“Now, Xiao said, he imagines a future where kids don’t have to depend on their parents to drive them around, for instance, and can instead summon a self-driving ride.”
Read more (video in post is from 2016; access 2017 video via link)
“Now, Xiao said, he imagines a future where kids don’t have to depend on their parents to drive them around, for instance, and can instead summon a self-driving ride.”
Read more (video in post is from 2016; access 2017 video via link)
The fear that automation in the form of robots or artificial intelligence is going to destroy jobs is widespread. But it can be difficult to gauge just how serious to take the threat. Different reports offer different estimations of how many jobs will be lost, while politicians and economists argue that technology creates as many jobs as it destroys, maintaining an equilibrium in employment over the long run.
But is this really true? A new study from the National Bureau of Economic Research aims to add some solid numbers to the debate, looking at the historical effects of robots on employment in the US. Economists Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo studied the US labor market between 1990 and 2007, looking at employment rates in different areas and industries while controlling for the influence of factors like increased imports from China and the offshoring of jobs.
Intelligent Machines
Nvidia’s deep-learning chips may give medicine a shot in the arm.
The company sees medicine as the next big market for its machine-learning hardware.
Confronting A.I.
Joe Rogan Experience.
Episode #938
Intelligent Machines
AI, quantum computing will accelerate materials discovery.
IBM’s Watson is already at work developing novel polymers.
Posted in futurism
Posted in futurism