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Jun 27, 2023

These 3 AI tools made my two-minute how-to video way more fun and engaging

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This is a really cool story that shows how you can use AI. People don’t even know many AI tools that exist, like Adobe Podcast, or that you can remove the background of a video without chroma key (green screen)

Today, I’ll show you how I selected and used three AI tools to help improve a short informational video for my YouTube channel. One tool rescued the entire little project, and the others punched up the end result. For this project, we’ll be using Adobe’s Photoshop Beta, Adobe Podcast, and the latest version of Apple’s Final Cut Pro for Mac.

Continue reading “These 3 AI tools made my two-minute how-to video way more fun and engaging” »

Jun 27, 2023

5 A.I. Tools for Video Editing

Posted by in categories: cryptocurrencies, habitats, media & arts, robotics/AI

I just posted a story and commented that people don’t even know how many AI tools exist. There are many. I can decorate my house without an interior designer, and much more. Here are 5 AI editing tools for video.


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➡️ Hit the [Subscribe] button or click here to sub: https://vod.strms.net/s/UCqdsVtEvUIU-0ebfhSFWOGw.
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TimeBolt: https://geni.us/TimeBolt — 20% Discount Code: Rafael.
Keyper: https://fxfactory.pxf.io/Keyper.
Captionator: https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/captionator-for-final-cut/id1627843786?mt=12
Caption Generator for Final Cut: https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/caption-generator-for-finalcut/id1666645487?mt=12
Final Cut Pro 90 Day Free Trial: https://www.apple.com/ca/final-cut-pro/trial/
Adobe Premiere: http://bit.ly/PremiereRafael.

Continue reading “5 A.I. Tools for Video Editing” »

Jun 27, 2023

Boulder Bonanza! Science and Sampling Attempts at the Onahu Outcrop on Mars

Posted by in categories: science, space

Mars Perseverance Rover struggled to collect samples from a crumbly, potentially conglomerate rock at the Onahu outcrop, before exploring another location, Stone Man Pass. Meanwhile, the rover continues to analyze nearby boulders and progress towards Jezero’s inner rim, home to the anticipated carbonate-rich “margin unit,” in pursuit of insights into Mars’ geological history.

Recently on Mars, Perseverance wrestled with sampling a crumbly rock and continued the mission’s boulder-bonanza!

Perseverance spent 3 weeks exploring the Onahu outcrop, after having previously performed an abrasion named Ouzel Falls. From this abrasion, scientists saw that the rock is most likely a conglomerate worth sampling, but was also likely to be crumbly.

Jun 27, 2023

Researchers reveal mechanism of protection against breast and ovarian cancer

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

In a new paper published today in Nature, researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have outlined the structure and function of a protein complex that is required to repair damaged DNA and protect against cancer.

Every time a cell replicates, mistakes can happen in the form of , but specialized proteins exist to repair the damaged DNA.

People with mutations in a DNA repair called BRCA2 are predisposed to breast, ovarian and , which often develop at a young age. In the clinic, these cancers are treated with a drug that inhibits PARP, another protein needed for DNA repair.

Jun 27, 2023

Facebook users targeted in copyright infringement scam

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, policy

Shouldn’t Facebook have alerted us and not CBS News?

The fake notice went on to say that a photo uploaded to the account’s page violated Facebook’s copyright infringement policy and that the decision could be appealed within 24 hours.

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Jun 27, 2023

Power Grids Are Teetering Worldwide. Here’s Why

Posted by in category: energy

Extreme heat is increasing electricity demand as people crank up the AC. The strain could be too much.

Jun 27, 2023

New computer memory tech could power the AI of the future

Posted by in categories: computing, futurism

Researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed a novel computer memory design that could boost performance using less energy.

Jun 27, 2023

Computer memory prototype ditches 1s and 0s for denser data storage

Posted by in categories: computing, materials

Cambridge scientists have developed a new prototype for computer memory that could make for faster chips that could hold up to 100 times more data. The system is made up of barium bridges between films of a disordered material.

As powerful as current computer technology can be, there are a few hard limits to it. Data is encoded into just two states – one or zero. And this data is stored and processed in different parts of a computer system, so it needs to be shuttled back and forth, which consumes energy and time.

But an emerging form of computer memory, known as resistive switching memory, is designed to be far more efficient. Rather than flipping a bit of information into one of two possible states, this new kind of memory can create a continuous range of states. This is done by applying an electrical current to certain types of materials, which causes their electrical resistance to become either stronger or weaker. A broad spectrum of these slight differences in electrical resistance creates a series of possible states to store data.

Jun 27, 2023

Ninth Dedekind number discovered: Scientists solve long-known problem in mathematics

Posted by in categories: mathematics, supercomputing

Making history with 42 digits, scientists at Paderborn University and KU Leuven have unlocked a decades-old mystery of mathematics with the so-called ninth Dedekind number.

Experts worldwide have been searching for the value since 1991. The Paderborn scientists arrived at the exact sequence of numbers with the help of the Noctua supercomputer located there. The results will be presented in September at the International Workshop on Boolean Functions and their Applications (BFA) in Norway.

What started as a master’s thesis project by Lennart Van Hirtum, then a computer science student at KU Leuven and now a research associate at the University of Paderborn, has become a huge success. The scientists join an illustrious group with their work. Earlier numbers in the series were found by mathematician Richard Dedekind himself when he defined the problem in 1,897, and later by greats of early computer science such as Randolph Church and Morgan Ward. “For 32 years, the calculation of D was an open challenge, and it was questionable whether it would ever be possible to calculate this number at all,” Van Hirtum says.

Jun 27, 2023

Lynk connects Palau’s off-grid islands with satellite texting

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, satellites

Satellite-to-phone connectivity provider Lynk has made its debut in Palau, where the nation’s hundreds of islands make traditional cell coverage difficult to achieve. The company’s “cell towers in space” now cover the entire country — intermittently, but that’s a lot better than nothing, and service will improve as more satellites are added to the constellation.

Lynk is among the first of a new wave of direct satellite-to-phone providers, replacing the bulky, dedicated satphones of yore by connecting ordinary mobile devices to low Earth orbit. It’s difficult to engineer for many reasons, as you can imagine.

Apple’s SOS has the most high-profile use case, with the distinguishing characteristic of having to actually point your phone at an unseen satellite, but Lynk’s service requires no special behavior by the user — it just works like a roving cell tower, connecting when it passes overhead.