『Great News | Inspiring Stories, Positive Developments and Good News』のカバーアート

Great News | Inspiring Stories, Positive Developments and Good News

Great News | Inspiring Stories, Positive Developments and Good News

著者: Andrew McGivern | Good News Podcast Host - Positive News and Inspiration
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The Great News Podcast is your source for positive news, inspiring stories, and good news from around the world. We skip the doom and gloom of mainstream media to focus on scientific breakthroughs, environmental wins, and the inspiring news that proves the world is getting better. Join Andrew McGivern for a dose of optimism and uplifting stories that will change your perspective on human progress. It is easy to find the Keep looking for the good in the world, because it is not only there - its everywhere.Andrew McGivern | Good News Podcast Host - Positive News and Inspiration 政治・政府
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  • De-Extinction Regrowing Cartilage and Safer Batteries
    2026/07/08
    A massive step forward for de-extinction. A biotech company called Colossal Biosciences (the one bringing back the Wooly Mammoth) has successfully hatched 26 live chicks using an artificial environment. These chicks were born from a 3D-printed lattice structure designed to mimic a natural eggshell, including a membrane that allows for oxygen exchange. While currently using chicken embryos, the ultimate goal is to scale this technology to resurrect the South Island giant moa, an extinct 12-foot bird from New Zealand. Because a moa egg is 80 times the size of a chicken egg, no modern bird could safely lay one, making these artificial shells a necessary gateway for bringing the species back. Next, we look at a breakthrough in safety in our electrified future. Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have developed "fireproof" sodium-ion batteries that features an internal "smart firewall". Traditional lithium ion batteries can suffer from thermal runaway, a chain reaction where temperatures skyrocket and lead to explosions. This new design uses a liquid electrolyte that solidifies into a physical barrier when internal heat exceeds 150°C (302°F), effectively cutting off the reaction before a fire can start. In tests, these cells maintained their integrity even during nail penetration and external heating up to 300°C.Scientists at Stanford have discovered a way to regrow articular cartilage in joints. Cartilage has almost zero regenerative potential in adults, leading to chronic pain and arthritis for millions. The team found they could trigger the body’s own skeletal stem cells by creating a slight injury, similar to a microfracture, and then using specific chemical signals to "steer" those cells. Chemists at Northwestern University have found a way to turn natural gas into liquid methanol in a single step. Current industrial methods require extreme heat and pressure, emitting millions of tons of CO2 annually. This new process uses pulses of high-voltage electricity to create tiny "lightning bolts" of plasma inside a reactor. These bursts break methane’s bonds at low temperatures, allowing it to recombine into methanol, a versatile chemical used in everything from plastics to cleaner-burning fuels for ships.Carbon-Trapping Wastewater: Scientists found that alkaline wastewater from steel and cement production can safely bind CO2 as bicarbonate, potentially removing 30 million tons of greenhouse gas every year.Ultralight Survival Straw: Lifestraw has released its lightest filter ever, the Sip Essential, which weighs less than one ounce and can filter up to 1,000 litres of water.Brain-Activating Electronics: Researchers created flexible, printed artificial neurons that can generate electrical spikes identical to biological ones, successfully activating real brain cells in lab tests.Sweaters for Houses: A new photothermal "skin" made of coated fabric panels can be attached to exterior walls, absorbing sunlight to raise indoor temperatures and potentially cutting heating bills by 15%.Solar Power After Dark: By stripping balsa wood down to its cellular scaffolding and filling it with a "phase-change" material, scientists created a heat-absorbing sponge that can drive a generator even after the sun goes down.Plastic to Gasoline:A new technique uses molten salts to break down common plastic waste into high-grade gasoline and diesel at relatively low temperatures, making recycling much less energy-intensive.The World’s Largest Flow Battery: In Switzerland, a billion-dollar project is excavating a pit deep enough to house a 2.1 GWh redox flow battery, capable of powering 210,000 households for an entire day.And my favorite quote of the day from the Daily Quote podcast is from Robert Louis Stevenson, who said: "Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant".You can follow the Daily Quote in your favorite podcast app.That is it for this episode of Great News.
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    9 分
  • Repairing the Brain, $20 Hearing Aids, and Turning Parking Lots into Power Plants
    2026/06/25
    The Great News Podcast is brought to you by the Daily Quote, the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way.Today, we’re looking at how the empty space in our cities is being turned into a powerhouse of clean energy. Plus, we’ll explore breakthroughs in repairing the brain, a $20 medical device set to disrupt an entire industry, and why your kitchen pantry might hold the secret to stopping dangerous mosquitoes.Our lead story today focuses on a global shift to turn "stranded assets", specifically, the massive amounts of asphalt used for parking lots, into solar farms. In a bold legislative move, South Korea has passed a national law requiring all parking lots with more than 80 spaces to install solar canopies and carports. This applies to both new and existing lots, aiming to stabilize the local grid while protecting cars from rain and sun. Meanwhile, in France, the Senate passed a policy requiring similar canopies for large lots, which could generate energy equivalent to 10 nuclear reactors. In the U.S., California’s Senate Bill 49 is looking to provide tax incentives for these "miniature power plants," with estimates suggesting that covering just 400 square miles of parking lots could power 6.5 million homes.If you like the Great News Podcast, you’ll love the Great News Letter, because the Great News Podcast is great, but the Great News Letter is greater. Link is in the show notes.Next, we have a double-header of breakthroughs in neurological repair. Researchers at the University of Helsinki have identified two drug molecules that can restart the brain's natural repair process in Multiple Sclerosis by promoting the regrowth of myelin, the protective nerve coating the disease destroys. Simultaneously, a study from the University of Zurich and USC found that stem cell-derived brain cells transplanted after a stroke can actually rebuild damaged connections and restore coordination. These cells didn't just survive; they matured into functioning neurons and triggered a broader healing response across the injured brain.In the world of affordable healthcare, a group called Founders Inc. has reinvented the hearing aid by studying the mechanics of the human ear. While a standard hearing aid can cost an astronomical $4,700,this new version is being brought to market for just $20, potentially making life-changing technology accessible to millions for the first time.Finally, scientists at Yale have discovered that garlic acts as a powerful birth control for mosquitoes. A natural compound called diallyl disulfide blocks the mating and egg-laying process in species that spread diseases like Zika and yellow fever. Interestingly, it's not the smell that deters them, but a specific taste receptor in their tiny organs that triggers an avoidance behavior.It's time for the speed round, where we squeeze in even more positivity:The Health Power of HummingBottling the SunLifestyle choices beat geneticsMicrobiome Brain BoostCleaner Air = Better Surgery Outcomes⁠Broccoli vs. CancerAnd my favorite quote of the day from the Daily Quote podcast this week is from Walt Whitman, who once said, "Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap, but by the seeds that you plant"Listen to an inspiring quote every single day by following the Daily Quote in your podcast app.I'm Andrew McGivern, and until next time, keep looking for the good in the world, because it’s not only there, it’s everywhere.
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    7 分
  • Smart Living Drugs and Turning Tumors into Vaccines
    2026/06/12
    Here are the latest great news stories from greatnewspodcast.com, brought to you by the Daily Quote, a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm Andrew McGivern, and this is the Great News Podcast.First up, our lead story: A new weapon in the fight against superbugs.Researchers at the University of Oxford have developed a "smart living drug" that can hunt down and destroy deadly, antibiotic-resistant bacteria in a single day. Instead of traditional antibiotics, which are becoming less effective, they used "SimCells" (short for simple cells). Read More Vaccines and Dementia RiskMoving on to a major development in brain health: common vaccines might be doing more than just preventing infections. A large-scale meta-analysis of 45 studies suggests that shingles vaccines and antiviral drugs are associated with a significantly lower risk of dementia. Read MoreThe Future of Hydrogen FlightNext, let's look at a breakthrough for the planet. Researchers at UNSW have redesigned hydrogen fuel cells to solve a critical flaw that has long blocked their commercial use. Read MoreTurning Tumors into VaccinesFinally, a team of medical biologists in the Czech Republic is testing a revolutionary "personalized" cancer therapy that turns a patient's own tumor into a vaccine. Read MoreSpeed Round:AI Power Boost: Engineers at UC San Diego developed a new hybrid piezoelectric chip for AI data centers that is 96.2% efficient and delivers four times more current, potentially slashing energy losses in the age of AI.Italian firms are deploying humanoid robot welders to shipyards. Equipped with "Physical AI," these robots will work alongside humans to handle repetitive, dangerous tasks, improving safety and production quality.Scientists at Harvard’s Wyss Institute have created "Neurobots"—tiny living robots made from frog cells that have their own integrated nervous systems. An online supermarket in Belgium is testing the Clevon 1, a fully driverless delivery robot. It navigates narrow city streets to bring groceries directly to customers' doors via a 5G connection.A new study suggests that microplastics in the environment may be overestimated because standard lab gloves (nitrile and latex) can shed particles that look identical to plastic under a microscope. Scientists discovered that depleting the gut microbiome in aged mice actually reversed aspects of brain aging, improving memory and vascular density, suggesting that targeting "microbial inflammation" could be a non-invasive way to promote cognitive resilience.That’s it for today’s episode of Great News. Until next time, I'm Andrew McGivern. Keep looking for the good in the world, because it's not only there, it’s everywhere.
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    9 分
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