Page 11430
Feb 6, 2016
Your only choice is to build better artificial intelligence tech than others: Brad Templeton
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: business, cybercrime/malcode, internet, mobile phones, nanotechnology, robotics/AI, security, singularity, transportation
Brand’s view and concerns about hacking driverless cars are valid. And, I do believe in time that government will eventually catch up in passing some laws that will make companies ensure that their technology is safe for consumer usage and are safe for the public. I just hope that the pendulum does swing too far to the other side of over regulation.
It is not easy to slot Brad Templeton. What do you make of a person who is not only the networks and computing chair at Singularity University in Silicon Valley but also a software architect, a director of the Foresight Nanotech Institute, board member of the cyberspace watchdog Electronic Frontier Foundation, the first person to have set up an Internet-based business, a futurist lecturer, hobby photographer, artist, as well as a consultant on Google’s driverless car design team?
In a phone interview from the US, Templeton, who will be in India this month as a key speaker during the SingularityU India Summit (to be held in association with INK, which hosts events like INKtalks—a platform for the exchange of cutting-edge ideas and inspiring stories), shared his views on driverless cars, the perceived threat from intelligent machines and censorship of the Internet. Edited excerpts:
Feb 6, 2016
Intel: The future of computing is…slow
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, quantum physics
Glad to see that Intel has finally announced that have embraced Quantum Tunnelling. However, slower performance chips isn’t the right way either.
Intel reveals at a conference that whether it chooses spintronics or quantum tunnelling, computers of the future are going to be slower.
Feb 6, 2016
Tinkering with Life : Genetics in the 21st Century
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension
I have nothing against the idea of designer babies. Why not better ourselves through science? There will always be a baseline version of humanity kicking around, even if it’s in cold storage,thus ensuring that any mistakes made early on don’t destroy the species. Besides, the same technology that allows us to make ourselves better could just as easily be used to repair us if we do make a mistake of some kind. TOO much red-tape, as always.
Room: B-3245.
Recent discoveries and advances in medicine are setting the bioethical world on fire. Some technologies, such as CRISPR-Cas9 and fast DNA sequencing techniques, have tremendously increased our control over our own genome. GMOs, Gene Therapy and life extension are examples of applications of our new gained knowledge in genetics. For more than a few, the thought of scientists playing with the fundamental building blocks of life brings an uneasy feeling. Yet, what are the scientists really doing?
Continue reading “Tinkering with Life : Genetics in the 21st Century” »
Using laser to build nanostructures on metal; and watch water bounce off the nanostructure coating
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=880054655441835&id=778276028953032
Feb 6, 2016
13 Facts About Time That Will Hurt Your Brain
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: neuroscience, particle physics
Time triva facts that make you go hmmm.
Passage of time is faster for your face than for your feet (supposing you’re standing up). Einstein’s theory of relativity states that the nearer you are to the center of the Earth, the slower time passes – and this has been already measured. For an instance, at the top of Mount Everest, a year would be about 15 microseconds shorter than at sea level.
A second isn’t what just you consider it is. Technically, it’s not defined as 1/60th of a minute, but as “the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation consistent to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom”.
Feb 6, 2016
Why former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is ‘pleased’ to own Twitter stock
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: futurism
Hmmm,
Steve Ballmer says Twitter has a great brand and lots of room to improve the product and the company’s cost structure.
Feb 6, 2016
Morocco Turns on What will Become the World’s Largest Solar Power Plant
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: nuclear energy, solar power, sustainability
As oil was to Saudi Arabia, could solar be to Morocco?
Morocco has turned on its enormous solar power plant in the town of Ourrzazate, on the edge of the Saharan desert. The plant already spans thousands of acres and is proficient of generating up to 160 megawatts of power. It’s already one of the largest solar power grids in the world, capable of being seen from space. And it’s only going to get bigger.
The present grid, called Noor I, is just the first phase of a planned project to bring renewable energy to millions living in Morocco. It will soon be followed by expansions, Noor II and Noor III, that will add even more mirrors to the present plant. Once the project is finished around 2018, the whole grid will cover 6,000 acres. It will be capable of producing up to 580 megawatts of power, comparable to that of a small nuclear reactor.
Continue reading “Morocco Turns on What will Become the World’s Largest Solar Power Plant” »
Feb 6, 2016
Google Wants Its Driverless Cars to Be Wireless Too
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LG-_Dz6nseQ&feature=youtu.be
Israel latest technology 2016 unmanned military technology subscribe and thumbs up.