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The XM157 Fire Control Optic has faced delays in fielding due to a mix of technical complexity, integration challenges, and evolving operational requirements tied to the broader Next Generation Squad Weapon program. Designed to combine a variable power optic, laser rangefinder, ballistic calculator, and digital display into one system, the XM157 pushes the limits of what a rifle optic can do, which has led to issues with battery life, weight, durability, and software reliability during testing. As a result, the United States Army has continued evaluating alternative optics and backup solutions to ensure reliability in real combat conditions, especially in harsh environments where simpler systems often outperform complex ones. This ongoing testing reflects a broader debate between advanced fire control technology and rugged simplicity, with the Army balancing innovation against the risk of overengineering at the squad level.

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[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago

FOR THE GLORY OF THE EMPIRE

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago

Computers now are the size of warehouses and they have GPU's instead of CPUs and they be thirsty. I think it could be argued we have come full circle. It is obvious now the true purpose of technology is to control poor people.

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 2 points 2 days ago

The comments section wow but yeah this is what I was kinda thinking. Clone / robot army. Or clone sex slaves for the corpos

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I am so confused? (programming.dev)

In honor of Israel’s Independence Day, San Francisco City Hall was lit in blue and white🇮🇱

altr

8-22-2026 Maya Avishai - I had the immense honor of raising the Israeli flag at San Francisco City Hall in celebration of 78 years of my beloved country, the State of Israel🇮🇱

altr

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)
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Italian UNIFIL soldiers in Lebanon stepped in to replace the crucifix destroyed by an IOF soldier, after the Israeli Occupation Forces falsely claimed they had already done so.

The IOF's version of events: they took a cross from a local church, leaned it against a tree next to the original destroyed statue, and called it a replacement.

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago

....and both parties are guilty of genocide. Every dicktator has a inner circle and sometimes has a relatively short tenure. Even kings gotta watch their back and in modern times so does the capitalist class. The USA is a brutal imperialist empire. Fascist are the useful idiots of empire. Fascism is capitalism in crisis and imperialism is its highest form. Pretty much business as usual but I have had my ear to the ground for a while now. I don't hate just trump... I hate the imperial pig dogs. I have been anti war since the day I was born.

Hitler's American Friends: The Third Reich's Supporters in the United States

A People's History of the United States: 1492-Present by Howard Zinn

The CIA as Organized Crime: How Illegal Operations Corrupt America and the World

The Kidnap Years: The Astonishing True History of the Forgotten Kidnapping Epidemic That Shook Depression-Era America

The Devil's Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America's Secret Government

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Cross posted from https://ibbit.at/post/213236

“Think of this as a human body,” says Javier González.

In front of me is essentially a metal box on wheels. Standing at around a meter in height, it reminds me of a stainless-steel counter in a restaurant kitchen. It is covered in flexible plastic tubing—which act as veins and arteries—connecting a series of transparent containers, the organs of this machine.

What makes it extra special is the role of the cream-colored tub that sits on its surface. Ten months ago, González, a biomedical scientist who developed the device with his colleagues at the Carlos Simon Foundation, carefully placed a freshly donated human uterus in the tub. The team connected it to the device’s tubes and pumped in modified human blood.

The device kept the uterus alive for a day—a new feat that could represent the first step to the long-term maintenance of uteruses outside the human body. The work has not yet been published.

The team members want to keep donated human uteruses alive long enough to see a full menstrual cycle. They hope this will help them study diseases of the uterus and learn more about how embryos burrow their way into the organ’s lining at the start of a pregnancy. They also hope that future iterations of their device might one day sustain the full gestation of a human fetus.

The machine is technically called PUPER, which stands for “preservation of the uterus in perfusion.” But González’s colleague Xavier Santamaria says the team has adopted a nickname for it: “We call it ‘Mother.’”

The organ in the machine

González and Santamaria, medical vice president of the Carlos Simon Foundation, demonstrated how the device might work when I visited the foundation in Valencia, Spain, earlier this month (although it held no organs on that day).

Both are interested in learning more about implantation, the moment at which an embryo attaches itself to the lining of a uterus—essentially, the very first moment of pregnancy.

The foundation’s founder and director, Carlos Simon, believes it’s a sticking point in IVF: Scientists have made many improvements to the technology over the years, but the failure of embryos to implant underlies plenty of unsuccessful IVF cycles, he says. Being able to carefully study how the process works in a real, living organ might give the team a better idea of how to prevent those failures.

a person in gloves stands next to a machine with lots of tubing coming in and out of the metal exteriorJESS HAMZELOUa sheep uterus resting on gauze connected to several tubesJAVIER GONZALES/CARLOS SIMON FOUNDATION

Javier González demonstrates the perfusion machine. A previous iteration of the device kept a sheep’s uterus (right) alive for a day.

The team took inspiration from advances in technologies designed to maintain donated organs for transplantation. In recent years, researchers around the world have created devices that deliver nutrients and filter waste so that organs can survive longer after being removed from donors’ bodies.

The main goal here is to buy time. A human organ might last only a matter of hours outside the body, so a transplant may require frantic preparation for the recipient, sometimes in the middle of the night. With a little more time, doctors could find better donor-patient matches and potentially test the quality of donated organs.

This approach is called normothermic or machine perfusion, and it is already being used clinically for some liver, kidney, and heart transplants.

The team at the Carlos Simon Foundation built a similar machine for uteruses. A blood bag hangs on one side. From there, blood is ferried via plastic tubing to a pump, which functions as the heart. The pump shunts the blood through an oxygenator, which adds oxygen and removes carbon dioxide as the lungs would in a human body.

The blood is warmed and passed through sensors that monitor the levels of glucose and oxygen, along with other factors. It passes through a “kidney” to remove waste. And finally the blood reaches the uterus, hooked up to its own plastic “arteries” and “veins.” The organ itself sits at a tilt, just as in the body, and is kept in a humid environment to stay moist.

Mother’s first uterus

The team first began testing an early prototype of the device with sheep uteruses around four years ago. That meant carting the machine to an animal research center in Zaragoza, around 200 miles away. Over the course of the preliminary study, veterinary surgeons removed the uteruses of six sheep and hooked them up to the machine. They kept each uterus alive for a day, using blood from the same animals.

After the sheep experiments, the researchers carted their machine back to Valencia and modified it to achieve its current incarnation, “Mother.” They started working with a local hospital that performed hysterectomies. And in May last year, they were offered their first human uterus.

The team needed to be quick. “You need to put [the uterus in the machine] within a couple of hours, maximum, of the extraction,” says Santamaria. He and his colleagues also needed to connect the uterus’s blood vessels to the tubing delicately, taking care to avoid any blockages (clotting is a major challenge in organ perfusion). The organ was hooked up to human blood obtained from a blood bank.

It seemed to work—at least temporarily. “We kept it alive for one day,” says Santamaria.

“As a proof of concept, it is impressive,” says Keren Ladin, a bioethicist who has focused on organ transplantation and perfusion at Tufts University. “These are early days.”

It might not sound like much, but 24 hours is a long time for an organ to be out of the body. Maintaining a donated uterus for that long could expand the options for uterus transplant, a fairly new procedure offered to some people who want to be pregnant but don’t have a functional uterus, says Gerald Brandacher, professor of experimental and translational transplant surgery at the Medical University of Innsbruck in Austria.

“It is better than what we currently have, because we have only a couple of hours,” he says. So far, most uterus transplants have been planned operations involving organs from living donors. A technology like this could allow for the use of more organs from deceased donors, he says.

That work is “not in the immediate pipeline” for the team in Spain, says Santamaria. “We are working on other problems.”

Pregnancy in the lab?

Santamaria, González, and their colleagues are more interested in using sustained human uteruses for research.

They’ve mounted a camera to a wall in the corner of the room, pointed at their machine. It allows the team to monitor “Mother” remotely, and to check if any valves disconnect. (That happened once before—a spike in pressure caused the blood bag to come loose, spilling a liter of blood on the floor, Santamaria says.)

They’d like to be able to keep their uteruses alive for around 28 days to study the menstrual cycle and disorders that affect the uterus, like endometriosis and fibroids.

It won’t be easy to maintain a uterus for that long, cautions Brandacher. As far as he knows, no one has been able to maintain a liver for more than seven days. “No studies out there … have shown 30-day survival in a machine perfusion circuit,” he says.

But it’s worth the effort. The team’s main interest is learning more about how embryos implant in the uterine lining at the start of a pregnancy. They hope to be able to test the process in their outside-the-body uteruses.

They won’t be allowed to use human embryos for this, says González—that would cross an ethical boundary. Instead, they plan to use embryo-like structures made from stem cells. The structures closely resemble human embryos but are created in a lab without sperm or eggs.

Simon himself has grander ambitions.

He sees a future in which a machine like “Mother” will be able to fully gestate a human, all the way from embryo to newborn. It could offer a new path to parenthood for people who don’t have a uterus, for example, or who are not able to get pregnant for other reasons.

He appreciates that it sounds futuristic, to say the least. “I don’t know if we will end up having pregnancies inside of the uterus outside of the body, but at least we are ready to understand all the steps to do that,” he says. “You have to start somewhere.”


From MIT Technology Review via this RSS feed

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago

Everbody just stop with the banning. The old divide and rule I see. It must come in waves.

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[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 3 days ago

hahaha suckers

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 3 days ago

You mean malicious code and viruses...

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U.S. federal authorities arrested a former Green Beret who allegedly tried to coup Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in New York on arms smuggling charges, The Associated Press (AP) reported Wednesday.

Jordan Goudreau, the 48-year-old former green beret, allegedly attempted to lead a cross border raid by Venezuelan army deserters that would remove Maduro from power in 2020, the AP reported.

He reportedly claimed he led the operation in a 2020 interview with a reporter exiled from Venezuela. An AP investigation alleged that the former green beret was in league with a retired general from the country to train Venezuelan deserters in Columbia. They were reportedly intending to strike at and seize Maduro, the investigation claimed. (RELATED: Venezuela Cuts Ties With Multiple Countries Over Election Objections)

In January, the ex-Green Beret Jordan Goudreau traveled to Colombia to train rebels planning a failed raid of Venezuela. To get there, he took a chartered flight on a plane owned by a businessman who had been one of Hugo Chavez’s staunchest allies. https://t.co/8Jsi1Saxv2

— The Associated Press (@AP) May 28, 2020

Federal prosecutors based in Tampa, Florida accused Goudreau and Yacsy Alvarez, his Venezuelan partner, of violating federal arms control laws when they allegedly collected and transported military supplies to enact the plot, according to an indictment, the AP reported. Prosecutors alleged that there were text messages between the accused discussing purchasing and exporting the military equipment for their plot, according to the outlet.

Goudreau’s alleged scheme ended with Venezuela’s security forces defeating the group, the AP reported. Venezuelan intelligence had heavily infiltrated the group, the outlet noted. Two former Green Berets, associates of Goudreau, were reportedly sent to prison and then released in a prisoner swap in 2023 for a Maduro ally, the outlet reported.

Cliver Alcalá, a retired Venezuelan army general and another associate of Goudreau, was sentenced earlier in 2024 to over two decades in prison by a U.S. court for procuring weapons for rebels with links to drug cartels, the outlet reported. Goudreau attended the trial of Alcalá but refused to comment to the AP about the failed coup. Gustavo J. Garcia-Montes, Goudreau’s attorney, told the AP his client was innocent.

Christopher A. Kerr, Alvarez’s attorney, told the outlet that his client is “seeking asylum in the United States and has been living here peacefully with other family members, several of whom are U.S. citizens.”

Alvarez “will plead not guilty to these charges this afternoon, and as of right now, under our system, they are nothing more than allegations,” Kerr reportedly added.

The Department of Justice has not yet responded to the Daily Caller’s request for comment.

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

They control the oil behind the wall. There the coal fired spy battery car power plant that makes your short range slave vehicle go vrooooom. Step by step we are being turned into slaves of the imperial order of pdfile capitalist elites. The infratructure is our chains. The moth to the flame.

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Corner the market, crush the poors and implement the control grid. I expected this a long ass time ago. It comes in cycles but people are just noticing I guess. See you in the FUTURE! pfffft ass gas netfix and chillers YOLO... Are we having fun yet?

[-] Thetechloop@programming.dev 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Nahh they just gotta get their nut. Don't chu get in the way of those breeding rituals. It is all for the glory baby

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Thetechloop

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