Tesla’s Ludicrous Plus mode beats Faraday Future’s 0-60 time

Faraday Future claims its FF 91 SUV will be the fastest accelerating production vehicle to date with a 0-60 mph time of 2.39 seconds, but we’re going to need a more precise stopwatch if the showdown with Tesla is going to continue. In a real-world track test, the folks from Tesla Racing Channel were able to just barely edge out the FF 91’s time in a Model S P100D sedan with the latest Ludicrous Plus mode update unlocked. The Tesla’s new track time? A blistering 2.389 seconds — besting Faraday by just a thousandth of a second.

Although that’s a teensy margin, it’s worth noting that Faraday Future has been selectively choosing who takes the other lane in its hype videos and the FF 91 might have benefited from using a lighter setup that will gain some weight with the final production model. The Tesla, on the other hand, just got a speed boost by downloading an over-the-air update. Elon Musk also thinks Tesla can get that 0-60 time down even further to 2.34 seconds in a production model, while a race-ready version can reportedly hit 62 mph in just 2.1 seconds. Either way, it’s doubtful we’ll see a true head-to-head race for the title until Faraday Future finally starts production in 2018.

Via: CNET Roadshow

Source: Tesla Racing Channel/YouTube

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Lasers Could Generate Shields Out Of Thin Air

Lasers could turn Earth’s atmosphere into a defensive, or offensive, tool in the future of warfare.
Proposed by BAE Systems, a defense and aerospace company founded in the United Kingdom, the conceptual Laser Developed Atmospheric Lens (LDAL) would use lasers to ionize and heat the atmosphere in a way that temporarily endows small pockets of it with useful characteristics. This could take the form of an aerial lens used to magnify objects far away, or even a kind of refractive shield to s

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Eating spicy food might help you live longer.

We know from previous research that testosterone levels are correlated with spicy food consumption. But how does all that spicy food actually affect your health (if at all)? These researchers used a large population-based survey that took place from 1988 to 1994 to examine the relationship between chili pepper consumption and mortality. They found that chili pepper consumption is correlated with a statistically significant 13% reduction in "instantaneous hazard of death." While this remains

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A Superbug That Resisted 26 Antibiotics

This illustration depicts Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria, which can cause different types of infections, including pneumonia, bloodstream infections and meningitis.

CDC


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This illustration depicts Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria, which can cause different types of infections, including pneumonia, bloodstream infections and meningitis.

CDC

“People keep asking me, how close are we to going off the cliff,” says Dr. James Johnson, professor of infectious diseases medicine at the University of Minnesota. The cliffside freefall he’s talking about is the day that drug-resistant bacteria will be able to outfox the world’s entire arsenal of antibiotics. Common infections would then become untreatable.

Here’s Johnson’s answer: “Come on people. We’re off the cliff. It’s already happening. People are dying. It’s right here, right now. Sure, it’s going to get worse. But we’re already there.”

His declaration came in response to a report of a woman in Nevada who died of an incurable infection, resistant to all 26 antibiotics available in the U.S. to treat infection. Her death was reported in the Jan. 13 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That kind of bacteria is known as a “superbug” – a family of bacteria resistant to antibiotics. In cases like the Nevada woman, who was infected with Klebsiella pneumoniae, the term “nightmare superbug” has been coined because this particular specimen was resistant to even antibiotics developed as a last resort against bacterial infection.

People in the U.S. have died from so-called superbug infections before. The CDC estimates that 23,000 die every year from multidrug resistant infections. A British report, The Review on Antimicrobial Resistance, estimates that globally, 700,000 people die each year due to infections that are drug-resistant. In many of those cases, the infection’s resistance was discovered too late, perhaps before a last-line, effective drug was finally initiated. In poor countries, those newer, more expensive, antibiotics often are not available.

The Nevada case is different in that resistance was discovered early in treatment, but even the drugs seen as the last line of defense didn’t work. “This one is the poster child because of resistance across the board,” Johnson says.

The woman described in the report was in her 70s and treated in a hospital in Reno, Nevada. About two years ago, on an extended visit to India, she broke a thighbone, according to the report. She had several hospitalizations in India because of infections, says Dr. Lei Chen, of the Washoe County Health District in Reno and an author of the MMWR report. When the patient was admitted to the Reno hospital, health workers discovered that the bacteria specimen tested was resistant to a class of antibiotics called carbapanems — or carbapenem-resistant enterobacteria (CRE). “Before, we could go to carbapenems, and they could reliably squash the bugs,” says Johnson. “This case broke down even our last, great gun.”

Her most recent hospitalization for infection in India had been in June 2016. She was admitted to a hospital in Reno in August, and state health department officials were notified that she had CRE. “Lab results showed she was resistant to all 14 drugs we tested,” says Chen. Further tests at the CDC lab showed resistance to 26 antibiotics. She died in September of multiple organ failure and sepsis. “This was my first time to see such a resistant pattern,” says Chen.

CRE infections are rare in the U.S. The CDC does not require that hospitals report CRE cases but estimates that some 175 cases have been reported in the states as of January 2017. “The majority of (CRE) cases still respond to one or two classes of antibiotics,” says Chen.

CRE infections are more common in India and Southeast Asia. The reasons aren’t clear, but all infections spread more easily in parts of the world with inadequate sanitary facilities. Then, as people cross borders and board airplanes, the bacteria spreads in the same way that brought it to Reno, Nevada. That’s why Dr. Randall Todd, director of Epidemiology and Public Health Preparedness at the Washoe County Health District, says all hospitals should double down on preventive efforts, including a travel history. “It’s important that health-care providers and hospitals keep in mind that our world is ever shrinking,” he says. “When someone comes in, it’s important to know where in the world they’ve been.”

Then, if CRE or other resistant infections are diagnosed, the hospital can set up appropriate precautions, like isolating the patient, and immediately start lab tests to try to find an effective antibiotic.

But in this case, there was no effective antibiotic. “And we’re going to see more of these, from a drip, drip, drip of cases; to a steady drizzle, to a rainstorm,” predicts Johnson. “It’s scary, but it’s good to get scared if that motivates action.”

The action needed is to use antibiotics wisely, in people and in animals, so strains of bacteria don’t get a chance to develop resistance, says Johnson. And to continue research into development of new antibiotics. “We do have some new drugs coming along, so there’s hope,” he says. But as new antibiotics become available, “we have to use them selectively, not willy-nilly.”


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Scientists Concerned For Future Of National Labs As Rick Perry Seeks Top Energy Post

This solar panel from 1980 is one of the oldest in National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s Outdoor Test Facility. Skepticism about climate change under the Trump administration could threaten funding.

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This solar panel from 1980 is one of the oldest in National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s Outdoor Test Facility. Skepticism about climate change under the Trump administration could threaten funding.

Grace Hood/Colorado Public Radio

When a solar company wants to test new technology, they bring their panels to the National Renewable Energy Lab near Denver. It’s a place where federal scientists can measure how powerful and long-lasting solar panels are, so consumers know what they are buying.

“A lot of times maybe people don’t even know how to evaluate new technologies appropriately. And so we have a lot of insight and knowledge into the market that can help with some of those decisions,” lab engineer Chris Deline explained.

It’s just one of the Department of Energy’s 17 national laboratories, where research is wide-ranging — from fossil fuel-based energy, to understanding dark matter in the universe. Under the Obama administration, research and development dollars flowed into renewable energy.

There is concern over the future of the labs as President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for energy secretary, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, takes the hot seat at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Thursday morning. Perry infamously called for the department’s elimination while running for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012, and Trump and Perry have at times questioned climate science.

Appearing at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., as a presidential candidate in 2011, Perry said, “The issue of global warming has been politicized. I think there are a substantial number of scientists who have manipulated data so that they will have dollars rolling into their projects.”

Perry doesn’t have a background in science, but Ken Kimmell with the Union of Concerned Scientists said that’s not the issue: “We do have a concern that a secretary who doesn’t fundamentally accept the science of climate change isn’t necessarily going to direct the assets of the Department of Energy towards advancing that mission.”

On the other hand, Kimmell noted that wind energy took off during Rick Perry’s three terms as Texas governor between 2000 and 2015. It was part of Perry’s “all of the above” energy approach.

In one of his last public appearances, outgoing Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz stressed the importance of clean energy research. “I think we have an innovation edge compared to most,” Moniz said. “But we can certainly lose it if we don’t keep this focus. And that will lead to lost market share. That will lead to lost jobs.”

Then there was that controversial questionnaire — the Trump transition team wanted the names of Department of Energy workers who attended climate change meetings. Moniz refused, and Trump’s team backed away.

Last week, Moniz announced tougher measures for Department of Energy scientists to protect them from political meddling.

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