Red Flags Missed: How July 4th Suspect Slipped Through The System

Why NASA Is Launching A Telescope Strapped To A Giant Balloon

NASA has plans to use a huge balloon the size of a football field when fully inflated to carry a telescope to an altitude of 130,000 feet over Antarctica.

Twitter lays off nearly 100 employees from its recruiting team

Twitter has laid off dozens of employees amid growing uncertainty around Elon Musk’s acquisition. The company cut 30 percent of its talent acquisition team, which includes recruiters and others charged with bringing on new hires, The Wall Street Journalreports. Twitter told The Journal that “fewer than 100 people” had been let go and that it was only the talent acquisition team that was affected.

Twitter had previously announced a partial hiring freeze as part of a broader attempt to cut costs as it attempts to finalize its acquisition by Elon Musk. The status of the deal is uncertain as Musk has threatened to pull out of the agreement, citing concerns about the number of bots on the platform. On Thursday, The Washington Postreported that the deal was in “serious jeopardy,” and that “it was likely a change in direction from Musk’s team would come soon.”

The subject of layoffs reportedly came up at recent Twitter all-hands with Musk. The Tesla CEO said he was concerned about costs at Twitter but didn’t directly answer a question about whether job cuts were on the table. “It depends,” he said, according to CNBC.

In a post on LinkedIn, Ingrid Johnson, a senior technical recruiter at Twitter, wrote that it was “a really tough day.” “There are people losing their jobs that have been there over a decade,” she wrote. “If Twitter has chosen to spend potential billions suing Elon and maintaining a falsely inflated stock price at the expense of the people who gave their lives building the company— that is an even more tragic story.”

Twitter isn’t the only tech company to recently pull back on hiring or lay off employees. Meta recently said it would slow its hiring as it faces “serious times.” Netflix, Unity, Coinbase and Paypal have all recently cut jobs as well.

GOP Rep. Beth Van Duyne Touts Infrastructure Funding She Voted Against

The Texas Republican says she’s “thrilled” that the Dallas-Fort Worth airport is benefiting from a bill she opposed in Congress.

The Classic Car That Stole The Show In Elvis

Baz Luhrmann’s new “Elvis” movie is storming the box office, and the wave of popularity it has generated is having a knock-on effect in other industries.

What's Actually Under The Moon's Surface, According To NASA

While it’s disappointing the moon isn’t made of cheese, what’s really below its surface may indeed be much more valuable.

ASUS Accidentally Reveals The ZenFone 9 Compact Flagship Phone

Asus has once again leaked its upcoming ZenFone 9 model, this time revealing the handset and all of its details in a prematurely published promo video.

Pressure mounts on FDA to expand pig-to-human organ transplant research

In January, doctors at the University of Maryland School of Medicine made history by successfully transplanting a pig’s heart into a human. The 57-year-old patient may have died two months later due to complications from the experimental procedure, but the case has inspired scientists throughout the medical field to call on the FDA to expand the scope and scale of human-porcine transplantation research. During a two-day conference in late June, policy advisors to the FDA and medical professionals discussed the future of xenotransplantation and “most attendees agreed that human trials are needed to help answer the most pressing research questions,” according to Nature

We’ve been stuffing pig organs into sick people since the early 19th century, but the technology has made rapid strides in recent decades thanks in part to the advent of CRISPR technology and more potent immunosuppressives. In 2017, researchers created the first human-pig hybrid embryo as well as devised a solution to potential inter-species viral infections. As of January, 2022, were implanting genetically modified pig kidneys into brain-dead donor recipients with great success.

“Our goal is not to have a one-off, but to advance the field to help our patients,” Dr. Jayme Locke, lead surgeon of the kidney study and director of UAB’s Incompatible Kidney Transplant Program, told the NYT. “What a wonderful day it will be when I can walk into clinic and know I have a kidney for everyone waiting to see me.”

Humans have also conducted numerous experimental pig-organ transplants into primates like baboons. But in order to safely and consistently do it with humans, researchers will have to test the techniques on humans, Caroline Zeiss, a veterinary specialist at Yale School of Medicine, told Nature. For example, doctors found traces of porcine cytomegalovirus (PCMV) in the heart transplant patient who died earlier this year and believe that it may have played a role in his demise, but they won’t know for sure without further tests that a primate model — ones that can’t be replicated in primates.

Researchers are only looking at “small, focused” clinical trials with “appropriately selected patients,” Allan Kirk, a transplant surgeon at the Duke University School of Medicine, told Nature. Researchers will have to answer a number of fundamental questions before the technology can be widely utilized, as well as determine the right mix of breeding and genetic tinkering needed to ensure that recipients’ bodies won’t reject them.

And while the decisions made during last week’s meeting may not have an immediate impact on the agency’s current stance on xenotransplantation, changes are reportedly afoot. The WSJ spoke to a “person familiar with the matter” at the end of June who asserts the FDA is planning to launch pig-organ transplantation trials in an effort ease the shortage of transplantable human organs (*angrily shakes fist at seatbelts*). There’s no word on when such trials would launch as they are being handled on a case-by-case basis, the source said.     

Solar Opposites' Mike McMahan Explains How the Hulu Alien Show Is Like The Wire

Solar Opposites returns for its third season next week on Hulu, bringing with it some wild and surreal new adventures for its alien characters—as well as its tiny-human characters and its regular human characters, to boot. Coming from one of the creatives behind Rick and Morty and Star Trek: Lower Decks, you’d expect…

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Jackie Evancho Reveals She Has Osteoporosis Caused By Anorexia: ‘I’m Still Struggling’

The “America’s Got Talent” veteran told People she’s “not healthy yet” but has been actively seeking therapy and finding solace in music.