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Feb 19, 2023

Balancing act: AI-powered superhuman robo-boots coming soon

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Robotic boots providing superhuman reflexes can help your balance. A new study shows that the key to augmenting balance is to have boots that can act faster than human reaction times.

Feb 19, 2023

Moon landings: Astronomers to track and catalog lunar debris in a ‘world first’

Posted by in categories: government, space

Scientists and government agencies have been worried about the space junk surrounding Earth for decades. But humanity’s starry ambitions are farther reaching than the space just around Earth.

Feb 19, 2023

West’s growing cleantech is denting Chinese dominance over green energy

Posted by in categories: business, climatology, habitats, policy, sustainability

Climate change policy has entered a new era. The growing row between the United States and the European Union over the impacts of the new American green subsidy regime makes that all too clear. Yet, in many ways, this story is ultimately about China.

For the last 20 years, developed countries have used three main types of policies to cut their greenhouse gas emissions. Renewable energy mandates have required electricity generators to invest in solar, wind, hydro, and geothermal power. Emissions trading schemes for energy and industrial businesses put a price on carbon. And energy efficiency standards have been progressively improved on a whole range of products, from vehicles and white goods to homes.

Feb 19, 2023

Power of AI: World-renowned architects’ vision reimagined through cars

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

You can’t ride them, but you sure can dream about them.

The works of the world’s most famous architects are easy to recognize. They add beauty and grace to our landscape and brighten up even the gloomiest of neighborhoods.

Now, designers Moss and Fog have used AI-image generator MidJourney to produce cars in the style of the world’s most famous architects, and the results are both mesmerizing and invigorating. and Fog/Instagram.

Feb 19, 2023

NASA Funds Disruptive Space Tech To Detect Very Nearby ExoEarths

Posted by in categories: innovation, space

A disruptive new planet-hunting technology, now under study as part of NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, could literally detect and then look for biosignatures from every Earth 2.0 within a thirty-light-year radius of our solar system.

Known as DICER (The Diffractive Interfero Coronagraph Exoplanet Resolver), the key to this NIAC study’s revolutionary means of detecting these planets is that unlike conventional optical space telescopes — which use curved, highly polished mirrors to collect starlight — this mission would employ flat sets of what are known as diffraction gratings.


Who says you need a conventional telescope to find exoplanets? NASA has funded a ‘Phase I’ study for the development of a whole new means of detecting and then teasing spectra from very nearby exoplanetary earths.

Continue reading “NASA Funds Disruptive Space Tech To Detect Very Nearby ExoEarths” »

Feb 19, 2023

Unique Datasets Will Take Generative AI Like ChatGPT to the Next Level

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

https://youtube.com/watch?v=ssKJmcVPZGw

Chamath says that venture capitalist investors are looking for companies that can collect unique datasets. Proprietary unique datasets could be critical to having superior performance for ChatGPT like Generative AI.

Feb 19, 2023

Infinite Resources — clean energy in the Arctic

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, climatology, cryptocurrencies, economics

A conversation with Jeff Krehmer about his upcoming book.

Clean energy, clean water, hydrogen economy, airships, bitcoin mining and more, much more.

Continue reading “Infinite Resources — clean energy in the Arctic” »

Feb 19, 2023

Scientists find new cause of high blood pressure, heart disease

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

In a study from St George’s and elsewhere, scientists found 119 areas in the genome that help to determine the size and shape of blood vessels at the back of the eye. They found that an increase in the “twisting” of the arteries could cause high blood pressure and heart disease.

Feb 19, 2023

Mucus-based gel improves bone graft results and promotes healing

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

Molecules from mucus can be used to produce synthetic bone graft material and help with the healing of larger bone loss, a new study found.

Researchers at KTH Royal Institute of Technology report the development of a bioactive gel which they say could replace the clinical gold standard of autografting, in which lost is replaced with healthy bone taken from another part of the patient’s body.

Hongji Yan, a researcher at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, says the gel contains mucins, molecules which were derived from cow . The mucins are processed into gels which are combined with monetite granules, a commonly-used synthetic bone graft material. The synthetic gel can be injected to the site of the bone loss.

Feb 19, 2023

The gradual march to AGI

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI, security

Check out all the on-demand sessions from the Intelligent Security Summit here.

The coming of artificial general intelligence (AGI) — the ability of an artificial intelligence to understand or learn any intellectual task that a human can — is inevitable. Despite the predictions of many experts that AGI might never be achieved or will take hundreds of years to emerge, I believe it will be here within the next decade.

How can I be so certain? We already have the know-how to produce massive programs with the capacity for processing and analyzing reams of data faster and more accurately than a human ever could. And in truth, massive programs may not be necessary anyway. Given the structure of the neocortex (the part of the human brain we use to think) and the amount of DNA needed to define it, we may be able to create a complete AGI in a program as small as 7.5 megabytes.