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Dec 1, 2022

‘Common Sense’ Test Could Lead to Smarter AI

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

The goal of achieving what is called artificial general intelligence — or the capacity of an engineered system to display human-like general intelligence — is still some time off into the future. Nevertheless, experts in the field of AI have no doubt accomplished some major milestones along the way, including developing AI capable of deep neural reasoning, tactile reasoning, and even AI with rudimentary social skills.

Now, in yet another step toward AI with more human-like intelligence, researchers from IBM, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University have developed a series of tests that would evaluate an AI’s ability to use a machine version of “common sense” — or a basic ability to perceive, understand, and judge in a manner that is shared by nearly all humans.

Dec 1, 2022

Neuralink Show and Tell, Fall 2022

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Tune in on Nov 30 @ 6pm Pacific for an exciting update from Neuralink!

Join us in our mission to build generalized I/O devices for the brain → https://neuralink.com/careers

Nov 30, 2022

Liquid Metal Stretchy Circuits, Built With Sound

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

A team in Korea has used sound waves to connect tiny droplets of liquid metals inside a polymer casing. The novel technique is a way to make tough, highly conductive circuits that can be flexed and stretched to five times their original size.

Making stretchable electronics for skin-based sensors and implantable medical devices requires materials that can conduct electricity like metals but deform like rubber. Conventional metals don’t cut it for this use. To make elastic conductors, researchers have looked at conductive polymers and composites of metals and polymers. But these materials lose their conductivity after being stretched and released a few times.

Liquid metals, alloys that stay liquid at room temperature, are a more promising option. Gallium-based liquid metals, typically alloys of gallium and indium, have caught the most attention because of their low toxicity and high electrical and heat conductivity. They are also tough because of an oxide skin that forms on their surface, and they stick well to various substrates.

Nov 30, 2022

Quantum teleportation opens a ‘wormhole in spacetime’

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

The equivalent to a wormhole in spacetime has been created on a quantum processor. Researchers in th.

Nov 30, 2022

Center for AI Safety

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

An institute aimed at advancing trustworthy, reliable, and safe AI.

Nov 30, 2022

Making a Traversable Wormhole with a Quantum Computer

Posted by in categories: computing, cosmology, quantum physics

Wormholes — wrinkles in the fabric of spacetime that connect two disparate locations — may seem like the stuff of science fiction. But whether or not they exist in reality, studying these hypothetical objects could be the key to making concrete the tantalizing link between information and matter that has bedeviled physicists for decades.

Surprisingly, a quantum computer is an ideal platform to investigate this connection. The trick is to use a correspondence called AdS/CFT, which establishes an equivalence between a theory that describes gravity and spacetime (and wormholes) in a fictional world with a special geometry (AdS) to a quantum theory that does not contain gravity at all (CFT).

In “Traversable wormhole dynamics on a quantum processor”, published in Nature today, we report on a collaboration with researchers at Caltech, Harvard, MIT, and Fermilab to simulate the CFT on the Google Sycamore processor. By studying this quantum theory on the processor, we are able to leverage the AdS/CFT correspondence to probe the dynamics of a quantum system equivalent to a wormhole in a model of gravity. The Google Sycamore processor is among the first to have the fidelity needed to carry out this experiment.

Nov 30, 2022

Here’s my guess: Neuralink will unveil a vision implant at today’s “show and tell”

Posted by in categories: computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience

Elon Musk’s brain interface company is planning an event to show its latest efforts to connect brains and computers.

Nov 30, 2022

Meet Kevin Talks Neuralink and Tesla

Posted by in categories: finance, robotics/AI

@Meet Kevin is a 30-year-old dad and financial analyst. He’s amassed a following of nearly 2 million subscribers on YouTube with his large library of financial content. He recently ran for California governor and owns a lot of Tesla stock.

Meet Kevin’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MeetKevin.

Continue reading “Meet Kevin Talks Neuralink and Tesla” »

Nov 30, 2022

This ‘Shark Tank’ Startup Is Making Vegan Bacon Out of Seaweed

Posted by in category: food

More people are opting to go vegetarian or vegan as factory farming’s impact on the planet becomes more apparent. But one carnivorous delight they may not have to give up is bacon, especially if they’re willing to be a bit flexible. A Dutch startup has been working on cultured bacon for a few years now, and New York-based MyForest Foods is producing a bacon substitute made from mushroom roots. They’ll soon have a competitor that will tempt consumers’ palates with yet another variety, this one made from a most unexpected source: seaweed (though to be fair, mushroom root is a pretty unexpected source for imitation bacon too).

Seaweed is good for you; it contains iodine as well as critical nutrients and antioxidants. But it doesn’t have the greatest taste (though this is admittedly a matter of personal preference; plenty of people love to snack on roasted sheets of the stuff). Umaro Foods, based in Berkeley, California, think they’ve found the perfect combination of ingredients to make seaweed taste—and feel—like bacon.

Continue reading “This ‘Shark Tank’ Startup Is Making Vegan Bacon Out of Seaweed” »

Nov 30, 2022

Elon Musk says Tim Cook told him Apple ‘never considered’ removing Twitter

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

Apparently, it was all a “misunderstanding.”