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Andrea Canidio

  • Research
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In a creative stroke inspired by Hollywood wizardry, scientists have designed a simple way to observe how bacteria move as they become impervious to drugs. The experiments are thought to provide the first large-scale glimpse of the maneuvers of bacteria as they encounter increasingly higher doses of antibiotics and adapt to survive-and thrive-in them.

The unstoppable march of bacteria

September 12, 2016

HT http://marginalrevolution.com/

← An endless source of amusement - seriously, some of these threads are so funny you should not read them at workShould you jump on the ‪#‎chatbots‬ bandwagon? Maybe not quite yet! →

Andrea Canidio's Blog

Interesting stuff from around the web, plus some occasional original thought.

Blog RSS

  • October 2022
    • Oct 4, 2022 I spent the summer reading everything I could about air pollution: here is what I learned
  • September 2022
    • Sep 9, 2022 NFTs for art and collectibles
  • August 2022
    • Aug 3, 2022 A new token distribution mechanism - Repeated auctions with incremental vesting
  • April 2020
    • Apr 29, 2020 Recent article on Insead Knowledge on privacy, blockchain and the current pandemic
  • March 2020
    • Mar 24, 2020 Private contact tracing via blockchain and secure multi-party computation
  • September 2019
    • Sep 30, 2019 My research with Thomas Gall featured on Insead Knowledge
    • Sep 19, 2019 On blockchain, regulation and pornography
    • Sep 16, 2019 Libra, the strange beast
  • May 2018
    • May 7, 2018 What the regulator should know about Blockchain: no-coin, old-coins, legit-coins, shit-coins
  • March 2018
    • Mar 26, 2018 "How the Unbanked Can Save and Borrow"
    • Mar 19, 2018 "Financial incentives for open source development: the case of Blockchain"
  • December 2017
    • Dec 14, 2017 Amazing map
  • October 2017
    • Oct 12, 2017 Depth vs novelty in research: differences between disciplines and across time.
  • June 2017
    • Jun 25, 2017 The vast majority of ICOs are seriously flawed, here is why and what to do about it.
  • April 2017
    • Apr 5, 2017 The Hungarian power grab
  • November 2016
    • Nov 24, 2016 An endless source of amusement - seriously, some of these threads are so funny you should not read them at work
  • September 2016
    • Sep 12, 2016 The unstoppable march of bacteria
  • April 2016
    • Apr 29, 2016 Should you jump on the ‪#‎chatbots‬ bandwagon? Maybe not quite yet!
    • Apr 26, 2016 "maybe, just, maybe" I should try some of this stuff in one of my classes.
    • Apr 24, 2016 "Not all practice makes perfect"
  • March 2016
    • Mar 16, 2016 Build your own AI
  • February 2016
    • Feb 17, 2016 "You can train your body into thinking it’s had medicine"
    • Feb 1, 2016 Your daily "dose of crypto conspiracy theorizing"
  • January 2016
    • Jan 15, 2016 "The Terrible Beauty of Brain Surgery"
    • Jan 1, 2016 The Nazi war on Xmas
  • December 2015
    • Dec 5, 2015 Hot or not? Definitely not
  • November 2015
    • Nov 13, 2015 The blockchain, disruption and money
  • October 2015
    • Oct 29, 2015 Access to the Internet makes you overconfident.
    • Oct 1, 2015 Working more, producing less.
  • August 2015
    • Aug 24, 2015 The Ashley Madison hack, common knowledge, and the explosion of coordinated actions.
    • Aug 21, 2015 Are we going toward a post-privacy future?
    • Aug 18, 2015 John Oliver on Televangelism in America
    • Aug 13, 2015 Note to self: "crazy like us, the globalization of the american psyche" by Ethan Watters
    • Aug 5, 2015 Note to self: "do no harm" by Henry March
  • July 2015
    • Jul 26, 2015 The solution to humanity's problems tastes like bacon.
    • Jul 25, 2015 How the Internet of Things will change the world.
    • Jul 12, 2015 Never have a bad meal in a restaurant again.
    • Jul 12, 2015 Beware of pickpockets!
  • June 2015
    • Jun 30, 2015 Leaving the Euro - keeping the Euro
    • Jun 26, 2015 Low tech and ingenious: transformative ideas that do not require new technology.
    • Jun 10, 2015 Waterloo and how to "leave" the euro
    • Jun 5, 2015 In Italy, 9 out of 10 startups are financed by Mamma, Papa', and other relatives.
  • May 2015
    • May 31, 2015 This is seriously funny!
    • May 24, 2015 Space and time
    • May 5, 2015 Klingon is the new Esperanto!
    • May 4, 2015 Wonderful BBC documentary on isolation.
    • May 3, 2015 John Oliver interviews Snowden

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