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Aug 17, 2023

Webb Confirms Two Very Luminous Galaxies in Early Universe

Posted by in category: space

During the first 500 million years of cosmic history, the first stars and galaxies formed, seeding the Universe with heavy elements and eventually reionizing the intergalactic medium.

Aug 17, 2023

Organoids shown to speed glycoengineered vaccine development

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, engineering

Testing the efficacy of a vaccine candidate is typically a long process, with the immune response of an animal model taking around two months.

A multi-institution team, led by Matt DeLisa, the William L. Lewis Professor in the Smith School of Chemical Biomolecular Engineering, at Cornell Engineering, is developing a method that is more than an order of magnitude faster.

Using a biomaterials-based organoid, developed in the lab of former Cornell professor Ankur Singh, now at the Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology, the team was able to assess the strength of the immune response in just days.

Aug 17, 2023

Cervavac, India’s own HPV vaccine for cervical cancer, is now in pvt hospitals: Who should get it first? What’s its efficacy?

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Plans are already under way to roll it out for the public sector too by the end of the year. With a 2–3 million dose production capacity, a single dose of the two-dose vial is priced at Rs 2,000 currently. Vaccine effective against high risk types of the cancer-causing virus, say oncologists.

Aug 17, 2023

Scientists Have Summoned a Massless Demon Particle

Posted by in categories: materials, particle physics

It’ll help unlock the inner workings of superconductors.

Aug 17, 2023

Scientists Recreate Pink Floyd Song by Reading Brain Signals of Listeners

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

The researchers also found a spot in the brain’s temporal lobe that reacted when volunteers heard the 16th notes of the song’s guitar groove. They proposed that this particular area might be involved in our perception of rhythm.

The findings offer a first step toward creating more expressive devices to assist people who can’t speak. Over the past few years, scientists have made major breakthroughs in extracting words from the electrical signals produced by the brains of people with muscle paralysis when they attempt to speak.

But a significant amount of the information conveyed through speech comes from what linguists call “prosodic” elements, like tone — “the things that make us a lively speaker and not a robot,” Dr. Schalk said.

Aug 17, 2023

Scientists explain the behavior of supercooled liquids

Posted by in category: materials

Kranthi Mandadapu.

This is according to a press release by the institution published on Tuesday.

Aug 17, 2023

New study challenges Einstein and Newton’s theories of gravity

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

No, it’s not dark matter.

Gravity is the force that attracts objects toward the Earth and maintains the orbital motion of planets around the Sun. Our scientific understanding of gravity was established by Isaac Newton.

Continue reading “New study challenges Einstein and Newton’s theories of gravity” »

Aug 17, 2023

“AI Town” lets you build your own GPT-based AI civilization

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Venture capitalist a16z rebuilds a research paper with “AI Town” and releases the code. AI Town uses a language model to simulate a Sims-like virtual world in which all characters can flexibly pursue their motives and make decisions based on prompts.

In April, a team of researchers from Google and Stanford published the research paper Smallville. OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 simulates AI agents in a small digital town based solely on prompts.

Each character has an occupation, personality, and relationships with other characters, which are specified in an initial description. With further prompts, the AI agents begin to observe, plan, and make decisions.

Aug 17, 2023

Nvidia’s earnings will be the AI hype cycle’s biggest test

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation

Nvidia (NVDA) will report its second quarter earnings after the closing bell next Wednesday, setting up what will be the AI hype cycle’s biggest test yet. During this AI gold rush, companies around the world looking to profit have turned to Nvidia’s graphics processors to power new AI software and platforms.

Currently, tech firms of all sizes are doing everything they can to get their hands on Nvidia chips. During Tesla’s (TSLA) Q2 earnings call, CEO Elon Musk told analysts that the automaker will take as many Nvidia graphics processors as the company can produce.


Nvidia is widely expected to have a blowout earnings report. A miss could derail the AI hype train.

Continue reading “Nvidia’s earnings will be the AI hype cycle’s biggest test” »

Aug 17, 2023

Meet Pibot: Korea’s LLM-powered smart robotic pilot

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Called “Pibot,” this humanoid robot integrates large language models to help it fly any aircraft as well as, if not better than, a human pilot.

Researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology (KAIST) are working to develop a humanoid pilot that can fly an aircraft without modifying the cockpit. Called “Pibot,” the robot has articulated arms and fingers that can interact with flight controls with great precision and dexterity. It also comes with camera “eyes” that help the robot monitor the internal and external conditions of the aircraft while in control.

Continue reading “Meet Pibot: Korea’s LLM-powered smart robotic pilot” »