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Oct 25, 2023

An AI revolution is brewing in medicine. What will it look like?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

Emerging generalist models could overcome some limitations of first-generation machine-learning tools for clinical use.

Oct 25, 2023

In major medical advancement, study finds additional chemo slashes risk of cervical cancer death

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

An already-approved chemotherapy drug could reduce the risk of dying of cervical cancer when added to the current treatment standard, according to new research presented at a major medical conference.

The study, presented at the European Society for Medical Oncology, followed 500 people, most of whom had “locally advanced” cervical cancer that hadn’t yet spread to other body parts.

Half of the patients were treated with chemoradiation — the current gold standard for treatment, researchers said. The other half were given combination therapy that included a pre-dose (or induction dose) of chemotherapy before every session of chemoradiation.

Oct 25, 2023

Mass. Woman, 30, with Rare Genetic Heart Condition Says She Has No Pulse: ‘I Run on Batteries’ (Exclusive)

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Sofia Hart has no pulse due to heart failure, and uses TikTok to document her life with an LVAD, a device that pumps her heart while she awaits a heart transplant.

Oct 25, 2023

California orders Cruise driverless cars off the roads because of safety concerns

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

The state issued the immediate suspension of the self-driving cars after one struck a pedestrian.

Oct 25, 2023

Tesla surpasses 2,000 active Supercharger stations in the U.S.

Posted by in category: transportation

Tesla has reportedly surpassed 2,000 open and active Supercharger stations in the U.S., marking a major milestone in the automaker’s continued deployment of charging infrastructure.

Oct 25, 2023

Atom Computing is the first to announce a 1,000+ qubit quantum computer

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, particle physics, quantum physics

How many qubits do we have to have in a quantum computer and accessble to a wide market to trully have something scfi worthy?


Today, a startup called Atom Computing announced that it has been doing internal testing of a 1,180 qubit quantum computer and will be making it available to customers next year. The system represents a major step forward for the company, which had only built one prior system based on neutral atom qubits—a system that operated using only 100 qubits.

The error rate for individual qubit operations is high enough that it won’t be possible to run an algorithm that relies on the full qubit count without it failing due to an error. But it does back up the company’s claims that its technology can scale rapidly and provides a testbed for work on quantum error correction. And, for smaller algorithms, the company says it’ll simply run multiple instances in parallel to boost the chance of returning the right answer.

Continue reading “Atom Computing is the first to announce a 1,000+ qubit quantum computer” »

Oct 25, 2023

Engineered cells touted to treat the most aggressive cancers in the world

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Koto_feja/iStock.

That is what Harvard Medical School’s Professor Khalid Shah told the laughing audience during his maiden TEDx talk, in which he spoke about how “repurposed cancer cells” could be used as therapeutics to cure aggressive cancers.

Oct 25, 2023

A next-generation treatment for bile duct cancer

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

FGFR inhibitors, in combination with standard treatments, have extended the lives of many with this disease. However, these drugs often stop working after six to eight months.

“These drugs work very well for a while, but resistance is inevitable,” says gastrointestinal medical oncologist Milind Javle, M.D.

Now, a new type of FGFR inhibitor may allow patients to live longer without their disease progressing.

Oct 25, 2023

Project Silica — Storing Data in Glass

Posted by in category: futurism

Data that needs to be stored long-term is growing exponentially. Existing storage technologies have a limited lifetime, and regular data migration is needed, resulting in high cost. Project Silica designs a long-term storage system specifically for the cloud, using quartz glass.

Read the blog at https://aka.ms/AA6faho.
Learn more about the project at https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/video/project-silic…-in-glass/

Oct 25, 2023

Forecasting the future of artificial intelligence with machine learning-based link prediction in an exponentially growing knowledge network

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

The number of publications in artificial intelligence (AI) has been increasing exponentially and staying on top of progress in the field is a challenging task. Krenn and colleagues model the evolution of the growing AI literature as a semantic network and use it to benchmark several machine learning methods that can predict promising research directions in AI.