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Jun 29, 2023

Billionaires and Bureaucrats Mobilize China for AI Race With US

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

The AI race.


China’s tech sector has a new obsession: competing with US titans like Google and Microsoft Corp. in the breakneck global artificial intelligence race.

Continue reading “Billionaires and Bureaucrats Mobilize China for AI Race With US” »

Jun 29, 2023

New Yorkers Fight Back Proposed Pizza Oven Regulation

Posted by in category: futurism

New Yorkers are fighting back against a proposed regulation on Pizza ovens.


New York City officials threatened to crack down on coal and wood-burning pizza ovens. Under the proposed regulation, owners would have to spend as much as $20,000 to purchase a filtration device that cuts emissions by 75%. New York City Mayor Eric Adams says the necessity of restrictions on coal and wood-burning ovens has never been more clear after Canadian wildfire smoke engulfed the city. Inside Edition’s Ann Mercogliano has more.

Jun 29, 2023

Neuralink’s monkey can play Pong with its mind. Elon Musk says human trials are next

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, neuroscience

If Neuralink’s monkey can play Pong with its mind, imagine what humans could do with the same technology in just a few years.

Jun 29, 2023

Scientists edge toward scalable quantum simulations on a photonic chip

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics, space

Scientists have made an important step toward developing computers advanced enough to simulate complex natural phenomena at the quantum level. While these types of simulations are too cumbersome or outright impossible for classical computers to handle, photonics-based quantum computing systems could provide a solution.

A team of researchers from the University of Rochester’s Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences developed a new chip-scale optical quantum system that could help make such a system feasible. The team, led by Qiang Lin, a professor of electrical and engineering and optics, published their findings in Nature Photonics.

Lin’s team ran the simulations in a synthetic space that mimics the physical world by controlling the frequency, or color, of quantum entangled photons as time elapses. This approach differs from the traditional photonics-based computing methods in which the paths of photons are controlled, and also drastically reduces the physical footprint and resource requirements.

Jun 29, 2023

Causely launches Causal AI for Kubernetes, raises $8.8M in seed funding

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

Join top executives in San Francisco on July 11–12, to hear how leaders are integrating and optimizing AI investments for success. Learn More

Causely, an artificial intelligence startup led by CEO and founder Ellen Rubin, announced today the limited early-access launch of its Causal AI platform for enterprise data. The company aims to revolutionize how businesses troubleshoot operational issues and manage application performance using Causal AI technology.

The company also announced today that it has raised $8.8 million in seed funding led by 645 Ventures, with participation from founding investor Amity Ventures, and including new investors GlassWing Ventures and Tau Ventures. The funding will enable Causely to build its Causal AI platform for IT and expand its offerings to a wider range of IT problems and scenarios. The financing also brings the company’s total funding to over $11 million since it was founded in 2022.

Jun 29, 2023

National Geographic Just Laid Off its Last Staff Writers

Posted by in category: futurism

National Geographic, a magazine renowned for its photojournalism and wildlife photography, has laid off the last of its remaining staff writers and a number of other employees, according to multiple departing staff writers. The move signals a possible decline for the publication.

The 19 affected employees—which The Washington Post reports included staff writers and members of the audio team—were made aware of the reduction back in April, which was also when parent company Disney announced widespread layoffs.

While multiple laid-off staffers have publicly stated that all staff writers have been let go, there appears to be mixed messaging — an internal source familiar with the situation told PetaPixel that this layoff did not affect “all writers”, as has been reported, and that the magazine continues to employ staff “writers/editors”. However, this may simply refer to the elimination of dedicated writing roles — The Post reports that “article assignments will henceforth be contracted out to freelancers or pieced together by editors.”

Jun 29, 2023

Nano-diamond battery made from nuclear waste could last up to 28,000 years

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, nuclear energy

Year 2021 😗😁


Nano Diamond Battery wants to bring its ‘nuclear-powered batteries’ to the market within five years.

Jun 29, 2023

This Plasma Engine Could Get Humans to Mars on 100 Million Times Less Fuel

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, physics, satellites

Year 2015 😗😁


Physicists in France have figured out how to optimise an advanced type of electric rocket thruster that uses a stream of plasma travelling at 72,420 km/h (45,000 mph) to propel spacecraft forward, allowing them to run on 100 million times less fuel than conventional chemical rockets.

Known as a Hall thruster, these engines have been operating in space since 1971, and are now routinely flown on communication satellites and space probes to adjust their orbits when needed. These things are awesome, and scientists want to use them to get humans to Mars, except there’s one — rather large — problem: the current lifespan of a Hall thruster is around 10,000 operation hours, and that’s way too short for most space exploration missions, which require upwards of 50,000 hours.

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Jun 29, 2023

How Theoretical Zero-Point Energy Draws Limitless Fuel From The Vacuum Of Space

Posted by in categories: environmental, robotics/AI, space

As sci-fi fans will attest, scenes of the distant future aren’t too difficult to imagine. We’ve got fleets of intergalactic ships exploring the inscrutable vastness of space. We’ve got legions of hardy settlers terraforming strange, new worlds. There’s a great galactic chain of humanity forged through will, knowledge, and intellect stretching across the Milky Way and beyond. At least, that’s one version. Some would describe a brutal, militaristic future for humanity, or one of disembodied consciousnesses and networks of planet-spanning artificial intelligence. But in each version, there’s one crucial element that humanity can’t do without: energy.

Energy is such a fundamental, critical component to civilization — off-world or not — that Soviet astronomer Nikolai Kardashev in 1964 labeled spacefaring civilizations based on how much energy they consumed; the higher the ranking, the more advanced, as Space.com explains. We’re talking far, far beyond crude fuel like oil and coal. Earth isn’t even a Type I civilization because we haven’t harnessed all the energy available on our own planet. By contrast, a Type II civilization would be able to build an energy-harnessing structure like a Dyson sphere around its own sun, as described in Popular Mechanics. After all, all those intergalactic ships, stations, settlements, etc., need power from somewhere, same as they need materials.

Continue reading “How Theoretical Zero-Point Energy Draws Limitless Fuel From The Vacuum Of Space” »

Jun 29, 2023

This Crazy Steam Bike Hit 180MPH And Was Designed In A Shed

Posted by in category: transportation

The world of land speed records is full of crazy homemade creations, like this steam-powered bike that runs on spent cooking oil.