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Mar 15, 2024

Volkswagen announces production start date for its most affordable $20K ID.1 EV

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

For the first time, Volkswagen announced it aims to start producing its most affordable ID.1 electric car, starting at 20,000 euros ($21,700), in 2027. The $20K Volkswagen ID.1 will offer “affordable electric mobility for everyone,” VW brand leader Thomas Shafer said Thursday.

“The working title is ID.1 and the vehicle is planned for 2027,” Shafer confirmed during VW’s annual press conference Thursday.

Work on the ID.1 is already well underway. Shafer said, “We’re already in the middle of it, we know what the car should look like.” However, the biggest challenge will be deciding where to build it.

Mar 15, 2024

New 621-mile range EV battery charges in six minutes and works in any weather

Posted by in category: transportation

The battery charges in the time it takes to fill a car with gasoline.

Mar 15, 2024

What Is a GPU? The Chips Powering the AI Boom, and Why They’re Worth Trillions

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

GPUs sell for tens of thousands of dollars, and GPU-maker Nvidia is worth over $2 trillion. But what is a GPU, exactly, and why is it special?

Mar 15, 2024

Apple Bought an AI Startup: What to Know About Its AI Plans

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Apple quietly purchased the startup earlier this year amid the company’s big push for more AI features in iOS 18.

Mar 15, 2024

BYD reveals cheaper e2 electric crossover starting under $13,000 to undercut ICE cars

Posted by in category: transportation

BYD is launching another lower-priced electric model. The Chinese automaker introduced the new BYD e2 Honor Edition, starting under $13,000, in its latest move to steal market share from gas-powered cars.

After declaring a “liberation battle” earlier this year, BYD is launching an aggressive campaign aimed at taking market share from ICE vehicles.

BYD kicked off the campaign last month with the new Qin Plus EV, which starts at around $15,000 (109,800 yuan). The company claimed its new EV opened a “new era of electricity is lower than oil.”

Mar 15, 2024

Apple Vision Pro Likely to Launch in These Nine Countries Next

Posted by in category: futurism

Apple will soon add 12 new languages to the virtual keyboard on the Vision Pro, based on code discovered by MacRumors. Right now, the Apple Vision Pro keyboard only supports English (US) and Emoji, which makes sense as it is limited to the United States.

To bring the Vision Pro to new countries, Apple needs to add support for additional languages. The code indicates the following languages will be added:

Mar 15, 2024

This New Robot Is So Far Ahead of Elon Musk’s Optimus That It’s Almost Embarrassing

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI

Tesla’s Optimus is taking baby steps while OpenAI’s Figure 1 is doing burnouts on the track.

Mar 15, 2024

Can This Detachable Cable Make Curbside EV Charging Less Annoying?

Posted by in category: futurism

New York startup itselectric hit an important milestone with its detachable Level 2 chargers, coming soon to Detroit and other cities.

Mar 15, 2024

How a quantum technique highlights math’s mysterious link to physics

Posted by in categories: mathematics, quantum physics, supercomputing

Everybody involved has long known that some math problems are too hard to solve (at least without unlimited time), but a proposed solution could be rather easily verified. Suppose someone claims to have the answer to such a very hard problem. Their proof is much too long to check line by line. Can you verify the answer merely by asking that person (the “prover”) some questions? Sometimes, yes. But for very complicated proofs, probably not. If there are two provers, though, both in possession of the proof, asking each of them some questions might allow you to verify that the proof is correct (at least with very high probability). There’s a catch, though — the provers must be kept separate, so they can’t communicate and therefore collude on how to answer your questions. (This approach is called MIP, for multiprover interactive proof.)

Verifying a proof without actually seeing it is not that strange a concept. Many examples exist for how a prover can convince you that they know the answer to a problem without actually telling you the answer. A standard method for coding secret messages, for example, relies on using a very large number (perhaps hundreds of digits long) to encode the message. It can be decoded only by someone who knows the prime factors that, when multiplied together, produce the very large number. It’s impossible to figure out those prime numbers (within the lifetime of the universe) even with an army of supercomputers. So if someone can decode your message, they’ve proved to you that they know the primes, without needing to tell you what they are.

Mar 15, 2024

Forget Chatbots. AI Agents Are the Future

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Startups and tech giants are trying to move from chatbots that offer help via text, to AI agents that can get stuff done. Recent demos include an AI coder called Devin and agents that play videogames.

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