brianmanahan
Lifer
- Sep 2, 2006
- 24,678
- 6,045
- 136
As much as I disliked going to laundry mats, I never once thought that I'd rather one not be there.
i've never been to one, i just refuse to live anywhere that doesn't have its own washing machine
As much as I disliked going to laundry mats, I never once thought that I'd rather one not be there.
i've never been to one, i just refuse to live anywhere that doesn't have its own washing machine
![]()
proposed new airline seating post covid19![]()
![]()
proposed new airline seating post covid19![]()
A woman in Erie tested positive & agreed to self isolate. But she didn't... she was seen leaving her house on more than one occasion. So she got arrested & spent a night in jail & now is back home with electronic monitoring so they'll know if she tries to leave again.
On the news they said 27 people she came in contact with have been asked to self isolate.
A woman in Erie tested positive & agreed to self isolate. But she didn't... she was seen leaving her house on more than one occasion. So she got arrested & spent a night in jail & now is back home with electronic monitoring so they'll know if she tries to leave again.
On the news they said 27 people she came in contact with have been asked to self isolate.

i've never been to one, i just refuse to live anywhere that doesn't have its own washing machine
Apparently kids all across the country are planning to host virtual proms.
I kinda feel sorry for them. A lot of teenagers actually look forward to prom, for many of them it will be the most fun they ever have in their miserable boring lives.
I'd post links to the news but so many news sites today have multiple pop-ups and I dont wanna support that.
A woman in Erie tested positive & agreed to self isolate. But she didn't... she was seen leaving her house on more than one occasion. So she got arrested & spent a night in jail & now is back home with electronic monitoring so they'll know if she tries to leave again.
On the news they said 27 people she came in contact with have been asked to self isolate.
proms are a waste, i don't get why schools pay for those or homecomings
Pfizer/BioNTech have started dosing in the US with their mRNA vaccine, compressing Phase I/II trials. If safety and efficacy results merit could be available for emergency use in the fall. Think this is the 9th or 10th vaccine to enter clinical trials so far.
How exactly do patents work on vaccines? Especially when a shit ton are doing it all at once?
...except not everything can be patented. It seems that they would have to develop it in a particularly novel way in order to patent it. Patents aren't just some reward for being first.They can be patented like anything else. However I doubt anybody is going to do something ultra shitty like do so to jack up the price. The PR hit would be terminal and governments will just copy it anyway and tell the company to fuck right off.
Whoever wins the derby will almost certainly very quickly license production to multiple producers even if they are competitors.
Apparently kids all across the country are planning to host virtual proms.
I kinda feel sorry for them. A lot of teenagers actually look forward to prom, for many of them it will be the most fun they ever have in their miserable boring lives.
I'd post links to the news but so many news sites today have multiple pop-ups and I dont wanna support that.
Some Wendy locations are reportedly running out of beef, therefore, no more hamburgers for a while.
The revolutionary genetic technique better known for its potential to cure thousands of inherited diseases could also solve the challenge of Covid-19 diagnostic testing, scientists announced on Tuesday. A team headed by biologist Feng Zhang of the McGovern Institute at MIT and the Broad Institute has repurposed the genome-editing tool CRISPR into a test able to quickly detect as few as 100 coronavirus particles in a swab or saliva sample.
Crucially, the technique, dubbed a “one pot” protocol, works in a single test tube and does not require the many specialty chemicals, or reagents, whose shortage has hampered the rollout of widespread Covid-19 testing in the U.S. It takes about an hour to get results, requires minimal handling, and in preliminary studies has been highly accurate, Zhang told STAT. He and his colleagues, led by the McGovern’s Jonathan Gootenberg and Omar Abudayyeh, released the protocol on their STOPCovid.science website.
STOP stands for “Sherlock Testing in One Pot.” It builds on Zhang’s 2017 CRISPR invention, called Sherlock. Like the better-known, genome-editing versions of CRISPR, Sherlock starts with a guide molecule that homes in on a specific stretch of DNA — or RNA, which constitutes the genome of the new coronavirus. An enzyme called AapCas12b, from the bacterium Alicyclobacillus acidophilus, cuts the RNA in a way that generates a fluorescent signal detectable much as home pregnancy tests detect the presence of a pregnancy-related hormone.
For STOP, the scientists targeted their guide molecule at the coronavirus’s N gene, which codes for the nucleocapsid, or shell, that encloses its genome. The PCR testdeveloped by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also targets the N gene.
The South Koreans put bluetooth wristbands on people who thought they'd be smart and leave their phones at home to violate isolation orders. You also apparently get in big trouble if public health officials call you and you don't answer the phone.
Funny that you bring this up. My spouse just watched the seminar on this the other day, as she works in a core facility at a university prepping samples for sequencingThis would be phenomenal progress in testing if the sensitivity and specificity are as described.
https://www.statnews.com/2020/05/05/crispr-covid-19-test-could-be-simple-cheap-at-home-diagnostic/
Apparently all that's needed besides the kit are pipettes and to heat the samples (which they guys who developed it say could even be reliably done with a sous vide).
