Skip to main content

شخصی‌ به نام یارادیجیلیق به

شخصی‌ به نام یارادیجیلیق به
Anonymous

شخصی‌ به نام یارادیجیلیق به شکلی‌ شیوا نتایج آموزش، دانشگاه و آگاهی‌ فرهنگی‌ را در زیر این مقاله گنجانده است، امیدوارم دوستان ترک آزربایجانی، ما را هر چه بیشتر، با پیشرفت‌های دنیای ترک، آشنا کنند، من یک پزشک هستم و خواستم یک ترک را که نه تنها در آمریکا، بلکه در کلّ دنیا، صاحب نامی‌ شده، به همه بشناسانم، عکس این دانشمند ترک، در روی جلد مجله فربز، مختص ماه اپریل، گذاشته شده، این دانشمند ترک، که لقب تولید کنندهٔ قرص خدا را گرفته، نه تنها قادر به کند کردن پروسهٔ پیر شدن شده، بلکه ادعا می‌کند توان معکوس کردن پروسهٔ پیر شدن را دارد. این مقاله را بخوانید. http://www.forbes.com/sites/matthewherper/2016/04/13/the-god-pill/#1395…

If you Google GOOGL -0.83% Osman Kibar’s name you’ll find pictures of him playing poker. It’s not that he was ever a serious player–just that in 2006 he won the first poker tournament he ever played in and then, a year later, came in second out of 3,000 players at a tournament run by the World Series of Poker in Vegas.

“I don’t get this,” he told a friend. “I’m going to enter another tournament just to check this assumption.” So he played one more tournament, won it and then quit. “While I’m playing, it’s you and the other players,” says Kibar, 45. “The cards are irrelevant. [But] when you just stare at cards 12 to 14 hours a day, you get this hangover effect.” He couldn’t think straight for days, he says, so he gave it up. Instead, for fun, he now reads higher-math textbooks and meditates.

Kibar, an engineering Ph.D. who emigrated from Turkey to the U.S. for college, doesn’t need to bet on cards for money. Samumed, the San Diego firm he has been stealthily building for a decade, is the most valuable biotechnology startup on the planet.

Based on investments made by private investors that include IKEA’s private venture firm, anonymous high-net-worth individuals and a single venture capital firm, Samumed has raised $220 million, and the most recent round of financing valued it at $6 billion. It is halfway through raising another $100 million at a $12 billion valuation. Kibar owns a third of the company, which would give him a net worth of $4 billion.

Samumed is finding it easy to raise huge amounts of cash because it believes it has invented medicines that can reverse aging. Its first drugs are targeted at specific organ systems. One aims to regrow hair in bald men. The same drug may also turn gray hair back to its original color, and a cosmetic version could erase wrinkles. A second drug seeks to regenerate cartilage in arthritic knees. Additional medicines in early human studies aim to repair degenerated discs in the spine, remove scarring in the lungs and treat cancer. After that Samumed will attempt to cure a leading cause of blindness and go after Alzheimer’s. The firm’s focus, disease by disease, symptom by symptom, is to make the cells of aging people regenerate as powerfully as those of a developing fetus.