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Feb 4, 2017
Humans With Amped Intelligence Could Be More Powerful Than AI
Posted by Montie Adkins in category: robotics/AI
George Dvorsky from 2013. Intelligence Augmented vs Artificial Intelligence.
Elan Musk has been having the same idea.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/25/elon-musk-could-soon-share…p-with-ai/
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Feb 4, 2017
Biomimetic Artificial Skin Layer with Significant Temperature Sensitivity (VIDEO)
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs
Researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology have developed a material that can sense changes in temperature with more sensitivity than human skin. The team discovered that flexible films made from pectin demonstrate an electrical response, caused by the release of calcium ions, following very small changes in temperature. Increased temperature causes the pectin molecules to “unzip”, allowing the release and movement of calcium ions.
Feb 4, 2017
Jetpack pioneer David Mayman’s new electric VTOL flying car project
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: transportation
Jetpack Aviation’s David Mayman and Nelson Tyler have already brought honest-to-god jetpacks out of the pages of science fiction books and onto the market. Now, they plan to do the same with flying cars. We spoke with Mayman at length about Jetpack Aviation’s new manned VTOL multirotor project.
When Karen was told her daughter had an incurable disease, she started a gene therapy company to find a cure.
Feb 4, 2017
Architects Reveal What They Think “The City of the Future” Will Look Like
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: space, sustainability
In Brief
- From colonies on Mars to massive pods under the sea, architects and urban planners have come up with some wildly imaginative designs for the future of city living.
- Given current population trends and our ever-worsening environment, we need to start thinking now about how humanity will live in the future.
When you imagine what the cities of the future will look like, it’s hard to think that we can do more than what some nations have already achieved. For instance, Dubai, Japan, and Singapore feature some of the world’s most impressive modern architectural marvels; Helsinki is pioneering a future in data transparency; Brazil is setting the standard for efficient and sustainable mass transportation and eco-consciousness; and Korea is defining an urban landscape anchored on digital connectivity.
But architects and urban planners are letting their imaginations run wild — after all, where else can we go but toward our most outlandish, exciting, and sometimes even dystopian imaginings of the future?
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Feb 4, 2017
China’s Manufacturing cost advantage is eroding so China will spend trillions for automation, robotics, 3D manufacturing and research
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: business, employment, robotics/AI
While the USA has been extremely concerned about losing jobs (particularly manufacturing jobs to China), China performed a survey of businesses in the American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing and found that 25% had moved or were planning to move their businesses out of China. Half were going to other Asian countries and 40% to America, Canada or Mexico.
China’s worker wages are rising about 7–8% each year and they have a shrinking working age population as the people age.
China is making big moves in automation and large scale deployment of robotics. In 2014, President Xi Jinping talked about a robotics revolution. China has been the number one buyer of industrial robots since 2013. However, China lags other nations in terms of robots per worker.
Feb 4, 2017
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates think it’s ‘crazy’ to view job-stealing robots as bad
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
The billionaire leaders and friends say increasing productivity is a good thing for humanity.
Feb 4, 2017
Retraining Our Desires: How to Be Happy in the Coming Robot Age
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: food, habitats, robotics/AI
We will need a good dose of healthy stoicism if we are to survive in the world after work. Luxury items will be significantly reduced in the world we’re imagining. Stoics like Marcus Aurelius and Seneca recommended that we adjust our desires to simple, reliable pleasures, like fresh water, decent bread, modest clothing, and good friends. Luxury pleasures are rare and unreliable so we suffer more when they fail to materialize.
But chocolate cake is delicious and diamonds are beautiful. When Plato sketched a Spartan lifestyle in the Republic, his friends accused him of designing a city for pigs not humans — and they demanded that he add spices and luxury to the imagined utopia. While I’m sensitive to this worry, I hasten to point out that many Americans are currently, and by their own initiative, downsizing their sense of the good life. The contemporary “tiny house movement” — which builds elegant housing around 1/10th the size of average homes — is already the kind of stoic adjustment that Americans will need to make when we’re all unemployed.