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Jun 26, 2024

We Can Use New Metrics To Save Compute

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

As new AI models make their way into the mainstream, and business leaders scramble to adapt, one sometimes overlooked aspect of computing is the measure of conservation.


In an age where efficiency matters, teams are trying to provide new frameworks for compute.

Jun 26, 2024

From Masters To Machines: The Cultural Impact Of AI On Expertise

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

It is this foundation that AI is now disrupting, providing the none-expert with expert like qualities. But this progression is a fallacy. If we let a junior in a consulting firm, for example, use tools to create presentations that are better than what she could produce on her own, are we teaching her anything? Could she repeat the results with a paper and with a pen? How will she gain the needed knowledge, critical thinking, and expertise if creates or assists the work? It’s all very well that engineers can prompt the code they need, but does this make them good engineers?

The trend of heavily relying on AI automation to complete tasks is the face of the future. Its here to stay. But there is a challenge we must acknowledge. We need to bridge two extremes. On one extreme is the irresistible temptation to benefit as much as possible from the automation AI provides. On the other extreme is the need to let our employees battle through their work themselves so they improve their skills and grow to become the experts their industry needs. How can we do one without losing the other?

This article is not a rant aimed at stopping the progress of technology. There is no stopping it; we can only join it. The challenge is how to build experts and expertise in an AI-generated world. How can we benefit from the optimizations AI can provide without forgetting how to build boats, aqueducts, or manufacture paper if we want to learn from the experience of the Portuguese, the Romans, and the Chinese? The challenge is not this or that but this and that. We want to benefit from AI, and we need to build a generation of new experts. But how do we connect these two dots?

Jun 26, 2024

Microsoft’s Mustafa Suleyman says he loves Sam Altman, believes he’s sincere about AI safety

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

In an interview at the Aspen Ideas Festival on Tuesday, Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI, made it very clear that he admires OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin asked what the plan will be when Microsoft’s enormous AI future isn’t so closely dependent on OpenAI, using a metaphor of winning a bicycling race. But Suleyman sidestepped.

“I don’t buy the metaphor that there is a finish line. This is another false frame,” he said. “We have to stop framing everything as a ferocious race.”

Jun 26, 2024

OpenAI delays ChatGPT’s new Voice Mode

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

OpenAI has delayed its Voice Mode feature that allows users to have near-real-time conversations with ChatGPT.

Jun 26, 2024

ChatGPT model 60-year-old? Scientists breathe new life into old AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Researchers propose a neuron-as-controller model, challenging the simplistic 1960s-era computational model of neurons.

Jun 26, 2024

Earth’s rotation measured 1000x better with quantum entanglement

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Researchers at the University of Vienna led by Philip Walther just pioneered the field of quantum mechanics and general relativity by measuring “the effect of the rotation of Earth on quantum entangled photons,” as stated in a press release.

In the Vienna experiment, they used an interferometer, which is the most sensitive to rotations. Its unparalleled precision makes it the ultimate tool for measuring rotational speeds, limited only by the boundaries of classical physics.

Jun 26, 2024

Engineers create world’s thinnest wire stable at 0 Kelvin

Posted by in categories: materials, nanotechnology

The team wondered if they could somehow leverage crystalline structures to identify a perfect candidate, sans building thousands of them in a lab.

The researchers were mostly on the lookout for 3D crystals with the right structural and electronic properties, so they could be “exfoliated.” 2D materials like graphene were extracted using this process from 3D.

Continue reading “Engineers create world’s thinnest wire stable at 0 Kelvin” »

Jun 26, 2024

Mind mapper: MIT’s new tech shows whole brain hemispheres in 3D detail

Posted by in categories: innovation, neuroscience

MIT just produced three groundbreaking innovations that allowed them to map whole hemispheres of the human brain.

Jun 26, 2024

Earth’s inner core is slowing down; impacting day’s length on surface

Posted by in category: futurism

The slowing down of the inner core can likely “alter the length of a day by fractions of a second” on the Earth’s surface.

Jun 26, 2024

First bendable perovskite solar cell to hit record 22.8% efficiency

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

In a world first, a team of scientists has successfully developed the first flexible perovskite/silicon tandem solar cell with a record efficiency of 22.8 percent.

While other scientists have developed flexible solar cells before, the new efficiency record sets a new precedent and represents a big step forward for the technology.

Continue reading “First bendable perovskite solar cell to hit record 22.8% efficiency” »

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