Codebender Cate

Codebender Cate Mother | INTP-T | Former US Army | Xbox Ambassadors | Gamer | WGU Cyber Club | ΟΣΣ | Cyber competitor | Journalist

06/15/2025
06/13/2025

BREAKING NEWS: Numerous websites and online services, including Google services, Spotify, DoorDash, and more, are reportedly encountering outages Thursday afternoon amid what appears to be a widespread outage. DETAILS: https://tinyurl.com/FOX16WidespreadOutage

06/12/2025

Lab-Grown Cells Improve Parkinson's Symptoms

New Stem Cell Therapy Could Reverse Parkinson’s Symptoms

In a quiet lab at Kyoto University, Japanese researchers may have just taken one of the biggest steps toward healing a disease that affects millions: Parkinson’s. For the first time, they’ve successfully implanted lab-grown brain cells into human patients — and early results are nothing short of astonishing.

The therapy uses induced pluripotent stem cells — iPS cells — which are reprogrammed to become dopamine-producing neurons. These are the exact types of brain cells that Parkinson’s destroys over time, leading to tremors, stiffness, and slowed movement. By restoring them, scientists hope to not just manage symptoms — but reverse the disease itself.

In their latest clinical trial, seven patients received this treatment. Of the six that could be evaluated, four showed over 20% improvement in motor symptoms — and that’s without any medication. Even more remarkable: there were no serious side effects.

Unlike previous treatments that simply replace lost dopamine chemically, this method rebuilds the damaged neural network from the inside out. It’s like planting new seeds in a barren field — and watching them take root.

The long-term impact remains to be seen, but larger Phase 3 trials are already being planned. If successful, this could become a standard therapy for Parkinson’s — potentially giving millions of patients a real second chance at a normal life.

For decades, Parkinson’s has been a slow, relentless decline. Now, thanks to regenerative medicine, we may finally have a way to push back — and win.

Hope for Parkinson’s is no longer theoretical — it’s growing, cell by cell.

06/11/2025

New Xbox consoles will let you play any game from your Steam library

06/10/2025

The internet is spicy today😂

06/10/2025
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvorak_keyboard_layout
06/09/2025

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvorak_keyboard_layout

August Dvorak watched frustrated as typing students struggled with the inefficient QWERTY keyboard in the 1930s. 🔤 ⌨️

As a professor of education at the University of Washington, Dvorak knew there had to be a better way than the clumsy QWERTY layout—a design created in the 1870s to prevent typewriter keys from jamming rather than for typing efficiency.

Dvorak spent years analyzing typing patterns, finger movements, and letter frequencies in English. His research revealed that with the standard QWERTY keyboard, most typing was done on the top row, while the home row—where fingers naturally rest—was underutilized.

In 1936, after more than a decade of research, Dvorak introduced the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard. His revolutionary design placed the most commonly used letters on the home row, reducing finger travel by up to 95% compared to QWERTY.

Typists who mastered the Dvorak layout reported reduced fatigue, fewer errors, and faster typing speeds. In fact, many of the world's speed typing records were set by people using Dvorak keyboards.

Despite its proven advantages, the Dvorak layout faced an uphill battle against the deeply entrenched QWERTY standard. Businesses were reluctant to retrain typists or replace existing equipment, leading to what economists call "path dependency"—when inferior standards persist due to switching costs.

The U.S. Navy conducted tests during World War II confirming the Dvorak layout's superiority, finding that the investment in retraining typists would pay for itself in increased productivity. However, after the war, bureaucratic resistance prevented its widespread adoption.

Today, the Dvorak layout remains available as an option on most operating systems, but QWERTY's dominance continues—a peculiar case where an intentionally inefficient design from the mechanical age persists in our digital world.

August Dvorak died in 1975, having spent his career trying to make typing more efficient. His simplified keyboard stands as a testament to good design thwarted by the powerful forces of standardization and inertia.

Sources: University of Washington Archives, U.S. Navy Studies, American Standards Association

06/09/2025

Found at a Local Park (Ohio)

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Pensacola, FL

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