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May 21, 2023

These areas of the US at ‘elevated’ risk of blackouts this summer

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

(NEXSTAR) – Large swathes of the U.S. could suffer blackouts this summer, according to the annual assessment from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC).

The report, which forecasts how prepared the energy grids that power air conditioners, medical devices, lights and other vital resources are, found that roughly two thirds of the country are at an “elevated risk” of power loss.

May 21, 2023

The Race Intensfies: Google Announces Bold Progress In AI, Advancing Med-PaLM 2 For Healthcare

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Med-PaLM 2 welcomes the next phase of healthcare data analysis and insight generation.

May 21, 2023

Why the co-inventor of Siri is worried about the rapid growth of AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

“Siri was very playful. And that was by design,” he declares with a wide grin and a laugh almost like a proud dad.

“Now it’s used roughly a billion times a day. That’s a lot of use. It’s on 2 billion devices. It is absolutely woven into everyday life.”

But what Mr Gruber and long-time colleagues working on artificial intelligence (AI) have seen in the past 18 months has scared them.

May 21, 2023

Influencer who created AI version of herself says it’s gone rogue and she’s working ‘around the clock’ to stop it saying sexually explicit things

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Caryn Marjorie created an AI version of herself to combat loneliness. Now she’s working hard to stop it from engaging in sexually explicit dialogue.

May 21, 2023

Sorry, Elon Musk — To Suggest Remote Work Isn’t ‘Morally Right’ is a Flawed Attempt to Push Your In-Person Work Agenda. Here’s Why

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability

It’s as though Musk views in-person work as a kind of hazing ritual — he and others did it, so you have to do it too. Well, as my mom frequently said when I proposed doing something dumb because others did it, “If all your friends jumped off a bridge, would you?”

Picture this: Musk standing on the precipice of the Golden Gate Bridge, urging us all to leap into the frigid waters below simply because he took the plunge. While his bravado might be admired by some, it’s not a practical or sustainable model for the future of work. Here’s a thought: rather than Musk’s daredevil dive into the deep abyss of forced in-office work, perhaps we should consider a more measured, flexible and hybrid approach to work, one that incorporates both remote and in-person options, as I tell my clients.

Continue reading “Sorry, Elon Musk — To Suggest Remote Work Isn’t ‘Morally Right’ is a Flawed Attempt to Push Your In-Person Work Agenda. Here’s Why” »

May 21, 2023

Superconducting qubits have passed a key quantum test

Posted by in category: quantum physics

A Bell test can confirm whether two systems are truly entangled – it has now been used to confirm entanglement between qubits in a superconducting circuits.

By Leah Crane

May 21, 2023

Neeva, the would-be Google competitor, is shutting down its search engine

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

“We’ve discovered that it is one thing to build a search engine, and an entirely different thing to convince regular users of the need to switch to a better choice.”

Neeva, which for a while looked like one of the startups with a real chance to challenge the supremacy of Google Search, announced on Saturday that it is shutting down its search engine. The company says it’s pivoting to AI — and may be acquired by Snowflake, The Information.

“Building search engines is hard,” Neeva co-founders Sridhar Ramaswamy and Vivek Raghunathan wrote in a blog post announcing the shutdown.

Continue reading “Neeva, the would-be Google competitor, is shutting down its search engine” »

May 21, 2023

Grammarly’s New CEO On Why ChatGPT Won’t Kill His Business

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

“There’s no kind of a priori right of this technology to upend our world, our lives and displace our own capabilities. I want technology to augment us, not displace us.”

But the technology that’s enabled Grammarly to expand its core offering could also disrupt it.


Fresh to the CEO role, Rahul Roy-Chowdhury talks about AI legislation, Grammarly’s Russia ban and trying to leverage disruptive technologies.

Continue reading “Grammarly’s New CEO On Why ChatGPT Won’t Kill His Business” »

May 21, 2023

Who Is Going to Regulate AI?

Posted by in categories: business, economics, government, policy, robotics/AI

Summary.


As businesses and governments race to make sense of the impacts of new, powerful AI systems, governments around the world are jostling to take the lead on regulation. Business leaders should be focused on who is likely to win this race, moreso than the questions of how or even when AI will be regulated. Whether Congress, the European Commission, China, or even U.S. states or courts take the lead will determine both the speed and trajectory of AI’s transformation of the global economy, potentially protecting some industries or limiting the ability of all companies to use the technology to interact directly with consumers.

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Continue reading “Who Is Going to Regulate AI?” »

May 21, 2023

How do you solve a problem like out-of-control AI?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Plus: The open-source AI boom is built on Big Tech’s handouts. How long will it last?

Last week Google revealed it is going all in on generative AI. At its annual I/O conference, the company announced it plans to embed AI tools into virtually all of its products, from Google Docs to coding and online search. (Read my story here.)

Google’s announcement is a huge deal. Billions of people will now get access to powerful, cutting-edge AI models to help them do all sorts of tasks, from generating text to answering queries to writing and debugging code. As MIT Technology Review’s editor in chief, Mat Honan, writes in his analysis of I/O, it is clear AI is now Google’s core product.