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Feb 1, 2024
Elon Musk Fumes as Judge Takes His $55 Billion
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
A Delaware judge has voided Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s gargantuan $55 billion pay package following a lawsuit by shareholders claiming it was far too much wealth to award a single individual.
In a ruling this week, Delaware judge Kathaleen McCormick called the billionaire’s cushy compensation plan “an unfathomable sum,” arguing it was unfair to shareholders.
Uncontested, the decision could leave a massive gap in the net worth of the once richest man in the world, which could have a ripple effect on his other ventures, including SpaceX and his online echo chamber X-formerly-Twitter.
Feb 1, 2024
How Modernity Made Us Allergic
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: biotech/medical, health
Our very old immune systems can’t keep up with modern lifestyles and diets, leading to increases in all sorts of chronic health problems like allergies and obesity.
Feb 1, 2024
The Troubling Mysteries at the Heart of Nuclear Bombs
Posted by Arthur Brown in categories: cosmology, military
Plutonium-pit secrets, growing up in parallel universes, the strange aftermath of a fictional wildfire, and more books out now.
Feb 1, 2024
Cancer-causing protein can be altered to stop disease from spreading
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
In a recent study, researchers found a new way to change the physical properties of a specific protein known to be the culprit of about 75% of all human cancer cases. The researchers say the discovery could pave the way for future cancer treatments.
Feb 1, 2024
This baby with a head camera helped teach an AI how kids learn language
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: robotics/AI
A neural network trained on the experiences of a single young child managed to learn one of the core components of language: how to match words to the objects they represent.
Human babies are far better at learning than even the very best large language models.
Feb 1, 2024
This robot can tidy a room without any help
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: habitats, robotics/AI
A new system helps robots navigate homes they’ve never seen before with a little help from open-source AI models.
Robots are good at certain tasks.
Feb 1, 2024
Google Maps experiments with generative AI to improve discovery
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: mapping, robotics/AI
Google Maps is introducing a generative AI feature to help you discover new places, the company announced today.
Using large language models (LLMs), the new feature analyzes the over 250 million locations on Google Maps and contributions from over 300 million Local Guides to pull up suggestions based on what you’re looking for. For instance, if you want to find cool thrift shops in San Francisco, you can search “places with a vintage vibe in SF,” and Maps will generate shopping recommendations organized by categories, as well as “photo carousels and review summaries,” the company explains. The new feature is meant to feel more conversational than the ordinary search experience. If you ask a follow-up question like “How about lunch?” the AI will take your previous interest in vintage and find restaurants that meet the criteria, such as an old-school diner.
The company says the feature should be able to generate recommendations on even the most niche or specific query.
Feb 1, 2024
Arc is building an AI agent that browses on your behalf
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: internet, robotics/AI
For years, Google (or any other search engine) has been the main gateway for people to discover websites and other content. The Browser Company, which makes the Arc Browser, is on a quest to change that by building an AI that surfs the web for you and gets you the results while bypassing search engines.
The company laid out its product roadmap, which talks about releasing a new tool in the next few months where you can tell the browser what you are looking for and it will present you relevant information by automatically crawling the web.
Continue reading “Arc is building an AI agent that browses on your behalf” »
Feb 1, 2024
Probabl is a new AI company built around popular library scikit-learn
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: robotics/AI
Probabl isn’t your average AI startup, as this new French company is an Inria spin-off company that revolves around an open source data science library called scikit-learn — Inria is a well-known French technology research institute.
As for scikit-learn, with more than 45,000 stars on GitHub, this Python module is widely used by machine learning teams working on tabular data. It can be used for model fitting, predicting, cross-validation, etc.
Unless you’re an ML developer, this might be the first time you’re hearing about scikit-learn. But many big companies have relied on the library for their own products, such as Spotify, Hugging Face, Booking.com and Dataiku.