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Mar 5, 2023
AI will soon ‘be a $600 billion addressable software market,’ C3.ai CEO says
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: robotics/AI
C3.ai Founder & CEO Tom Siebel joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss company earnings, the buzz around ChatGPT, the ongoing AI hype cycle, and the outlook for the computer software company as tech grapples with AI adoption.
Video Transcript
JULIE HYMAN: C3.AI has been riding the huge buzz around artificial intelligence this year. The shares have gone up a lot and they’re still going up spurred by ChatGPT and the buzz around that. But the company does have a longer history.
Mar 5, 2023
Planned Economies And Artificial Intelligence: A short rant | Mia Mulder
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: economics, robotics/AI
Adamandeve.com Code: MIA 50% off 1 item + free shipping in the US and Canada. Some restrictions apply.
ChatGPT is changing the world, but what if the technology behind it can change the economy too?
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OpenAI Codex is an AI that translates natural language to code.
0:00 — Introduction.
2:48 — Hello World.
13:08 — Building a game.
25:15 — Codex plugin for Microsoft Word.
Mar 5, 2023
The Neuroscience of Creativity, Perception, and Confirmation Bias | Beau Lotto | Big Think
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: biological, computing, education, finance, neuroscience
The Neuroscience of Creativity, Perception, and Confirmation Bias.
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To ensure your survival, your brain evolved to avoid one thing: uncertainty. As neuroscientist Beau Lotto points out, if your ancestors wondered for too long whether that noise was a predator or not, you wouldn’t be here right now. Our brains are geared to make fast assumptions, and questioning them in many cases quite literally equates to death. No wonder we’re so hardwired for confirmation bias. No wonder we’d rather stick to the status quo than risk the uncertainty of a better political model, a fairer financial system, or a healthier relationship pattern. But here’s the catch: as our brains evolved toward certainty, we simultaneously evolved away from creativity—that’s no coincidence; creativity starts with a question, with uncertainty, not with a cut and dried answer. To be creative, we have to unlearn millions of years of evolution. Creativity asks us to do that which is hardest: to question our assumptions, to doubt what we believe to be true. That is the only way to see differently. And if you think creativity is a chaotic and wild force, think again, says Beau Lotto. It just looks that way from the outside. The brain cannot make great leaps, it can only move linearly through mental possibilities. When a creative person forges a connection between two things that are, to your mind, so far apart, that’s a case of high-level logic. They have moved through steps that are invisible to you, perhaps because they are more open-minded and well-practiced in questioning their assumptions. Creativity, it seems, is another (highly sophisticated) form of logic. Beau Lotto is the author of Deviate: The Science of Seeing Differently.
Mar 5, 2023
NASA captures sequestered carbon of 9.9 billion trees with deep-learning and satellite images
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: information science, robotics/AI, satellites
A NASA-led research team used satellite imagery and artificial intelligence methods to map billions of discrete tree crowns down to a 50-cm scale. The images encompassed a large swath of arid northern Africa, from the Atlantic to the Red Sea. Allometric equations based on previous tree sampling allowed the researchers to convert imagery into estimates of tree wood, foliage, root size, and carbon sequestration.
The new NASA estimation, published in the journal Nature, was surprisingly low. While the typical estimation of a region’s carbon stock might rely on counting small areas and extrapolating results upwards, the NASA demonstrated technique only counts the trees that are actually there, down to the individual tree. Jules Bayala and Meine van Noordwijk published a News & Views article in the same journal commenting on the NASA team’s work.
Mar 5, 2023
Second Variety
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: biotech/medical, existential risks, government, robotics/AI, space travel
FULL AudioBook | GreatestAudioBooks | Science Fiction / Fantasy — Early victories by the USSR in a global nuclear war cause the United Nations government to retreat to the moon leaving behind troops and fierce autonomous robots called “Claws”, which reproduce and redesign themselves in unmanned subterranean factories. After six bloody years of conflict the Soviets call for an urgent conference and UN Major Joseph Hendricks sets out to meet them. Along the way he will discover what the Claws have been up to, and it isn’t good… — Second Variety was first published in the May 1953 edition of Space Science Fiction Magazine. (Summary by Gregg Margarite)
About the Author, Philip K. Dick:
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 – March 2, 1982) was an American writer notable for publishing works of science fiction. Dick explored philosophical, social, and political themes in novels with plots dominated by monopolistic corporations, authoritarian governments, alternate universes, and altered states of consciousness. His work reflected his personal interest in metaphysics and theology, and often drew upon his life experiences in addressing the nature of reality, identity, drug abuse, schizophrenia, and transcendental experiences.
Mar 5, 2023
Searching for Alien Probes in the Solar System
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: alien life
An updated look at how we are preparing to search the solar system in SETI to see whether anyone has ever stationed an alien probe in the star system including just what we might look for.
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Mar 5, 2023
Is science about to end? | Sabine Hossenfelder
Posted by Ken Otwell in categories: computing, information science, particle physics, quantum physics, science
Short and sweet. Everyone needs a daily dose of Sabine.
Is science close to explaining everything about our universe? Physicist Sabine Hossenfelder reacts.
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Mar 5, 2023
ChatGPT and Whisper APIs debut, allowing devs to integrate them into apps
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: robotics/AI
On Wednesday, OpenAI announced the availability of developer APIs for its popular ChatGPT and Whisper AI models that will let developers integrate them into their apps. An API (application programming interface) is a set of protocols that allows different computer programs to communicate with each other. In this case, app developers can extend their apps’ abilities with OpenAI technology for an ongoing fee based on usage.
OpenAI calls its new ChatGPT API model “gpt-3.5-turbo,” which supersedes its previous “best” LLM API, “text-davinci-003.” It is priced at $0.002 per 1,000 tokens (about 750 words), which OpenAI says is about 10 times cheaper than its existing GPT-3.5 models. “Through a series of system-wide optimizations, we’ve achieved 90% cost reduction for ChatGPT since December,” writes OpenAI on its API announcement page.