Menu

Blog

Page 2573

Jul 11, 2023

The Future Of AI—And Everything Else—Is Hybrid

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

Qualcomm recently released a white paper titled, “The Future of AI is Hybrid.” In the paper, they outline a clear case that for AI to develop to its maximum capabilities, it needs to be processed both on the cloud and the edge. Computing at the edge would improve issues like cost, energy use, reliability, latency issues, privacy—all of the things that make scaling and growing a technology difficult. And they’re right: for AI to optimize fully, it needs more than one partner, more than one solution. But the greater lesson here is: that’s true for all technology moving forward.

When we hear the term “hybrid,” many of us think of hybrid cars—cars that run on both gasoline and electricity. We in the tech space eventually grabbed that term to refer to things like hybrid cloud —a situation where companies may process some of their data on the public cloud, private cloud, or data center in some type of mix. The goal in creating these hybrid models in technology was the same as it was with hybrid cars—to reduce energy consumption, improve costs, enhance performance.

The hybrid cars grew in popularity because they allowed users the enjoy the best qualities of both types of cars—gas and electric. Gas engines allow the hybrid to refuel quickly and move longer distances before needing fuel. The electric side helps cut emissions and save money. A similar concept is true for AI. AI needs somewhere powerful and stable for model training and inference, which require huge amounts of space for processing complex workloads. That’s where the cloud comes in. At the same time, AI also needs to happen fast. For it to be useful, it needs to process closer to where the action actually happens—the edge of a mobile device.

Jul 11, 2023

Claude 2.0, Anthropic’s Latest ChatGPT Rival, Is Here — And This Time, You Can Try It

Posted by in categories: business, mathematics, robotics/AI

AI startup Anthropic has released its next major model – and this time, you can see for yourself how it compares to other AI standouts such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Inflection’s Pi. Anthropic announced on Tuesday that it’s released Claude 2, a large-language model that the company said showed improvement across several key benchmarks that include coding, math and reasoning skills, while producing fewer harmful answers.

Claude 2 is more widely available in its second major iteration. Anthropic launched a new beta-test website for general users to register in the U.S. and U.K. – claude.ai – while opening up the new model to businesses by API at the same price they paid for Anthropic’s previous,… More.


New model Claude 2.0 is better at coding, math and reasoning, CEO Dario Amodei said. Unlike its predecessor, it’s available for general consumer use.

Continue reading “Claude 2.0, Anthropic’s Latest ChatGPT Rival, Is Here — And This Time, You Can Try It” »

Jul 11, 2023

NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft data reveals presence of chromium in Mercury’s core

Posted by in category: space

“Our model, based on laboratory experiments, confirms that the majority of chromium in Mercury is concentrated within its core.”

Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun, yet it is also the least understood. Mercury.

This odd planet features some of the most enduring mysteries, for instance, scientists aren’t sure where Mercury came from. How did its metallic core get so dense and big? Or how does this small planet, so near to the Sun, sustain even a thin atmosphere?

Jul 11, 2023

Study finds, ‘greedy’ genes from father encourage unborn babies to steal their mother’s food

Posted by in category: food

A mice experiment shows that genes from the father make an unborn child manipulate their mother’s metabolism so that the fetus could have more and more nutrition.

A new mice study from the University of Cambridge (UC) reveals that during pregnancy, a fetus tries to suck in as many nutrients as possible from its mother, and unique “greedy genes” from the father helps the fetus do so.

Continue reading “Study finds, ‘greedy’ genes from father encourage unborn babies to steal their mother’s food” »

Jul 11, 2023

SpaceX breaks record for Falcon 9 with 16th launch of booster B1058

Posted by in categories: drones, internet, satellites

SpaceX’s veteran Falcon 9 booster, B1058, made its 16th launch on Sunday. This was the 216th successful mission for the series and a record-breaking event for the company.

On the night of July 9, 2023, SpaceX made space history with yet another successful Falcon 9 rocket launch. Blasting off from the Space Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, the rocket carried a payload of Starlink satellites before landing its first stage booster on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean.

This is pretty much par for the course for SpaceX, but what is more incredible is that this was the 16th launch and landing of its B1058 Falcon 9 rocket booster. The company now hopes to be able to use the same booster… More.

Continue reading “SpaceX breaks record for Falcon 9 with 16th launch of booster B1058” »

Jul 11, 2023

New ‘light-structure’ technique could solve some of quantum computing’s biggest challenges

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, quantum physics

“I find it totally amazing that it is possible at all to build these light structures.”

A Ph.D. candidate at has developed an innovative technique for creating the elementary building blocks of a future quantum computer or internet in a more controlled manner, opening up a potential solution to many of the challenges along the road to this long-sought technology.

Petr Steindl’s doctoral thesis, which he defended last week as the final step in his Ph.D. program at Leiden University in Germany, explores a new technique for generating photons using quantum dots and microcavities.

Jul 11, 2023

‘Hundred times’ more probability of finding water on exoplanets, says new study

Posted by in category: alien life

Rutgers University scientists believe there might be many more Earth-like exoplanets with liquid water.

Are we alone in this vast universe? Are there planets out there that harbor liquid water and ideal conditions for life to thrive?

These are some of the major questions that space scientists hope to find answers to. However, in order to answer these big questions, it is necessary to get into the nitty-gritty of what may allow water to sustain itself on other distant planets.

Jul 11, 2023

How harvesting electricity from humid air could one day power our devices

Posted by in category: energy

Famed physicist Nikola Tesla wanted to obtain electricity from humidity in the air: decades after his death, the idea could finally be coming to fruition.

Jul 11, 2023

Dr. Khalid Salaita, PhD — Emory University — Developing Novel DNA-Based Mechano-Technologies

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

Developing Novel DNA-Based Mechano-Technologies For Human Health — Dr. Khalid Salaita, Ph.D. — Emory University


Dr. Khalid Salaita, Ph.D. (https://www.salaitalab.com/salaita) is a Professor of Chemistry at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia (USA), program faculty in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory, program member of Cancer Cell Biology at Winship Cancer Institute, and most recently is the recent winner Future Insight Prize given by Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany (https://www.emdgroup.com/en/research/open-innovation/futurei…aming.html) for his cutting edge work in the area of mechanobiology.

Continue reading “Dr. Khalid Salaita, PhD — Emory University — Developing Novel DNA-Based Mechano-Technologies” »

Jul 11, 2023

Impossible Quantum Drive That Defies Known Laws of Physics Scheduled for “Do or Die” October Space Flight

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space travel

A controversial new type of electric propulsion system that physicists say defies Newton’s Laws of Motion, known as the Quantum Drive, has secured a spot on a SpaceX rocket and will launch into low Earth orbit (LEO) this October.

Designed by IVO Ltd., an electronics prototyping company, the promising yet controversial Quantum Drive could change the future of space travel and, if proven to work, would potentially rewrite or expand many of the accepted principles of inertia and motion that have existed for centuries.

Newtonian Physics Says creating inertia Without Propellant is Impossible.