THC

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  • Full gram cartridge with cannabis oil and terpenes inside. With weed leaf on white background. An alternative method of smoking medical marijuana.

    Black market fears are hampering cannabis waste recycling efforts in California

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    11.16.2022

    In California, the nation’s largest legal cannabis market, 510-thread cartridges are popular to the point of ubiquity but, due to the state’s strict hazardous waste disposal regulations, difficult to dispose of in a responsible manner.

  • PAX Labs

    Vape maker PAX launches PodID to explain what's in your cannabis oil

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    11.12.2019

    Consumers want to know what's in the stuff they buy and where it comes from, whether that's food, electricals or clothing -- so why should cannabis be any different? Vape company PAX Labs is rolling out a new feature for its mobile app which gives users detailed information about what makes up their oil concentrate.

  • James Trew / Engadget

    The next frontier for cannabis vapes: mood-specific formulas

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    04.20.2019

    "In New York, my bicycle messenger really had two types of cannabis. It was either green or brown." Michael Ray is the CEO of Bloom Farms, a California-based cannabis company that specializes in vape cartridges and CBD tinctures. Ray's reflecting on cannabis's current cultural explosion. As an increasing number of states fully legalize it, alongside countries like Canada, the curtain of illegitimacy is slowly lifting. For the first time, cannabis can be explored and experimented with in plain sight. The result: an emerging trend of tailored and targeted vape products that claim to do more than get you lifted. Cannabis is going a la carte.

  • ZombieFrieZ via Getty Images

    Concentrates are the future of cannabis

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    04.20.2017

    The cannabis industry is in the midst of an unprecedented renaissance. Strains are stronger, consumption methods more numerous and availability greater than ever before. Medical-grade marijuana now averages around 20 percent THC -- a threefold increase from the "hippie weed" your parents toked back in the '60s. Smoking has been usurped by vaping and edibles as the preferred dosing methods, making the concentrates and oils more valuable commodities than the flowers they're derived from. The good times certainly are rolling, but how long can we keep up this relentless march toward pure THC distillate?

  • YouTube / RC - Freak

    Stanford has developed a roadside breathalyzer for weed

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    09.13.2016

    Blood, breath and urine. These are the holy trinity of determining alcohol intoxication but are virtually useless when measuring the amount of THC in your system thanks the molecule's ability to remain present in bodily fluids for up to a month after consumption. However, a technological breakthrough from Stanford University could soon enable law enforcement to accurately determine how blunted you are as soon as they pull you over.

  • Who needs weed when we've got THC-producing yeast?

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    09.14.2015

    Researchers from the Technical University of Dortmund in Germany have reportedly discovered a way to genetically engineer yeast to produce both THC and cannabidiol. THC is the primary psychoactive chemical in cannabis which cannabidiol (or CBD) is a potent anti-inflammatory compound. Synthetic THC is already sold under brand names like Cesamet. It's often used to treat nausea associated with HIV or cancer therapies. However getting yeast to produce just those chemicals, rather than having to strip them from the plants themselves, could greatly reduce the cost of their production compared to conventional chemical synthesis.