🔸Faculty member at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the Cambridge School of AI in Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
🔸Member of the European Laboratory for Learning and Intelligent Systems (ELLIS).
🔸His work primarily focuses on leveraging artificial intelligence and advanced experimental techniques to engineer cells, modulate their responses to disease and perturbations, and apply these innovations in diagnostics, therapeutics, and drug discovery.
🔸In addition to his academic work, he has experience in both biotech and tech industries, having worked at Relation Therapeutics and Cellarity, as well as Facebook AI.
🔸Faculty member at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the Cambridge School of AI in Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
🔸Member of the European Laboratory for Learning and Intelligent Systems (ELLIS).
🔸His work primarily focuses on leveraging artificial intelligence and advanced experimental techniques to engineer cells, modulate their responses to disease and perturbations, and apply these innovations in diagnostics, therapeutics, and drug discovery.
🔸In addition to his academic work, he has experience in both biotech and tech industries, having worked at Relation Therapeutics and Cellarity, as well as Facebook AI.
The administrator of a telegram group, "Suck Channel," was sentenced to six years and six months in prison for seven counts of incitement yesterday. Developing social channels based on exchanging a single message isn’t exactly new, of course. Back in 2014, the “Yo” app was launched with the sole purpose of enabling users to send each other the greeting “Yo.” 3How to create a Telegram channel? The court said the defendant had also incited people to commit public nuisance, with messages calling on them to take part in rallies and demonstrations including at Hong Kong International Airport, to block roads and to paralyse the public transportation system. Various forms of protest promoted on the messaging platform included general strikes, lunchtime protests and silent sit-ins. The group’s featured image is of a Pepe frog yelling, often referred to as the “REEEEEEE” meme. Pepe the Frog was created back in 2005 by Matt Furie and has since become an internet symbol for meme culture and “degen” culture.
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