Sadly my father passed away last year from lymphoma.
If removing cancer cells from the blood can't cure it perhaps 3D printing/growing new organs might?
I want to create a program that can type and click for me on any Windows app without access to the source code. This would save a lot of time doing boring and repetitive tasks. Is this possible?
That would be the most ideal way yes but for that you would need to engineer cells etc...
My solution proposes that we just filter them out somehow with the aid of a centrifuge.
The person wouldn't be placed in a centrifuge, their blood would go into a machine similar to one used for dialysis...
Would it be possible to remove cancer from blood samples with the aid of centrifugal forces to separate it out by weight?
I do realize cells can have similar densities but what if the machine was really precise?
I was wondering what everyone else thought about ChatGPT, the new AI software that is apparently pretty good at answering questions.
After playing around with it for a few minutes I must say that it is pretty impressive. It's able to answer my coding questions quite well and describe concepts to...
I was wondering if it would be possible to remove diseases such as cancer from the blood with a mechanical device similar to the one used for dialysis. When the blood passes through the device certain cells would bind to the walls that have just the right binding sites so that they get stuck...
Would the star cancel out any meaningful information being sent back with its EM interference as well?
Another thing that came to mind is, how would a small spacecraft even take good photos?
Even a pair of binoculars takes up a resonable amount of space.
The idea for the mission is that if we built a spacecraft small enough, we could push it with laser(s) to Alpha Centuri within a resonable amount of time, and once there it could send us back images of the star/planets.
My question is, would a tiny spacecraft even able to transmit the data...