A German cryonics start-up is offering a chance at a second life for the cost of a sports car. Is cryogenics within reach, or still an empty promise?
It's a scene plucked from science fiction: On their deathbed, a person is completely frozen and then stashed away, so that they might be revived in the future. But could it be possible? In this ...
While it sounds like science fiction, about 500 people around the world have already taken the plunge – literally freezing themselves in time with the dream of a second chance at life.IMAGINE waking ...
Europe’s leading cryopreservation company, Tomorrow.Bio, claims that about 700 customers have joined the list of those waiting to be preserved, while six people and five pets already have undergone ...
So they contacted us,” said Max More, chief executive of Alcor, a non-profit which claims to be the world leader in cryonics – a technique that freezes a recently deceased person at a very low ...
Scottsdale is the home of Alcor Cryonics, one of two companies to offer cryonic services in the US. Although Zoltan says he plans to sign up with Alcor, right now he’s too busy to visit the ...
The technology in question is cryonics, the rapidly developing field of freezing the deceased and preserving the biological structure of the individual in the hopes of reanimating the body at some ...
In episode 35 of The AI Fix, our hosts learn who the 175th best programmer in the world is, the AI supervillains put on suits ...
A German cryonics start-up is offering a chance at a second life for the cost of a sports car. Is cryogenics within reach, or still an empty promise? The ambulance parked up by a green in central ...
A high-tech cryonics start-up is offering to freeze patients in liquid nitrogen after death, one day bringing them back to life for a cost of $200,000 (£165,000). Europe’s leading ...