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    App Delivers Almost Everything

    New innovative app service delivers just about anything you want to your front door

    Nikki Ndukwe
    Nikki Ndukwe
    Jan 31, 2015 | 1:08 pm

    Hey Houston, your life is about to get easier with a new service that will bring you just anything you want, because now, there’s an app for that.

    The Austin-based delivery app Favor and its personable runners have arrived in Houston. Favor is a service that allows users to order a host of items for delivery through a shiny, user-friendly app.

    “The app features the most popular places around you, but, unlike most services, you can request anything you need,” co-founder Zac Maurais tells CultureMap.

    While trendy foodies will love this new app, Favor is not only for the hungry Houstonians. If you need someone to pick up your dry cleaning, just enter it in and it will be delivered to you by a friendly blue tuxedo-shirted runner.

    If you're in need of something other than food delivered to you, simply tap the "Essentials" tab and options like CVS, Petco, and even the Apple store pop up. If those stores aren't to your liking, simply type in the name and Favor will bring it right to you. Sorry, though, alcohol can't be delivered at this time.

    “The app is as simple as possible. It features the most popular places around you, but, unlike most services, you can request anything you need. Your options aren't limited to just the places that we partner with,” Favor co-founder Zac Maurais tells CultureMap.

    College buddies and former pizza delivery guys Maurais and Ben Doherty launched the service in Austin in 2013 and have expanded it to three cities. “We wanted to create something where you could order, pay for the transaction, and have someone else pick it up for you, all done through an app,” Maurais says.

    Favor thrives on the unique rapport created between the runners and the app’s users. Runners are like personal assistants who keep up constant communication, making the experience a positive and memorable one, Maurais says.

    Favor boasts a cashless and simple payment method, with a $6 delivery fee plus 5 percent of the total cost of the item and tip to the runner, all done through the app. For your first time, the $6 fee will be waived with the code “CLUTCH.”

    The average delivery time is 35 minutes, but times can vary depending on demand, traffic and restaurant wait times. We always keep you posted on the status of your order, via push notifications and texts from your runner.

    For now, the service is limited to Rice Village, Midtown, Downtown, River Oaks, Galleria and Medical Center areas from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. As the app continues to grow, the owners plan to expand to more areas of Houston.

    Maurais says the vibrant millennial population is what attracted Favor to expand to cities like Austin, Boston, Dallas, and now Houston. “We’re excited to be in Houston. It's a service that people are really going to value here because nothing like this has ever existed before," he says.

    Favor app delivery runners act as a personal assistant.

    Favor app runner
    Photo courtesy of Favor
    Favor app delivery runners act as a personal assistant.
    unspecified
    news/innovation

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    brain scientists at work

    Rice University scientists invent new algorithm to fight Alzheimer's

    Jef Rouner
    Oct 24, 2025 | 3:00 pm
    Vicky Yao and Qiliang Lai of Rice University work on a laptop.
    Photo courtesy of Rice University
    Vicky Yao, an assistant professor of computer science and member of the Ken Kennedy Institute at Rice University, and Qiliang Lai, a Rice postdoctoral researcher

    A new breakthrough from researchers at Rice University could unlock the genetic components that determine several human diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

    Alzheimer's disease affected 57 million people worldwide in 2021, and cases in the United States are expected to double in the next couple of decades. Despite its prevalence and widespread attention of the condition, the full mechanisms are still poorly understood. One hurdle has been identifying which brain cells are linked to the disease.

    For years, it was thought that the cells most linked with Alzheimer's pathology via DNA evidence were microglia, infection-fighting cells in the brain. However, this did not match with actual studies of Alzheimer's patients' brains. It's the memory-making cells in the human brain that are implicated in the pathology.

    To prove this link, researchers at Rice alongside Boston University developed a computational algorithm called “Single-cell Expression Integration System for Mapping genetically implicated Cell types," or SEISMIC. It allows researchers to zero in on specific neurons linked to Alzheimer's, the first of its kind. Qiliang Lai, a Rice doctoral student and the lead author of a paper on the discovery published in Nature Communications, believes that this is an important step in the fight against Alzheimer's.

    “As we age, some brain cells naturally slow down, but in dementia ⎯ a memory-loss disease ⎯ specific brain cells actually die and can’t be replaced,” said Lai. “The fact that it is memory-making brain cells dying and not infection-fighting brain cells raises this confusing puzzle where DNA evidence and brain evidence don’t match up.”

    Studying Alzheimer's has been hampered by the limitations of computational analysis. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) map small differences in the DNA of Alzheimer's patients. The genetic signal in these studies would often over-emphasize the presence of infection fighting cells, essentially making the activity of those cells too "loud" statistically to identify other factors. Combined with greater specificity in brain regional activity, SEISMIC reduces the data chatter to grant a clearer picture of the genetic component of Alzheimer's.

    “We built our seismic algorithm to analyze genetic information and match it precisely to specific types of brain cells,” Lai said. “This enables us to create a more detailed picture of which cell types are affected by which genetic programs.”

    Though the algorithm is not in and of itself likely to lead to a cure or treatment for Alzheimer's any time soon, the researchers say that SEISMIC is already performing significantly better than existing tools at identifying important disease-relevant cellular signals more clearly.

    “We think this work could help reconcile some contradicting patterns in the data pertaining to Alzheimer’s research,” said Vicky Yao, assistant professor of computer science and a member of the Ken Kennedy Institute at Rice. “Beyond that, the method will likely be broadly valuable to help us better understand which cell types are relevant in different complex diseases.”

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