Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘futurism’ category: Page 677

Sep 20, 2019

To Better Understand The Arctic, This Ship Will Spend A Year Frozen Into The Ice

Posted by in category: futurism

How To Study The Arctic? Freeze A Ship Full Of Researchers Into The Ice A group of scientists is embarking on a bold plan to better understand an extremely understudied part of the rapidly warming Arctic — the central Arctic Ocean.

Sep 20, 2019

A New Pandemic Could Kill 80 Million People, Experts Warn

Posted by in category: futurism

:-:


The world is not prepared for a crisis of this magnitude.

Sep 20, 2019

Richard Dawkins’ New Book, “Outgrowing God,” Brings Atheism to Younger Readers

Posted by in category: futurism

Just to put this out there: There’s no shortage of Christian apologists who have written books tailored to a younger audience, and the Bible itself has all kinds of children’s editions. But when Dawkins’ book comes out, you can expect Christian writers to accuse Dawkins of trying to indoctrinate children into godlessness. Even though he’s doing exactly what they do, except from a different perspective. The difference is he actually has evidence on his side.


The book will be released this October.

Sep 19, 2019

The Future Looks Like Salt Reactors

Posted by in categories: futurism, nuclear energy

They just might change how you see nuclear energy.

Sep 19, 2019

A biologist believes that trees speak a language we can learn

Posted by in category: futurism

Humans have long recognized the song of trees.

Sep 19, 2019

Our Relative Velocities

Posted by in category: futurism

Everything is moving. Our relative velocities.

Sep 18, 2019

Missing Link Between Simple Cells and Complex Life-Forms Possibly Found

Posted by in category: futurism

Cells with nuclei bear certain similarities to simple archaeal cells, which may help clear up their fuzzy evolutionary past.

Sep 18, 2019

Designing for a Post-Job Future: The Impact of AI on Architecture

Posted by in categories: architecture, futurism
https://pixabay.com/images/id-4375588/ by TheDigitalArtist

What might the end of work mean for the future of buildings? Firstly, a significant proportion of the built environment that has up to now been designed for people-centred economic activities —offices, shopping centers, banks, factories and schools—may over the next 10–20 years house 50% or less of the number of workers with far fewer physical customers. Furthermore, with the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), some organizations might run on algorithm alone with literally no human staff.

The future of jobs is not just about employment, but about larger societal shifts with dramatic impact on the use of space and resources. Indeed, AI is increasingly likely to provide a meta-level management layer — collating data from a variety from a range of sources to monitor and control every aspect of the built environment and the use of resources within it.

Today, at the dawn of the AI revolution, some of the latest technology coming at us involves mixed reality; advances in virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) are buzzing with new uses in places of work, education and various commercial settings. Teaching and training are exemplary uses — enabling dangerous, rare or just everyday situations to be simulated for trainees. Such simulations also provide the nexus point for humans to work alongside AI. For example, robot surgeons might do the cutting, while a human surgeon looks on remotely via video or a VR/AR interface. How might places be redesigned to accommodate this human-AI hybrid job future? The outcome could be spaces that embrace the blurring of physical and digital worlds, possibly with multi-sensory connection points between the two.

The coming wave of AI in business and society could impact the future design, use and management of buildings in dramatic ways. Key design features, including construction, security, monitoring and maintenance, could become coordinated by highly automated AI neural networks. For example, future office buildings might make intelligent responses to their inhabitants’ moods or feelings in order to increase productivity of humans in the organization—varying lighting, temperature, background music, ambient smells, and digital wallpaper displays according to the motivational needs of each worker.

Continue reading “Designing for a Post-Job Future: The Impact of AI on Architecture” »

Sep 18, 2019

Watch: Paris tests ‘flying taxi’ as future of city transport

Posted by in categories: futurism, transportation

With pollution a major issue for Paris and the city’s public transport bursting at the seams, one start-up has a solution involving the River Seine.

The Bubble, a “flying taxi”, is powered by electricity and lifts out of the water on “wings” – and boasts green credentials such as being noise and pollution-free. It costs around €200,000 to build and can reach speeds of up to 18 knots (20.7mph). Test voyages in Paris are limited to a maximum speed of 18.6mph.

The service could launch as early as spring next year, according to a press release from the Paris mayor’s office. The Seabubbles start-up launched a four-day test run on the Seine on Monday.

Sep 17, 2019

Google Fi gets a cheaper “unlimited” plan, bundled cloud storage

Posted by in category: futurism

With the cloud storage, you’ll save about $12 over the old Fi unlimited plan.

Page 677 of 1,080First674675676677678679680681Last