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Oct 28, 2023

Green IT: AI chip with potential

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Modern chips: many steps, low energy consumption.

These key requirements for a chip are summed up mathematically by the parameter TOPS/W: “tera-operations per second per watt”. This can be seen as the currency for the chips of the future. The question is how many trillion operations (TOP) a processor can perform per second (S) when provided with one watt wordpress of power. The new AI chip, developed in a collaboration between Bosch and Fraunhofer IMPS and supported in the production process by the US company GlobalFoundries, can deliver 885 TOPS/W. This makes it twice as powerful as comparable AI chips, including a MRAM chip by Samsung. CMOS chips, which are now commonly used, operate in the range of 10–20 TOPS/W. This is demonstrated in results recently published in Nature.

In-memory computing works like the human brain.

Oct 28, 2023

Google invests two billion dollars in ChatGPT competitor Anthropic

Posted by in categories: internet, robotics/AI

Anthropic, the AI startup known for its chatbot Claude, has been trying to land Google as a major investor after winning over Amazon. Now it seems they have succeeded.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the deal with Google is now in the bag: Two billion dollars will flow from Google to Anthropic over an unspecified period of time. Google will pay $500 million in cash immediately. This second investment follows Google’s initial investment of approximately $300 million in February 2023.

Anthropic is currently rolling out its Claude 2 chatbot on the web and as a programming interface through its own services and partners such as Amazon AWS and Google’s cloud AI service Vertex AI. Claude 2 is currently available in 95 countries, but is not currently available in the EU, presumably for privacy reasons.

Oct 28, 2023

A new way to erase quantum computer errors

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, quantum physics

Quantum computers of the future hold promise in solving all sorts of problems. For example, they could lead to more sustainable materials and new medicines, and even crack the hardest problems in fundamental physics. But compared to the classical computers in use today, rudimentary quantum computers are more prone to errors. Wouldn’t it be nice if researchers could just take out a special quantum eraser and get rid of the mistakes?

Reporting in the journal Nature, a group of researchers led by Caltech is among the first to demonstrate a type of quantum eraser. The physicists show that they can pinpoint and correct for mistakes in quantum computing systems known as “erasure” errors.

“It’s normally very hard to detect errors in quantum computers, because just the act of looking for errors causes more to occur,” says Adam Shaw, co-lead author of the new study and a graduate student in the laboratory of Manuel Endres, a professor of physics at Caltech. “But we show that with some careful control, we can precisely locate and erase certain errors without consequence, which is where the name erasure comes from.”

Oct 28, 2023

Needle-Free Flu Vaccine for Home Use May Be Approved Next Year

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Drug-maker AstraZeneca announced this week that the FDA is currently considering approving the needle-free option for home use. Called FluMist, the vaccine must be refrigerated and would be shipped in insulated packaging to people’s homes.

FluMist has been around for more than two decades and is approved for people ages 2 to 49 years old. It’s fallen in and out of favor over the years, including one period where a CDC advisory panel highlighted FluMist as the preferred flu vaccine for children. Later, its effectiveness was questioned, leading to a reformulation effort, STAT News reported.

AstraZeneca expects the FDA to make a decision on whether to allow home use of FluMist by Spring 2024. The convenience of home administration could increase the number of people who get a flu vaccine, said Ravi Jhaveri, MD, Chief of Infectious Diseases in the Department of Pediatrics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.

Oct 28, 2023

Calorie restriction in humans builds strong muscle and stimulates healthy aging genes

Posted by in categories: food, life extension

Read about NIH-funded research that shows reducing calories may improve health benefits.

Oct 28, 2023

Race to AI: the origins of artificial intelligence, from Turing to ChatGPT

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Today’s poem-writing AI has ancestry in punch-card machines, trundling robots and godlike gaming engines.

Oct 28, 2023

Wearable device makes memories and powers up with the flex of a finger

Posted by in categories: energy, health, nanotechnology, wearables

Link :- https://eng.unimelb.edu.au/ingenium/wearable-device-makes-me…f-a-finger


Researchers from the University of Melbourne and RMIT University have invented an experimental wearable device that generates power from a user’s bending finger and can create and store memories, in a promising step towards health monitoring and other technologies.

Multifunctional devices normally require several materials in layers, which involves the time-consuming challenge of stacking nanomaterials with high precision. This innovation features a single nanomaterial incorporated into a stretchable casing fitted to a person’s finger. The nanomaterial enables the device to produce power simply through the user bending their finger. The super-thin material also allows the device to perform memory tasks.

Continue reading “Wearable device makes memories and powers up with the flex of a finger” »

Oct 28, 2023

Memes, Genes, and Brain Viruses

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI

Go to https://brilliant.org/EmergentGarden to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.

Continue reading “Memes, Genes, and Brain Viruses” »

Oct 28, 2023

Boston Dynamics integrates GPT-4 with Spot and discovers emerging capabilities

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

What id really like to see is put the super realistic robot head on Atlas, and equip w/ a super advanced talking LLM, but maybe people arent ready for it yet. Definitely technically possible.


Robotics company Boston Dynamics has integrated OpenAI’s GPT-4 into its Spot robot dog, showcasing its emerging capabilities.

To build the talking and interactive robot dog, Boston Dynamics added a Bluetooth speaker and microphone to Spot’s body, in addition to a camera-equipped arm that serves as its neck and head. Spot’s grasping hand mimics a talking mouth by opening and closing. This gives the robot a form of body language.

Continue reading “Boston Dynamics integrates GPT-4 with Spot and discovers emerging capabilities” »

Oct 28, 2023

Gene therapy restores hearing in children with rare form of deafness

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The approach could help researchers develop therapies for other types of inherited hearing loss.