Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | 2011-10-19login
Stories from October 19, 2011
Go back a day, month, or year. Go forward a day, month, or year.
1.Signs that you are a bad programmer (yacoset.com)
450 points by okal on Oct 19, 2011 | 168 comments
2.Programming Language Development: The Past 5 Years (fogus.me)
284 points by jashkenas on Oct 19, 2011 | 53 comments
3.Google AI Challenge 2011 (aichallenge.org)
275 points by philf on Oct 19, 2011 | 68 comments
4.Supreme Court of Canada: No Liability for Linking (michaelgeist.ca)
215 points by mef on Oct 19, 2011 | 38 comments
5.Startup Ideas We'd Be Willing To Pay For (giftrocket.com)
207 points by kapilkale on Oct 19, 2011 | 123 comments
6.Lytro cameras are ready for preorder. (lytro.com)
207 points by sahillavingia on Oct 19, 2011 | 94 comments
7.Android 4.0 SDK Now Available (android.com)
182 points by Toddward on Oct 19, 2011 | 78 comments

There's a lot of complexity here I'm going to attempt to simplify. Apologies in advance if I glossed over any important details.

It all starts with what Malaria has evolved to do. The lifecycle of malaria requires both a mosquito and a human. It gets into a female mosquito, hangs out in her gut until she bites a human, jumps into the human and hangs out there for a while mucking about, and then jumps back to a different mosquito.

If malaria straight-up killed its host, it wouldn't transmit itself on to the next one. This means malaria must be really good at two things: keeping its host walking around and going undetected for as long as possible. It has lots of tricks it uses to stay under the radar. This all makes sense because the longer it can stay in the host, the more likely it'll get picked up by something else. Think of malaria like a spy that's infiltrated your population. You know one of your civilians is killing the others, but you can't figure out who.

It's also important to know HOW vaccinations work. There are four golden strategies used today:

- Put a dead bugger in the body.

- Put a neutered bugger in the body.

- Put the bugger's coat (a virus-like particle) in the body.

- Put the bugger's perfume (a protein marker) in the body.

All four of these strategies work the same way. Your body recognizes an intruder and teaches itself how to eliminate the threat.

We've established that malaria is good at going undetected. This renders the first two strategies ineffective. Even if we did introduce dead/neutered malaria into the body, the body will still have a hard time finding it when real Malaria enters the system.

We can't use the third strategy because Malaria isn't a virus. That leaves us with only one option: a perfume (subunit) vaccine.

A subunit vaccine is a vaccine where you take the perfume of a bugger and give it to the body saying "Anything that smells like this, you should probably deal with". These are difficult vaccines to put together. Proteins, like perfume, are a carefully constructed thing and are hard to perfectly replicate. Plus, given their complex nature, the body can get confused and build ineffective defenses since it's only given a protein to work with.

On top of all this, the malaria bugger goes through three different stages of its life while in the human body. If you target it late stage, you'll prevent further transmission but the human could still die. You want to target it early stage, preventing transmission AND protecting the human from symptoms. Unfortunately, your body only has 5 minutes from being bitten to to find the bugger and kick its ass before he effectively vanishes from sight.

So where does that leave us? We have a spy entering our country. We are already doing everything we can to destroy his transit before he enters our borders (spraying with DEET to kill mosquitos). We need to catch him before he masquerades as a citizen, otherwise we will never find him. So our only option is to look for signs of a spy and ruthlessly eliminate anything that fits the bill.

That's what RTS,S/AS01 does. In the 80s we were able to produce a protein from the malaria sporozoite (the first stage inside the human body) to get a small level of immunity in humans. The problem since then has been ramping up the immune response. The body needs to act fast (within 5 minutes of being infected) and with extreme prejudice (wiping out the sporozoites) off of very little training (a single sporozoite protein). Vetting this vaccination is also tricky, since it requires human field testing in Africa.

In other words, this vaccine is the culmination of 50 years of dedication, research, and hard work. It's also a miracle of modern science. Most importantly, it will save a LOT of human lives.

9.How does the iPhone 4S camera stack up against other cameras? (campl.us)
171 points by brackin on Oct 19, 2011 | 64 comments
10.Secret iOS business; what you don’t know about your apps (troyhunt.com)
168 points by troyhunt on Oct 19, 2011 | 57 comments
11.Unofficial Google Advanced Search (jwebnet.net)
161 points by 0x12 on Oct 19, 2011 | 15 comments
12.Remembering Steve Jobs: A Million Tributes From Around The World (apple.com)
153 points by adeelarshad82 on Oct 19, 2011 | 23 comments
13.Remember The Milk can sync with your iPhone calendar (rememberthemilk.com)
150 points by hopeless on Oct 19, 2011 | 56 comments
14.Google now tells you your IP when you ask it in search (google.com)
144 points by suivix on Oct 19, 2011 | 89 comments
15.Ask HN: Please review my site "Smoke Signal" (getsmokesignal.com)
143 points by mtgentry on Oct 19, 2011 | 80 comments
16.How to turn a biased coin into a Fair Coin (bueno.org)
137 points by aristus on Oct 19, 2011 | 47 comments
17.We Can All Become Job Creators (nytimes.com)
136 points by kennyma on Oct 19, 2011 | 93 comments
18.Matias Duarte on the philosophy of Ice Cream Sandwich (thisismynext.com)
130 points by turing on Oct 19, 2011 | 48 comments
19.IPhone 4S has GLONASS in addition to GPS (apple.com)
129 points by dchest on Oct 19, 2011 | 89 comments
20.Is Nokia's CEO a Microsoft mole? (globalpost.com)
123 points by haasted on Oct 19, 2011 | 86 comments
21.Paul Graham, Dropbox and The Single Founder Exception (forbes.com/sites/bruceupbin)
118 points by jkuria on Oct 19, 2011 | 62 comments
22.Google Surrenders in the Nymnwars (eff.org)
111 points by hornokplease on Oct 19, 2011 | 29 comments
23.From South Africa, a faster and easier way to apply condoms (springwise.com)
108 points by bond on Oct 19, 2011 | 35 comments
24.Khan Academy Triples Unique Users To 3.5 Million (techcrunch.com)
96 points by ssclafani on Oct 19, 2011 | 45 comments
25.Go Ahead, Sell My Data (kevinjcurtin.com)
91 points by granfalloon on Oct 19, 2011 | 109 comments
26.Stanford on-line Data Mining Courses ($10k for a certificate) (stanford.edu)
90 points by zeratul on Oct 19, 2011 | 36 comments
27.Google, Samsung unveil Ice Cream Sandwich-powered Galaxy Nexus (cnet.com)
86 points by AhtiK on Oct 19, 2011 | 130 comments
28.Andrew Ng's Classroom Lectures for ML (171.64.93.201)
82 points by dlo on Oct 19, 2011 | 13 comments
29.How to create a (fictional) language in one day (sicher.org)
81 points by sicher on Oct 19, 2011 | 19 comments
30.Google+ for Google Apps users - it's a matter of days (plus.google.com)
79 points by patrickaljord on Oct 19, 2011 | 36 comments

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: