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Apr 5, 2023

AI chip race: Google says its Tensor chips compute faster than Nvidia’s A100

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business, robotics/AI, space, supercomputing

It also says that it has a healthy pipeline for chips in the future.

Search engine giant Google has claimed that the supercomputers it uses to develop its artificial intelligence (AI) models are faster and more energy efficient than Nvidia Corporation’s. While processing power for most companies delving into the AI space comes from Nvidia’s chips, Google uses a custom chip called Tensor Processing Unit (TPU).

Google announced its Tensor chips during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic when businesses from electronics to automotive faced the pinch of chip shortage.

Continue reading “AI chip race: Google says its Tensor chips compute faster than Nvidia’s A100” »

Apr 5, 2023

MIT scientists produce ‘ultrastable’ materials using new computing method

Posted by in categories: chemistry, computing, engineering

The resulting materials could be used for capturing greenhouse gases.

MIT researchers have used a computational model to identify about 10,000 possible metal-organic framework MOF structures that they classify as “ultrastable.” These states make them good candidates for applications such as converting methane gas to methanol.

“When people come up with hypothetical MOF materials, they don’t necessarily know beforehand how stable that material is,” said in a statement published on Tuesday Heather Kulik, an MIT associate professor of chemistry and chemical engineering and the senior author of the study.

Apr 5, 2023

Mind control: 3D-patterned sensors allow robots to be controlled by thought

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

This novel technology looks like a sci-fi device. But it’s real.

It seems like something from a science fiction movie: a specialized, electronic headband and using your mind to control a robot.


Oonal/iStock.

Continue reading “Mind control: 3D-patterned sensors allow robots to be controlled by thought” »

Apr 5, 2023

New Stanford report highlights the potential, costs, and risks of AI

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

AI-related jobs are on the rise but funding has taken a dip.

The technology world goes through waves of terminologies. Last year, was much about building the metaverse until it turned to artificial intelligence (AI) which has occupied the top news spots almost everywhere. To know whether this wave will last or wither off, one needs to look at some trusted sources in the domain, such as the one released by Stanford University.

For years now, the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence at Stanford has been releasing its AI Index on an annual basis.

Continue reading “New Stanford report highlights the potential, costs, and risks of AI” »

Apr 5, 2023

Joe Biden warns of AI dangers, urges tech companies to make safe products

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Social media has already illustrated the harm that powerful technologies can do without the right safeguards, said the President.

U.S. President Joe Biden warned of the dangers of using artificial intelligence (AI) while putting the onus on making safe products on technology companies.


The White House/ Wikimedia Commons.

Continue reading “Joe Biden warns of AI dangers, urges tech companies to make safe products” »

Apr 5, 2023

The interaction between white adipose tissue mitochondria and gut microbiota in obesity

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

In a recent study published in the Nutrients journal, researchers explored the interaction of white adipose tissue (WAT) mitochondria with gut microbiota in obesity.

Study: The Crosstalk between Gut Microbiota and White Adipose Tissue Mitochondria in Obesity. Image Credit: AlphaTauri3DGraphics/Shutterstock.com

Apr 5, 2023

The ‘Little Bang’ Helping Physicists Study the Infant Universe

Posted by in category: particle physics

By recreating an early state of matter called the quark-gluon plasma, scientists hope to understand the conditions that made the universe what it is today.

Apr 5, 2023

Scientists discover significant storage capacity in water-based batteries

Posted by in category: chemistry

Researchers at Texas A&M University have discovered a 1,000% difference in the storage capacity of metal-free, water-based battery electrodes. These batteries are different from lithium-ion batteries that contain cobalt. The group’s goal of researching metal-free batteries stems from having better control over the domestic supply chain since cobalt and lithium are outsourced. This safer chemistry […].

Apr 5, 2023

Stephen Wolfram on AI’s rapid progress & the “Post-Knowledge Work Era” | E1711

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

(0:00) Nick kicks off the show.
(1:24) Under the hood of ChatGPT
(7:53) What is a neural net?
(10:05) Cast.ai — Get a free cloud cost audit with a personal consultation at https://cast.ai/twist.
(11:33) Determining values and weights in a neural net.
(18:28) Vanta — Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://vanta.com/twist.
(19:33) Emulating the human brain.
(23:26) Defining computational irreducibility.
(26:14) Emergent behavior and the rules of language.
(31:49) Discovering logic + creating a computational language.
(38:10) Clumio — Start a free backup, or sign up for a demo at https://clumio.com/twist.
(39:38) Wolfram’s ChatGPT plugin.
(43:46) The rapid pace of AI
(58:45) The “Post-Knowledge Work” era.
(1:03:52) The unintended consequences of AI
(1:11:45) Rewarding innovation.
(1:16:12) The possibility of AGI
(1:20:07) Creating a general-purpose robotic system.

Check out Wolfram Research: https://www.wolfram.com/

Continue reading “Stephen Wolfram on AI’s rapid progress & the ‘Post-Knowledge Work Era’ | E1711” »

Apr 5, 2023

How to Survive the AI Revolution

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

Is artificial intelligence on the path to replacing people and jobs? Not quite. GSB professors argue that instead of viewing #AI as a competitor, we should be embracing it as a collaborator.

“The idea that AI is aimed toward automation is a misconception. There’s so much more opportunity for this technology to augment humans than the very narrow notion of replacing humans.” Professor Fei-Fei Li, co-director of the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence.
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