The findings may open the door to potential advancements in preventative strategies targeting women at greater risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
..."

From the abstract:
"INTRODUCTION
The brains of female mammals evolved to undergo structural and functional changes during pregnancy and lactation, equipping them for motherhood. However, long-term cognitive health implications of these adaptations in women are poorly understood.

METHODS
In the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) Memory Study (WHIMS; n = 7427) and WHI Study of Cognitive Aging (WHISCA; n = 2304), postmenopausal women completed reproductive history interviews, annual global cognitive assessment from mean age 70 for up to 13 years, and multi-domain cognitive testing for up to 8 years.

RESULTS
Each additional month pregnant was associated with higher scores of global cognition.
Each additional month of breastfeeding corresponded to higher scores of global cognition, verbal memory, and visual memory. We observed equivalent results for binary formulations of gravidity and breastfeeding.

DISCUSSION
Low rates of fertility and breastfeeding may have implications for postmenopausal cognitive health at the population level. Next steps include examining mechanisms linking women's reproductive history with postmenopausal cognitive health.

Highlights
  • Motherhood may leave an enduring mark on women's brains, shaping cognitive health.
  • Over 7000 women were assessed annually from approximately age 70 for up to 13 years.
  • Ever being pregnant and cumulative time pregnant were linked with better cognition.
  • Ever having breastfed and more time breastfeeding were linked with better cognition.
  • These results imply that declining fertility may affect cognitive aging in future generations.
"

Pregnancy, breastfeeding associated with higher levels of cognitive function for postmenopausal women, new research shows | UCLA



Fig. 3 Results from primary hypotheses.


New NIH Jay Bhattacharya chief says all gain-of-function research stopped

Good news! Hopefully, this is only a temporary stop! Why all gain of function research, domestic or foreign?

How much is actually gain of function research still needed or what are the alternatives?

Fauci Fallout: New NIH chief says all gain-of-function research stopped, no lockdowns in future | Just The News "Gain of function research is a controversial form of science that tries to enhance deadly viruses and bacteria to make them more deadly in an effort to study future pandemic responses."

Friday, February 06, 2026

BBC exposes China's spy-cam porn industry

Next time you stay in a hotel in China ...

(1) BBC exposes China's spy-cam porn industry | BBC News - YouTube

President debuts TrumpRx site aimed at lowering drug prices for Americans

What is next President Trump? The man is on a mission and restless!
 
President debuts TrumpRx site aimed at lowering drug prices for Americans - YouTube

Viral ‘sanamania’ craze boosts Japan PM’s Takaichi's popularity

Very recommendable!

She is a fan of former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher! 

(240) Viral ‘sanamania’ craze boosts Japan PM’s popularity - YouTube


She is a rock star with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung


The High Cost of Sanctuary Policies and sanctuary cities

Recommendable!

(240) The High Cost of Sanctuary Policies - YouTube

Yodelling taken to new heights: Swiss folk singing adapts to modern era

Very recommendable! Time for more yodeling has come! 😊

(236) Yodelling taken to new heights: Swiss folk singing adapts to modern era • FRANCE 24 English - YouTube

Ibrahim Traore Drives Burkina Faso’s Highest Gold Production In History

Recommendable!

(236) Ibrahim Traore Drives Burkina Faso’s Highest Gold Production In History | Firstpost Africa | N18G - YouTube

ISIS Mosque Bloodbath: 31 Dead in Pakistan Capital Blast

What monsters attack a place of worship!

(236) ISIS Mosque Bloodbath: 31 Dead in Pakistan Capital Blast | WION - YouTube

Claude CoWork Breakthrough Triggers Sell-Off in Indian Tech with Palki Sharma

Serious stuff! How much will the Indian IT sector suffer from advances in ML & AI?

(236) Claude CoWork Breakthrough Triggers Sell-Off in Indian Tech | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G - YouTube

How Thailand Went From Asian Leader to Laggard - Bloomberg

Recommendable!

(236) How Thailand Went From Asian Leader to Laggard - YouTube

Why is the Saudi Arabia-UAE Rivalry Heating Up? with Palki Sharma

Very recommendable!

(236) Why is the Saudi Arabia-UAE Rivalry Heating Up? | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G - YouTube

Olympic ski jumpers may be injecting their penises with acid to jump farther

The latest and greatest about the Olympic Games! There are no limits to doping! Anything goes! Or what do female athletes inject into their breasts?

Why don't we have some Olympic Games for best doping?

Olympic ski jumpers may be injecting their penises with acid to jump farther | Blaze Media "According to [German tabloid] Bild, some ski jumpers are allegedly injecting their penises with hyaluronic acid in order to increase the size of the area to fly a bit farther. The logic here is that with an enlarged groin area, the ski jumpers would be measured for a slightly larger suit, which is then a bit looser when the swelling goes down."

Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests

Amazing stuff! How did the harnessing of fire by humans affect human evolution?

"A new study ... suggests that this increased exposure to burn injuries may have driven notable genetic adaptations which differentiated humans from other primates and mammals. This may also explain both beneficial and maladaptive responses to severe burn injury. ...

Using comparative genomic data across primates, the researchers found examples of genes associated with burn injury responses which show signs of accelerated evolution in humans. These genes are involved in wound closure, inflammation and immune system response—likely helping to rapidly close wounds and fight infection; a major complication after burn injury, particularly before the widespread use of antibiotics.

These findings support the theory that exposure to burn injuries may have been a notable force on the evolution of humans. ..."

From the abstract:
"The mastery of fire transformed human evolution through advantages spanning diet, behavior, physiology, and ecology. While these benefits are well established, here we highlight a previously overlooked cost — and selective pressure — unique to humans: high-temperature burn injury.
Unlike other species, humans and their hominin ancestors have faced increased lifetime risk of burns, which we argue has driven genetic adaptation. Drawing on comparative genomic evidence across primates, we suggest that genes associated with burn injury response — relating to wound healing and inflammation — show signs of accelerated evolution in humans.
We propose that recurrent exposure to burns acted as a selective force in our lineage, helping to explain both beneficial adaptations and paradoxical maladaptive responses to severe injury.
By framing burns as an evolutionary pressure, the Burn Selection Hypothesis invites a re-evaluation of how fire shaped human biology and offers new perspectives for understanding both the evolutionary past and modern burn care."

Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests

Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests (original news release) "Humans’ exposure to high temperature burn injuries may have played an important role in our evolutionary development, shaping how our bodies heal, fight infection, and sometimes fail under extreme injury, according to new research."




Cancer protein molecule shields against Alzheimer’s

Amazing stuff!

"Scientists have found a protein made by cancer cells that protects the brain from Alzheimer’s disease in mice — potentially solving a decades-old puzzle about why cancer and Alzheimer’s disease are rarely found in the same person.
When mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease were given a transplant of lung, prostate or colon cancer, they did not develop the plaques characteristic of the brain condition. ... After more than six years of searching, they identified a cancer protein called cystatin C that could infiltrate the brain and flag brain plaques for destruction by the immune system. The breakdown of plaque improved cognitive performance in mice and, if replicated in humans, could form the basis of a new therapy."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• Fight Alzheimer’s disease with peripheral cancers via Cyst-C secretion
Tumor-derived Cyst-C attenuates amyloid pathology of Alzheimer’s disease
• Human Cyst-C binds amyloid oligomers and activates TREM2
• Tumor-derived Cyst-C degrades pre-existing amyloid plaques via TREM2

Summary
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and cancer are among the most devastating diseases worldwide. Epidemiological data indicate that the incidence of AD significantly decreases in patients with a history of cancer. However, whether and how peripheral cancer may affect AD progression is yet to be studied.
Here, we find that peripheral cancer inhibits amyloid pathology and rescues cognition via secretion of cystatin-c (Cyst-C), which binds amyloid oligomers and activates triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) in microglia, enabling microglia to degrade the pre-existing amyloid plaques in AD mice. These effects of Cyst-C are abolished by a cell-type-specific deletion (Cx3cr1TREM2−/−) or mutation of TREM2 (TREM2R47H) or Cyst-C (Cyst-CL68Q) in microglia.
Together, these findings provide significant conceptual advances into cancer neuroscience and establish therapeutic avenues that are distinct from the present amyloid-lowering strategies, aiming at degrading the existing amyloid plaques for precision-targeted AD therapy."

Nature Briefing: Cancer

Cancer might protect against Alzheimer’s — this protein helps explain why (open access) "A molecule produced by cancer cells can shield the brain from Alzheimer’s disease in mice."



Graphical abstract


Multiple sclerosis may have two distinct biological pathways

Good news!

"... For decades, multiple sclerosis (MS) has been defined primarily by its symptoms, rather than its underlying biology. Now, a new study aims to challenge that approach, presenting evidence that MS may actually follow two distinct biological pathways. ... 

To do that, the team paired two complementary sources of information. One came from blood measurements of serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL), a protein released when nerve cells are damaged and widely used as a marker of disease activity. The other came from MRI scans that captured how structural degeneration spread through the brain over time.

Rather than examining each dataset in isolation, the researchers analyzed them together using a machine-learning system developed at UCL called SuStaIn (Subtype and Stage Inference). The model is designed to detect subtle disease patterns and map how they evolve, allowing the team to test whether MS follows a single biological trajectory or something more complex. ...

Instead of detecting a smooth disease spectrum, two distinct structural patterns emerged. The team found that patients clustered into separate groups that reflected different underlying pathways of neurodegeneration.

One subtype was marked by early damage concentrated in the brain’s cortex, while the other was dominated by degeneration in white matter regions. Although both patterns ultimately produced the symptoms associated with multiple sclerosis, the location of tissue damage and the path it followed through the brain differed substantially between the two groups. ..."

From the abstract:
"Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a highly heterogeneous disease in its clinical manifestation and progression. Predicting individual disease courses is key for aligning treatments with underlying pathobiology.
We developed an unsupervised machine learning model integrating MRI-derived measures with serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) levels to identify biologically informed MS subtypes and stages. ...

In comparison to MRI-only models, incorporating sNfL with MRI improved correlations of data-derived stages with the Expanded Disability Status Scale in the training (Spearman’s ρ = 0.420 versus MRI-only ρ = 0.231, P = 0.001) and external test sets (ρ = 0.163 for MRI–sNfL, versus ρ = 0.067 for MRI-only).
The early-sNfL subtype showed elevated sNfL, corpus callosum injury and early lesion accrual, reflecting more active inflammation and neurodegeneration, whereas the late-sNfL group showed early volume loss in the cortical and deep grey matter volumes, with later sNfL elevation.
Cross-sectional subtyping predicted longitudinal radiological activity: the early-sNfL group showed a 144% increased risk of new lesion formation (hazard ratio = 2.44, 95% confidence interval 1.38–4.30, P < 0.005) compared with the late-sNfL group. Baseline subtyping, over time, predicted treatment effect on new lesion formation on the external test set (faster lesion accrual in early-sNfL compared with late-sNfL, P = 0.01), in addition to treatment effects on brain atrophy (early sNfL average percentage brain volume change: −0.41, late-sNfL = −0.31, P = 0.04).

Integration of sNfL provides an improved framework in comparison to MRI-only subtyping of MS to stage disease progression and inform prognosis. Our model predicted treatment responsiveness in early, more active disease states. This approach offers a powerful alternative to conventional clinical phenotypes and supports future efforts to refine prognostication and guide personalized therapy in MS."

Multiple sclerosis may have two distinct biological pathways



Fig. 1 Overview of the study


AI reveals how brain activity unfolds over time

Amazing stuff! Sounds promising!

"In brief
  • Stanford researchers developed Brain-dynamic Convolutional-Network-based Embedding (BCNE) to analyze complex brain activity over time and space.
  • This deep learning approach enables insights into memory, decision-making, and neurological conditions, offering potential applications in clinical settings.
  • Further refinement is needed for real-time monitoring and integration with other imaging techniques.
...

applied deep learning to decipher such complex brain activity – in two and, in some cases, three dimensions and over long time scales to provide neuroscientific insights ...

In fact, in one experiment, the researchers recorded the brain activity of people watching movies to note how their brains transition from scene to scene and to evaluate changes in perception, emotion, and comprehension as the narrative unfolds.
In other experiments with lab monkeys and rats, BCNE captured detailed information about how physical movements are signaled from the brain to the muscles and provided other detailed information about the animals’ brain activity. ..."

From the abstract:
"Dynamic brain data are becoming increasingly accessible, providing a gateway to understanding the inner workings of the brain in living participants. However, the size and complexity of the data pose a challenge in extracting meaningful information across various data sources. Here we introduce a generalizable unsupervised deep manifold learning for exploration of neurocognitive and behavioral patterns. Unlike existing methods that extract patterns directly from the input data, the proposed brain-dynamic convolutional-network-based embedding (BCNE) captures brain-state trajectories by analyzing temporospatial correlations within the data and applying manifold learning.
The results demonstrate that BCNE effectively delineates scene transitions, underscores the involvement of different brain regions in memory and narrative processing, distinguishes dynamic learning processes and identifies differences between active and passive behaviors. BCNE provides an effective tool for exploring general neuroscience inquiries or individual-specific patterns."

AI reveals how brain activity unfolds over time | Stanford Report "Researchers have developed a deep learning model that transforms overwhelming brain data into clear trajectories, opening new possibilities for understanding thought, emotion, and neurological disease."






Terahertz microscope reveals the motion of superconducting electrons

Amazing stuff!

"... Now, MIT physicists have used terahertz light to reveal inherent, quantum vibrations in a superconducting material, which have not been observable until now. ...

In a paper appearing today in the journal Nature, the scientists report that they have developed a new terahertz microscope that compresses terahertz light down to microscopic dimensions. This pinpoint of terahertz light can resolve quantum details in materials that were previously inaccessible. ..."

From the abstract:
"The superconducting gap defines the fundamental energy scale for the emergence of dissipationless transport and collective phenomena in a superconductor.
In layered high-temperature cuprate superconductors, in which the Cooper pairs are confined to weakly coupled two-dimensional (2D) copper–oxygen (CuO2) planes, terahertz (THz) spectroscopy at subgap millielectronvolt (meV) energies has provided crucial insights into the collective superfluid response perpendicular to the superconducting layers. However, within the CuO2 planes, the collective superfluid response manifests as plasmonic charge oscillations at energies far exceeding the superconducting gap, obscured by strong dissipation.
Here we present spectroscopic evidence of a below-gap, 2D superfluid plasmon in few-layer Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x and spatially resolve its deeply subdiffractive THz electrodynamics. By placing the superconductor in the near field of a spintronic THz emitter, we reveal this distinct resonance—absent in bulk samples and observed only in the superconducting phase—and determine its plasmonic nature by mapping the geometric anisotropy and dispersion. Crucially, these measurements offer a direct view of the momentum-dependent and frequency-dependent superconducting transition in two dimensions."

Terahertz microscope reveals the motion of superconducting electrons | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology "For the first time, the new scope allowed physicists to observe terahertz “jiggles” in a superconducting fluid."








Kikkoman bets on organic growth in 'most critical' Indian market

Japanese soy sauce for the Indian cuisine?

Kikkoman bets on organic growth in 'most critical' Indian market - Nikkei Asia "Japanese soy sauce maker emphasizes localization, chef endorsements, executive says"




US Supreme Court Justice Jackson faces questions about impartiality after appearing at anti-ICE themed Grammys. Really!

This is almost a laughable insinuation! An example of junk journalism!

Justice Jackson faces questions about impartiality after appearing at anti-ICE themed Grammys | Just The News "Star-studded evening featured multiple performances and speeches highlighting opposition to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)."


Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson (official photo)


Thursday, February 05, 2026

FDP-Chef Dürr erwägt Bewaffnung von Bahnmitarbeitern

Kein Wunder das die FDP aus dem Bundestag geflogen ist! An Stelle von sofortiger Deportation oder Inhaftnahme von gewalttätigen Ausländern!

FDP-Chef Dürr erwägt Bewaffnung von Bahnmitarbeitern | ntv - YouTube

Die Tyrannei der Mehrheit mit Bernd Baumann (AfD)

Empfehlenswert! Sehr bedenklich!

Die Tyrannei der Mehrheit❗ - YouTube

Smartphones squeezed out in AI chip scramble

Bad news!

(250) Smartphones squeezed out in AI chip scrambleーNHK WORLD-JAPAN NEWS - YouTube

Canadian Robot Trucks company Waabi Wades Into Robotaxi business

Good news! The company's leader is the well known ML & AI researcher Raquel Urtasun!

(250) Robot Trucker Waabi Wades Into Robotaxi Battle With Billion Dollar Raise - YouTube

Saudi victory over UAE in Yemen means paying separatists' salaries

A weird story!

(250) Saudi victory over UAE in Yemen means paying seperatists' salaries - YouTube

All 2.2 million camels in Saudi Arabia Need passports with Palki Sharma

Is this part of the modernisation of Saudi Arabia under the crown prince?

(243) When Camels Need Paperwork: Saudi Arabia’s Bold New System | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G - YouTube

Taiwan’s TSMC tells Takaichi it plans to mass produce cutting-edge chips in Kumamoto

Good news! Just watch how much Takaichi smiled!

(243) Taiwan’s TSMC tells Takaichi it plans to mass produce cutting-edge chips in Kumamoto - YouTube

Deutsche Gesellschaft ist offen für die klimaneutrale Transformation. Wirklich!

Eine Gesellschaft im Klimawahn! Am deutschen Wesen wird die Welt nicht genesen!

Propaganda and Demagogie verbreitet durch den Der Informationsdienst
des Instituts der deutschen Wirtschaft!

Die Grafik unten sagt klar 57% der Befragten eher dagegen oder neutral/ohne Meinung sind!

Die Befragung ist uralt von 2024! Und nur 2159 Befragte!

Gesellschaft ist offen für die Transformation - iwd.de "Den klimaneutralen Umbau der Industrie in Deutschland [bis 2045] befürwortet eine große Mehrheit der Bundesbürger, wie eine IW-Studie zeigt. Selbst wenn Maßnahmen im direkten Wohnumfeld erforderlich sind, bleibt die Zustimmung hoch."




Scientists break ‘decades of gridlock’ in climate modeling

Finally, there is hope for better and more accurate weather forecasting!

Maybe soon, the latest climate models will confirm that the Global Warming/Climate Change was a hoax!

"In brief
  • Gravity waves are a source of uncertainty in climate models because they are too small and short-lived to appear in models designed to cover the whole planet.
  • A new Stanford-led study shows how machine learning algorithms that predict the effects of gravity waves can be incorporated into global climate models.
  • The approach shows a path toward better modeling of other small-scale systems, like clouds, and could improve understanding of future weather patterns.
...

Climate models don’t fully capture gravity waves because they are often based on a grid of 100-by-100-kilometer square columns. In each column, physics equations describe the movement of air and water. Many gravity waves are too small to register at this resolution, like a ripple in a puddle that a low-resolution photo doesn’t capture. Other gravity waves ripple out over distances long enough to cross 10 or more squares in the grid. But, due to computational constraints, climate models do not capture horizontal gravity wave movement.  ..."

From the abstract:
"Gravity waves (GWs) make crucial contributions to the middle atmospheric circulation. Yet, their climate model representation remains inaccurate, leading to key circulation biases.
This study introduces a set of three neural networks (NNs) that learn to predict GW fluxes (GWFs) from multiple years of high-resolution ERA5 reanalysis. The three NNs: a  ANN, a  ANN-CNN, and an Attention UNet embed different levels of horizontal nonlocality in their architecture and are capable of representing nonlocal GW effects that are missing from current operational GW parameterizations. The NNs are evaluated offline on both time-averaged statistics and time-evolving flux variability.
All NNs, especially the Attention UNet, accurately recreate the global GWF distribution in both the troposphere and the stratosphere. Moreover, the Attention UNet most skillfully predicts the transient evolution of GWFs over prominent orographic and nonorographic hotspots, with the 
 model being a close second. Since even ERA5 does not resolve a substantial portion of GWFs, this deficiency is compensated by subsequently applying transfer learning on the ERA5-trained ML models for GWFs from a 1.4 km global climate model. It is found that the re-trained models both (a) preserve their learning from ERA5, and (b) learn to appropriately scale the predicted fluxes to account for ERA5's limited resolution.
Our results highlight the importance of embedding nonlocal information for a more accurate GWF prediction and establish strategies to complement abundant reanalysis data with limited high-resolution data to develop machine learning-driven parameterizations for missing mesoscale processes in climate models."

Scientists break ‘decades of gridlock’ in climate modeling | Stanford Report "In global climate models, researchers have harnessed AI to accurately model atmospheric gravity waves, ripples of air that affect the polar vortex, winter weather, and climate patterns."



Fig. 1 (left) Temperature perturbations (in K) associated with gravity waves (GWs) over the Drake Passage and the Southern Ocean on 18 July 2015 06 UTC, as resolved in ERA5,
(middle) the momentum flux  (units mPa) associated with the excited GWs, and (right) the momentum flux predicted using an Attention UNet convolutional neural network trained on 3 years of ERA5 data.


The Women Who Built Wall Street between 1870-1970

According to this article, there were very few women! It started with a spiritualist!

"... Victoria Woodhull worked as a spiritualist in the 1860s. When Vanderbilt hired her to communicate with his deceased wife, she saw an opportunity.

“She would rub shoulders with a lot of very rich men, a lot of investors, and they would be talking about their stock tips all the time,” ... “So Woodhull starts to tell Cornelius Vanderbilt, hey, you know, your wife is giving me some really hot stock tips from beyond the grave.”

Vanderbilt used the tips. He gave Woodhull and her sister about $700,000 (roughly $15 million today). In 1870, they opened Woodhull Claflin and Company, the first female-operated financial firm on Wall Street. ..."

The Women Who Built Wall Street - Markets Media


Victoria Woodhull


English for trippers: Deployable deplorable

Not to be confused with adorable! Deploy a decoy!

How do snakes go for many months without eating?

Amazing stuff!

"... The trick may be losing the genes that produce ghrelin, a key hormone that regulates appetite, digestion, and fat storage.

The team scanned the genomes of 112 species, seeking changes in the DNA that makes ghrelin, dubbed the “hunger hormone ” because it was once thought to be the key to obesity in humans.
In snakes, chameleons, and toadhead agamas, ghrelin genes were either missing or so warped by mutations they could no longer encode the hormone, the scientists found. When the researchers looked at MBOAT4, an enzyme that makes ghrelin function, they found that it too was lost in snakes, chameleons, and the agamas.

Losing ghrelin and MBOAT4 may have been part of how these ambush predators adapted to a boom-and-bust feeding schedule. Normally, ghrelin can help the body turn fat into energy when food is scarce. Without ghrelin and MBOAT4, the reptiles may be able to hold onto their energy reserves for longer, letting them persist in low power mode for months to a year between meals. ..."

ScienceAdviser


Brain cells birth zombielike transport vesicles

Amazing stuff! What little we still know about our brain!

"When key “housekeeper” brain cells grow in lab dishes, they spawn unusual microscopic vesicles that can move on their own and carry energy-generating organelles ... The biologists have dubbed their discovery zombosomes because the blobs can move like cells for a period despite lacking a nucleus, which acts as a cell's control center. The group also showed the membrane-bound messengers ferry proteins related to Parkinson’s disease, suggesting they may contribute to it and other brain disorders. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• Zombosomes are shed nuclear bodies of astrocytes that remain motile
• Pathological aggregates can hijack zombosomes, promoting cell-to-cell propagation
• Zombosomes with α-synuclein deposits induce pathology in 2D and 3D hiPSC models
• Zombosome-like bodies with α-synuclein content are present in the human brain

Summary
Astrocytes not only play a central role in orchestrating the brain’s microenvironment but also are tightly connected to neurodegenerative processes. Hence, unraveling astrocytes’ intercellular pathways can give important insight into disease-spreading mechanisms. Here, we describe a distinct form of actively migrating cellular vehicles, which we have named zombosomes. Zombosomes shed from astrocytes but retain their adhesive and motile properties, even though they lack nuclei.
They share protein markers with their parental astrocytes, including highly packed vimentin, and are loaded with intact organelles.
Importantly, zombosomes act as disease couriers, transferring α-synuclein aggregates from one cell to another, and have the capacity to infiltrate and induce pathology in cerebral organoids.
Human brain sections show scattered vimentin-rich zombosomes with no attachments to nearby astrocytes, which contain deposits of aggregated α-synuclein.
Taken together, our findings represent an interaction pathway between distant cells through “live” vehicles that when misused, may cause propagation of Parkinson’s disease pathology."

Brain cells birth zombielike transport vesicles | Science | AAAS



Graphical abstract


Figure 1. Zombosomes, a distinct form of actively migrating intercellular shuttle, originating from astrocytes


TU München baut ersten europaweiten KI-Chip mit moderner 7-Nanometer-Technologie

Na was für eine positive Überraschung!

"... Der KI-Chip basiert auf dem Open-Source-Standard Risc-V. So entstehen für die TUM keine Lizenzkosten. Außerdem ist ein solcher offener Standard deutlich transparenter und man kann nachvollziehen, wie der Kern eines solches Chips aufgebaut ist. ..."

TU München baut ersten europaweiten KI-Chip mit moderner 7-Nanometer-Technologie "An der Technischen Universität München (TUM) ist der EU-weit erste KI-Chip mit moderner 7-Nanometer-Technologie entstanden. Ab 2028 sollen die Chips in Dresden gefertigt werden."

TUM baut eigenen KI-Chip in 7-nm-Technologie (original Mitteilung) "An der Technischen Universität München (TUM) ist der EU-weit erste KI-Chip mit moderner 7-Nanometer-Technologie entstanden. Prof. Hussam Amrouch entwickelte den neuromorphen Chip auf Grundlage des Standards des weltweit führenden Chip-Produzenten TSMC. Künftig will der Professor für KI-Prozessor-Design zusammen mit seiner Forschungsgruppe jährlich mindestens drei neue Designs entwerfen, die ab 2028 von der European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (ESMC) in Dresden gefertigt werden sollen."

Das Foto ist vom 19.5.2025 (Quelle)


Google DeepMind researcher David Silver leaves to launch his own AI startup

David Silver is a very well known ML & AI researcher! This could be interesting!

"... Ineffable Intelligence was formed in November 2025, and Silver was appointed a director of the company on Jan. 16, according to documents filed with U.K. business registry Companies House.

In addition, Silver’s personal web page now lists his contact as Ineffable Intelligence and provides an Ineffable Intelligence email address ..."

Exclusive: Google DeepMind researcher David Silver leaves to launch his own AI startup | Fortune


David Silver


Grok undressed the mother of one of Elon Musk’s kids into a bikini — and now she’s suing

The many ways to make money!

P.S. I was not able to find this picture of her. 

"Ashley St. Clair, the mother of one of X owner Elon Musk’s children, is suing his company for enabling its AI to virtually strip her down into a bikini without her consent. ..."

Grok undressed the mother of one of Elon Musk’s kids — and now she’s suing | The Verge

A tiny Rembrandt drawing sold for $17.9 million

Amazing stuff!

"The amount that a tiny Rembrandt drawing sold for at Sotheby’s. “Young Lion Resting” smashed the Dutch master’s $3.7 million record for a work on paper and now ranks as one of the priciest drawings ever sold at auction. It’s the latest sign that the art market is roaring back following a yearslong slump."

The Wall Street Journal What's news
 
A Tiny Rembrandt Drawing Sells for $17.9 Million "The Dutch master’s sketch of a lion—the last still in private hands—now ranks as one of the priciest drawings ever sold at auction"



Wednesday, February 04, 2026

These mysterious ridges could be the secret to younger skin

Recommendable!

Balwoogongyang: The Korean discipline of eating to be happier

Very recommendable!

China-Born TPP Lawmaker Prepares To Take Office in Taiwan as a first Amid Citizenship Questions

Exciting news!

How A Russian Nesting Doll Satellite Approached A US Target In Orbit

What is Putin the Terrible up to?

Melania Trump brutally shuts down CNN reporter over question about Ghislaine Maxwell

Good news! Bravo! Not since Jacqueline Kennedy!

USA sind angriffsbereit: Satellitenbilder zeigen Aufmarsch vor Iran mit Julian Röpcke

Empfehlenswert!

This is how China 'BUILT ITS EMPIRE,' expert reveals (about rare earth metals)

Recommendable!

Moderna, Merck report cancer treatment discovery for several different cancers with Maria Bartiromo

Good news! Cancer is history (soon)! No safety risks, no side effects!

Trump Sends US Troops to Nigeria to Counter Islamic State Terrorists

How far will President Trump go?

India Drops HAL from 5th Generation Fighter Jet Project with Palki Sharma

Recommendable!

Last remaining nuclear arms control treaty between US and Russia to expire on 2/5/2026 called START or what about a new nuclear arms race!

Please no hysteria and alarmism as long as both parties continue to uphold the limits!
As this video points out, a new treaty may have to include China, India, and Pakistan!

Why the Taliban Are Now Fighting with Tajikistan

Recommendable!

Erdogan Meets MBS as Saudi Arabia, Turkey Seek a Reset in Ties with Palki Sharma

Recommendable! This could be a momentous change!

Lithium-free battery breaks voltage barrier for ultra-cheap energy storage

Good news! Is this perhaps a breakthrough!

"... Unlike conventional lithium-ion batteries, sodium–sulfur batteries store energy using metallic sodium as the anode and elemental sulfur (S₈) as the cathode – two elements that are both abundant and inexpensive. ..."

From the abstract:
"Room-temperature sodium–sulfur (Na–S) batteries offer a sustainable energy storage solution to conventional lithium (Li)-based systems, owing to the high element abundances and theoretical electrochemical performance. However, their practical applications have been severely hindered by the low discharge voltages and the need for largely excessive Na metal anode.
Here we report a 3.6 V class Na–S battery featuring a high-valence sulfur/sulfur tetrachloride (S/SCl4) cathode chemistry and anode-free configuration. We show that sodium dicyanamide (NaDCA) can simultaneously unlock reversible S/SCl4 conversion and Na plating/stripping in a non-flammable chloroaluminate electrolyte.
This design enables the maximum energy and power densities of 1,198 Wh kg−1 and 23,773 W kg−1, respectively, calculated on the basis of the total electrode mass including both the cathode and the anode. Also, we demonstrate facilitated S/SCl4 conversion by incorporating a bismuth-coordinated covalent organic framework (Bi-COF) catalyst (8 wt% loading) into the S cathode, which realizes an impressive discharge capacity of 1,206 mAh g(sulfur+catalyst)−1, contributing to a maximum energy density of 2,021 Wh kg−1 calculated on the basis of the total electrode mass.
With an estimated cost of US$5.03 per kWh and excellent scalability, our anode-free Na–S battery shows promise in grid energy storage and wearable electronics."

Lithium-free battery breaks voltage barrier for ultra-cheap energy storage | Research | Chemistry World