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Mar 22, 2023

Google CEO tells employees that 80,000 of them helped test Bard A.I., warns ‘things will go wrong’

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

“As more people start to use Bard and test its capabilities, they’ll surprise us. Things will go wrong,” Pichai wrote in an internal email to employees Tuesday viewed by CNBC. “But the user feedback is critical to improving the product and the underlying technology.”

The message to employees comes as Google launched Bard as “an experiment” Tuesday morning, after months of anticipation. The product, which is built on Google’s LaMDA, or Language Model for Dialogue Applications, can offer chatty responses to complicated or open-ended questions, such as “give me ideas on how to introduce my daughter to fly fishing.”

Alphabet shares were up almost 4% in mid-day trading following the announcement.

Mar 22, 2023

The inside story of how ChatGPT was built from the people who made it

Posted by in category: futurism

Exclusive conversations that take us behind the scenes of a cultural phenomenon.

Mar 22, 2023

NDERF Home Page

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Near Death Experience Research Foundation the largest collection of Near Death Experiences (NDE) in over 23 Languages. With thousands of full-text near death experiences posted. Share your near death experience, research, spiritually transforming events, consciousness studies, extensive information and research.

Mar 22, 2023

186,100 miles per second!!! Is black hole propulsion possible?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, space travel

It’s time to explore what might be the ultimate starship! The Kugelblitz Black Hole Starship! Can you really create an artificial black hole? If so, how much energy would it generate, and how fast could it propel a ship across he galaxy? The answers are simply mind-blowing.
#space #blackhole #interstellar.

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Mar 22, 2023

Quantum Computers in the Revolution of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, robotics/AI

A digestible introduction to how quantum computers work and why they are essential in evolving AI and ML systems. Gain a simple understanding of the quantum principles that power these machines.

Mar 22, 2023

Top 10 Industrial Applications of Quantum Computing in 2023

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, robotics/AI, supercomputing

The introduction of a novel idea of quantum computing in industrial applications is the result of the slow but steady progress of computing systems and equipment. Quantum computers, which are primarily used to aid in complex computations, are anticipated to significantly progress several industries and open up new prospects.

The promotion of IBM’s supercomputers is not far behind that of other tech behemoths like Google, who claim to have a better grasp on quantum dominance. What’s more crucial, though, is that enterprises and entire sectors will undoubtedly benefit from massive automation and digital transformation thanks to the industrial applications of quantum computing development. Quantum computing in 2023 offers countless opportunities. The world will eventually learn about the actual potential of quantum computing. With each passing day, the demand for effective processing grows, and it appears that the only option is to develop quantum applications. In this article, we have enlisted the top 10 industrial applications of quantum computing.

Mar 22, 2023

The quantum revolution: ‘Spooky action’

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, media & arts, quantum physics

Madhumita Murgia Hi, my name is Madhumita Murgia, and I’m one of the presenters of Tech Tonic. We’re looking for some feedback from our listeners about the show. So if you have a second, please fill out our brief listener survey, which you can find at ft.com/techtonicsurvey.

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In this season of Tech Tonic, we’ve been talking about quantum computers and why some people think they’re so revolutionary. But so far we’ve mainly talked about the things quantum computers can do, or at least what they might be able to do in the future that makes them so groundbreaking: performing calculations that should take centuries in minutes, cracking the unbreakable codes of the internet, dramatically speeding up the development of new drugs and materials. But what we haven’t done yet is look at why they’re able to do these things. What’s going on inside a quantum computer that makes them so extraordinary, so completely different to any computer that’s come before.

Mar 22, 2023

Artificial Intelligence — Are We There Yet?

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) solutions: https://ibm.biz/Solutions_with_IBM_AI

IBM Watson is AI for business: https://ibm.biz/IBM_and_Watson_AI_Are_we_there_yet.

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Mar 22, 2023

VR Startup Working on Tech to “Replay” Memories

Posted by in category: virtual reality

A VR startup wants to allow users to record and then “replay” their memories back in the locations where they happened — but some folks aren’t with it.

Mar 22, 2023

New microchip links two Nobel Prize-winning techniques

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, health

Physicists at Delft University of Technology have built a new technology on a microchip by combining two Nobel Prize-winning techniques for the first time. This microchip could measure distances in materials at high precision—for example, underwater or for medical imaging.

Because the technology uses sound vibrations instead of light, it is useful for high-precision position measurements in opaque materials. The instrument could lead to new techniques to monitor the Earth’s climate and human health. The work is now published in Nature Communications.

The microchip mainly consists of a thin ceramic sheet that is shaped like a trampoline. This trampoline is patterned with holes to enhance its interaction with lasers and has a thickness about 1,000 times smaller than the thickness of a hair. As a former Ph.D. candidate in Richard Norte’s lab, Matthijs de Jong studied the small trampolines to figure out what would happen if they pointed a simple at them.