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Jun 29, 2024

ChatGPT could be smarter than your professor in the next 2 years

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

“If you look at the trajectory of improvement, GPT-3 was maybe toddler level intelligence, systems like GPT-4 are smart high schooler intelligence and in the next couple of years we’re looking at PhD level intelligence for specific tasks,” she said during a talk at Dartmouth.

Some took this to suggest we’d be waiting two years for GPT-5 but looking at other OpenAI revelations, such as a graph showing ‘GPT-Next’ this year and ‘future models’ going forward and CEO Sam Altman refusing to mention GPT-5 in recent interviews — I’m not convinced.

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Jun 29, 2024

NVIDIA Gears Up For $50 Trillion “AI Automation” Market, CEO Says That Blackwell Will Be The “Most Successful” Product In Firm’s History

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

NVIDIA’s CEO Jensen Huang believes that the AI frenzy will automate a whopping $50 trillion worth of companies, stating that Blackwell will play a dominant role.

NVIDIA Isn’t Taking The Foot of The AI Accelerator Pedal Any Time Soon, Plans To Take Blackwell’s Adoption To a Whole New Level

NVIDIA has undoubtedly managed to pick up a market that will progress rapidly in the future. Not only is every big tech firm, whether Microsoft or Amazon, forced into the race of “AI automation,” but the demand for adequate computing power is rising massively.

Jun 29, 2024

How scientists build rotatory machines with molecules

Posted by in categories: computing, nanotechnology

Machines have evolved to meet the demands of daily life and industrial use, with molecular-scale devices often exhibiting improved functionalities and mechanical movements. However, mastering the control of mechanics within solid-state molecular structures remains a significant challenge.

Researchers at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), South Korea have made a groundbreaking discovery that could pave the way for revolutionary advancements in data storage and beyond. Led by Professor Wonyoung Choe in the Department of Chemistry at UNIST), a team of scientists has developed zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) that mimic intricate machines. These molecular-scale devices can exhibit precise control over nanoscale mechanical movements, opening up exciting new possibilities in nanotechnology.

The findings have been published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition (“Zeolitic Imidazolate Frameworks as Solid-State Nanomachines”).

Jun 29, 2024

New intelligence model could upend biology, genetics, medicine and AI

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, robotics/AI

This may be about as wildly entertaining, disruptive and philosophically profound as legitimate scientific research gets. Michael Levin’s work in cellular intelligence, bioelectrical communication and embodied minds “is going to overturn everything.”

Jun 29, 2024

Semiconducting MAX phases show promise for high-temperature thermoelectric applications

Posted by in category: energy

New research identifies semiconducting MAX phases with low thermal conductivity and high thermoelectric efficiency, potentially advancing high-temperature energy harvesting technology.

Jun 29, 2024

New method developed for measuring thermal expansion in atomically thin materials

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics

Advanced materials, including two-dimensional or atomically thin materials just a few atoms thick, are essential for the future of microelectronics technology. Now a team at Los Alamos National Laboratory has developed a way to directly measure such materials’ thermal expansion coefficient, the rate at which the material expands as it heats. That insight can help address heat-related performance issues of materials incorporated into microelectronics, such as computer chips.

The research has been published in ACS Nano (“Direct measurement of the thermal expansion coefficient of epitaxial WSe 2 by four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy”).

“It’s well understood that heating a material usually results in expansion of the atoms arranged in the material’s structure,” said Theresa Kucinski, scientist with the Nuclear Materials Science Group at Los Alamos. “But things get weird when the material is only one to a few atoms thick.”

Jun 28, 2024

New method stores CO2 in cement, enhances strength, durability

Posted by in categories: materials, sustainability

Concrete innovation sequesters CO2:


Engineers developed a method to store CO2 in concrete using carbonated water, achieving 45% sequestration efficiency and enhancing strength.

Jun 28, 2024

Brian Greene: The Most Important Question in Science

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics, science

Join my mailing list https://briankeating.com/list to win a real 4 billion year old meteorite! All.edu emails in the USA 🇺🇸 will WIN!

What would Brian Greene do if he could travel through time, and which future technology is he most excited about?

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Jun 28, 2024

IBM Research’s new NorthPole AI chip

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A new prototype chip from IBM Research could potentially bring energy-efficient AI to the edge.

Jun 28, 2024

Video Shows China’s Rifle-Equipped Robot Dog Opening Fire on Targets

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

China has released video footage of its rifle-toting robot dogs, and it’s about as scary as you were probably imagining.

Last week, Agence France-Presse reported that China had flaunted the gun-carrying robodogs in a 15-day joint military exercise with Cambodia dubbed the “Golden Dragon.”

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