Archive for the ‘robotics/AI’ category: Page 2261
Jun 28, 2016
An AI Just Defeated Human Fighter Pilots in An Air Combat Simulator
Posted by Phillipe Bojorquez in category: robotics/AI
Air combat veterans proved to be no match for an artificial intelligence developed by Psibernetix. ALPHA has proven to be “the most aggressive, responsive, dynamic and credible AI seen to date.”
Retired United States Air Force Colonel Gene Lee recently went up against ALPHA, an artificial intelligence developed by a University of Cincinnati doctoral graduate. The contest? A high-fidelity air combat simulator.
And the Colonel lost.
Continue reading “An AI Just Defeated Human Fighter Pilots in An Air Combat Simulator” »
Jun 28, 2016
A.I. Downs Expert Human Fighter Pilot In Dogfight Simulation
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: robotics/AI
Jun 28, 2016
No need in supercomputers
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: business, cybercrime/malcode, information science, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI, singularity, supercomputing
Great that they didn’t have to use a super computer to do their prescribed, lab controlled experiments. However, to limit QC to a super computer and experimental computations only is a big mistake; I cannot stress this enough. QC is a new digital infrastructure that changes our communications, cyber security, and will eventually (in the years to come) provide consumers/ businesses/ and governments with the performance they will need for AI, Biocomputing, and Singularity.
A group of physicists from the Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics, the Lomonosov Moscow State University, has learned to use personal computer for calculations of complex equations of quantum mechanics, usually solved with help of supercomputers. This PC does the job much faster. An article about the results of the work has been published in the journal Computer Physics Communications.
Senior researchers Vladimir Pomerantcev and Olga Rubtsova, working under the guidance of Professor Vladimir Kukulin (SINP MSU) were able to use on an ordinary desktop PC with GPU to solve complicated integral equations of quantum mechanics — previously solved only with the powerful, expensive supercomputers. According to Vladimir Kukulin, personal computer does the job much faster: in 15 minutes it is doing the work requiring normally 2–3 days of the supercomputer time.
Jun 28, 2016
Stephen Hawking warns of ‘AI arms race’ – and reveals what most mystifies him
Posted by Amnon H. Eden in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI, transportation
Hawking repeats Zoltan Istvan’s worries:
“Governments seem to be engaged in an AI arms race, designing planes and weapons with intelligent technologies,” Hawking told veteran interviewer Larry King. “The funding for projects directly beneficial to the human race, such as improved medical screening, seems a somewhat lower priority.”
British physicist Stephen Hawking sees signs that the applications for artificial intelligence are already going down the wrong track.
Jun 27, 2016
Google’s Sundar Pichai has been hacked — which CEO will be next?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: robotics/AI, security
Geez! Is no one safe anymore; Google’s CEO has been hacked. Oh boy; guess there is definitely a bigger message to Google and others of big tech around this one. Whose next Bezos, Schmidt, etc? BTW — how is that AI working out.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai has become the latest tech executive to have a social media account hacked, and the group responsible says more targets will follow.
On Sunday, a group of hackers calling themselves OurMine briefly took over Pichai’s account on Quora, a question-and-answer site.
Continue reading “Google’s Sundar Pichai has been hacked — which CEO will be next?” »
Jun 27, 2016
DHL Delivery Drone
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: drones, robotics/AI, transportation
Jun 26, 2016
The bot revolution: How conversational interfaces will replace apps
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: habitats, internet, robotics/AI
I have been helping by advising various companies across multiple industries plan & prep for more on boarding of bot technology as part of their own IT infrastructure and application layer. What I have seen companies who are at a turning point for their applications and infrastructure are wanting to invest in more automation meaning more online bot technology so that the resources that they currently have can be scaled to focus on new products & services innovation to help IT become a profit center & deploy commercial services and products to the company’s external customers.
We’re at the cusp of a sharp rise in devices that have no screen but do have conversational voice controls, such as the Amazon Echo. Smart home and Internet-of-things (IoT) objects that respond to users’ voices will improve and become more intuitive with further iterations and wider adoption.
Already they can, for example, dim the lights in a room and play a favorite song. With practice, and, by the virtues of machine learning, these user experiences will become ever more intuitive, capable, and innate.
Continue reading “The bot revolution: How conversational interfaces will replace apps” »
Jun 26, 2016
Virginia looks at new opportunities for Wallops spaceport
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: drones, robotics/AI, security, space, transportation
WALLOPS ISLAND — With space station resupply launches expected to resume in August and a runway under construction for testing drone flights, Virginia is looking at another opportunity to lure a major federal research program to the state’s expanding spaceport complex on this Eastern Shore barrier island.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is expected to begin looking for a place to base a new “science and technology testing ground” for unmanned vehicle systems — operating in the air and underwater — and boosters say the regional spaceport would be an ideal fit.
“What better place to do it than here?” said Peter Bale, chairman of the Wallops Island Regional Alliance, as members of the House Appropriations Committee visited last week.
Continue reading “Virginia looks at new opportunities for Wallops spaceport” »
Jun 26, 2016
Driverless cars could end up killing passengers to save pedestrians
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
I guess this is one form of safety; however, not the one that I had in mind.
SIMILAR ARTICLES