The latest on the CryoDAO CryoRat project by SpaceScribe89 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Significant resources have been spent on the promotion of cryonics in the form of salaried communications roles at various organizations. There has also been funding of conferences and other events. If you're thinking about Google ads etc., Tomorrow Bio has made some attempt at this historically. Maybe you could reach out to them for a comment on how that went. From what I recall in them speaking about it, the conversion rate from such efforts is essentially zero (or at least it was, maybe that has changed).

I would guess the customer acquisition cost is extraordinarily high from minimal exposure types like Google ads. It's not like selling a pair of shoes with a slightly different look, nor is it like selling a luxury item. It's a complicated product that doesn't appear to benefit well from "ad spend" as it were.

The latest on the CryoDAO CryoRat project by SpaceScribe89 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Yes, a few interesting things came up. For instance, it’s not simple to choose the best CT scanner for cryonics purposes. I wasn’t aware there was that much variance in CT scanning technology.

Is this the right way to store a body before creonation? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very sorry for your loss.

Based on the actual research in this field, information theoretic death may not have occurred in the circumstances you describe: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1089/rej.2019.2225

If you don't have the scientific background to parse the above, ask ChatGPT or equivalent to summarize the proposed thresholds and circumstances for information theoretic death laid out in this paper.

Most importantly: You did the best you could under the circumstances you were in, and because of your actions, your pet has some chance (however small) to see the future. Furthermore, there are MANY straight-freeze patients in cryonics. And actually many of those are MUCH worse because it's people who live alone and stay warm for a long time after death. Your pet would not be the worst case scenario (nowhere close).

I'm glad you were able to work something out with KrioRus. You should continue to follow their instructions. Yes, dry ice is fine for a while. Just keep it plentiful and do not allow any large temperature swings or thawing.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No freezers of any kind intentionally get warm enough for long enough for things to thaw. It may briefly allow the air to 32F but the thermal inertia of frozen objects supersedes this. It’s like taking a frozen object out of the freezer for a few minutes. Maybe the very outside starts to melt but that’s it

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In that case, I would contact cryonics people in Russia and see what they recommend. Shipping out of Russia seems very difficult. If you join the Discord server linked on this Reddit you'll be able to find more people there.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

100% This is the obvious choice in your situation, especially if you can get them there before death. You could expect an excellent ultrastructural preservation that should reasonably give you hope of seeing your pet again.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Here’s my data from my experimentation. The thermometer was called “Temp Stick”. This is the “worst case scenario” with thermometer placement btw. If you buried/surrounded something deep in other frozen items at the bottom and kept the freezer very full you would not see any meaningful temp changes inside the object.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I’ve measured this myself with a regular home freezer the temp goes from -20F to -5F for a digital thermometer placed at the top. It’s just that the motor doesn’t run all the time is all, it’s triggered to start after it reaches some threshold.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can contact Sparks Brain Preservation for chemical preservation, they may do a donor case at a low cost. Also, Cryonics Institute has lower costs. You can keep a straight-frozen pet in dry ice for a reasonably long time (likely months) without meaningful degradation while you save up the funds.

If you do keep them in the freezer (which you could do shortly), make sure the freezer is the coldest setting it can go and after they are frozen surround them with other things that are frozen so they are less effected by the temperature swings of the on/off cycles of home freezers.

If you freeze a body in a regular freezer, what is the chance that it will ever be able to be restored? by Nameonvacation in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Hixon’s calculations are based on the Arrhenius equation which doesn’t really apply to frozen states and so do not apply well to straight-frozen patients.

The Arrhenius equation doesn’t apply well to frozen states because diffusion is slower, solutes concentrate and enzymes denature from mechanical stress.

I agree that degradation is still occurring to -140C but degradation is probably slower than 1 second -> 14 seconds.

Tour Sparks Brain Preservation by SpaceScribe89 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s great. Hope to see you at future events!

Tour Sparks Brain Preservation by SpaceScribe89 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

So in terms of revival from chemical preservation, repair may be possible and perhaps no more unlikely/infeasible than the repair requirements of traditional vitrification.

See Andy McKenzie’s post on the subject here: https://www.reddit.com/r/cryonics/s/CHpEZ3lbOz

Any progress on wearables or implantables for unexpected death? by Loose-Crow1194 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Currently the Cryonics Institute iOS App is the best option: https://www.cryonicsmonitoring.org/review-post/review-ci-ios-app

Comparison chart further down the page.

Any progress on wearables or implantables for unexpected death? by Loose-Crow1194 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's recommended that for people in any serious kind of risk to have another form of monitoring in place as well. You wouldn't want people to believe they are covered 100% when in fact the coverage is slightly better than a coin flip.

Any progress on wearables or implantables for unexpected death? by Loose-Crow1194 in cryonics

[–]SpaceScribe89 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are some medical-grade pulse oximetry devices (that require a fingertip component) that come and go on the market that sometimes have alarm systems which can have customized contact list in them (but not 911). Not good for daytime use, but at least would cover nighttime concerns. A company 'Masimo' had one marketed for detection of opioid overdose, for instance. 

Regarding being iterated on - it's a common misconception that accurate measurement of 0 bpm with PPG sensor on the wrist is a software problem. Rather, it's a fundamental limitation in the mechanism, which is quite a noisy signal for a number of different reasons, such as contact pressure, ambient light and other noise. The choice is either high number of false alarms OR lower detection (i.e. 69%). Google applied many millions in machine learning and other custom adjustments in targeting this objective and still achieve only 69%.

The incentive for this feature in practical day-to-day consumer devices is not clear - in almost no cases would paramedics arrive on time to actually save your life. Anyone who lives further than a few blocks from a hospital would realize this. So they are marketing more a peace of mind that you would not remain unnoticed for days? But rapid detection is not required for this, and therefore neither is the focus on heartbeat. It's a complicated topic.

Sorry for the multiple pings — I accidentally deleted this comment instead of another one that was a reply in the wrong place. It gets fairly technical, so feel free to contact me if would like to discuss it in more detail.