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Jun 13, 2023

Tesla Giga Shanghai Production Speed 38 Seconds, Changes Everything!

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, Elon Musk, sustainability

A nice Tesla Video. Hope it’s not censored.


#TeslaFans #teslanews #teslamotorfans #gigaberlin.
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Tesla Giga Shanghai Production Speed 38 Seconds, Changes Everything!
Huge thank to:
CCTV https://www.youtube.com/c/cctv.
wu wa https://www.youtube.com/c/%E7%83%8F%E7%93%A6
Jason Yang https://www.youtube.com/c/JasonYang.
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Tesla’s Giga Shanghai is a trump card for the EV revolution of Tesla.
Recently, Elon Musk revealed how fast Giga Shanghai could produce a car in just 38 seconds.
So how did that change everything?
The first video includes a ten-minute and five-minute segment of the Model Y leaving the workshop.
And during the 10-minute segment, 16 new cars were completed, which would be 38 seconds per car on average.
7 cars were completed in the following 5-minute segment, translating to an average of 44 seconds per car.

Continue reading “Tesla Giga Shanghai Production Speed 38 Seconds, Changes Everything!” »

Jun 13, 2023

Microsoft Alarmed at Doctors Using ChatGPT to Tell Patients Bad News

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Doctors using ChatGPT to communicate with patients in a more empathetic way and even tell them about bad news.

Jun 13, 2023

There’s now an open-source SDK for mini quantum computers you can use

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Quantum Brilliance, the company behind miniaturized, room-temperature quantum computing products, has announced the general availability of Qristal SDK.

Previously available in beta, Qristal SDK is an open-source software development kit designed for researching applications integrated with its diamond-based quantum accelerators.

Jun 13, 2023

Quantum Speedup — Quantum Computers Are Better at Guessing

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Daniel Lidar, the Viterbi Professor of Engineering at USC and Director of the USC Center for Quantum Information Science & Technology, and first author Dr. Bibek Pokharel, a Research Scientist at IBM Quantum, achieved this quantum speedup advantage in the context of a “bitstring guessing game.”

By effectively mitigating the errors often encountered at this level, they have successfully managed bitstrings of up to 26 bits long, significantly larger than previously possible. (For context, a bit refers to a binary number that can either be a zero or a one).

Quantum computers promise to solve certain problems with an advantage that increases as the problems increase in complexity. However, they are also highly prone to errors, or noise. The challenge, says Lidar, is “to obtain an advantage in the real world where today’s quantum computers are still ‘noisy.’”.

Jun 13, 2023

The future of AI is unknown. That’s the problem with tech ‘prophets’ influencing AI policy

Posted by in categories: climatology, existential risks, policy, robotics/AI, sustainability

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The skies above where I reside near New York City were noticeably apocalyptic last week. But to some in Silicon Valley, the fact that we wimpy East Coasters were dealing with a sepia hue and a scent profile that mixed cigar bar, campfire and old-school happy hour was nothing to worry about. After all, it is AI, not climate change, that appears to be top of mind to this cohort, who believe future superintelligence is either going to kill us all, save us all, or almost kill us all if we don’t save ourselves first.

Whether they predict the “existential risks” of runaway AGI that could lead to human “extinction” or foretell an AI-powered utopia, this group seems to have equally strong, fixed opinions (for now, anyway — perhaps they are “loosely held”) that easily tip into biblical prophet territory.

Jun 13, 2023

How Google’s “Don’t be evil” motto has evolved for the AI age

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Google CEO Sundar Pichai told 60 Minutes the company’s founding motto includes more nuance, but still underpins its values.

Jun 13, 2023

How Does Matter Give Rise To Consciousness?

Posted by in categories: ethics, neuroscience, robotics/AI, terrorism

Sam Harris is an American author, philosopher, neuroscientist, and podcast host.

His work touches on a wide range of topics, including rationality, religion, ethics, free will, neuroscience, meditation, philosophy of mind, politics, terrorism, and artificial intelligence.

Continue reading “How Does Matter Give Rise To Consciousness?” »

Jun 13, 2023

Asana CEO: ‘The way we work right now will soon look vestigial. Here’s how A.I. will make work more human’

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, surveillance

Finally, stories born from paranoia teach you to see A.I. as the ultimate surveillance tool, watching your every eye moment and jiggle of your mouse. But what if it’s used instead to catch you doing things well, and to foster trust between managers and employees?

With the ability to compile reports of your accomplishments—or even assess their quality—A.I. can help managers better appreciate the output of their employees, rather than relying on quantified inputs, like time spent at your desk. It can watch out for deadlines and critical paths, automatically steering you toward the work that’s most urgent. And if you do fall behind on deadlines, A.I. can let your manager know: They don’t have to poke their nose in all the time just to catch the one time you fell behind. With A.I. helping everyone focus their attention to match intentions as they do their work, managers can instead spend their time investing in ways to support their team and grow individuals.

The way we work right now will soon look vestigial, a kind of social scaffolding in our journey to build something better. We know that A.I. will transform the future of work. Will the future edifices of our labor be austere, brutalist towers that callously process resources? Or will they be beautiful, intricate monuments to growth and thriving?

Jun 13, 2023

Hong Kong Would Be the Bigger Loser from a Google Exit

Posted by in category: policy

The US tech giant’s role in the life of citizens and businesses is far more important than what the city offers in revenue.

Jun 13, 2023

We need to retain research integrity in the AI era

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) tech poses a challenge to ensuring the integrity of research, particularly PhD study, says University of Melbourne expert.