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Oct 16, 2022

We are entering a new era powered robotics

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI

Did you miss a session from MetaBeat 2022? Head over to the on-demand library for all of our featured sessions here.

Many observers were disappointed with the recent demo of the AI-enabled “Optimus” robot at Tesla’s AI Day. One reviewer cleverly titled his article “Sub-Optimus.” However, these views actually miss the point. Whatever else may be said of Elon Musk, he is a genius at sensing timing and opportunity, applying technology and providing the necessary resources.

Continue reading “We are entering a new era powered robotics” »

Oct 16, 2022

Students Are Using AI to Write Their Papers, Because Of Course They Are

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Essays written by AI language tools like OpenAI’s Playground are often hard to tell apart from text written by humans.

Oct 16, 2022

The Metaverse is the internet no one wants

Posted by in categories: computing, internet

Meta’s push to put computing into a headset will end in tears.

Oct 16, 2022

Turkish scientists develop ‘fiber sensor’ shoes for early diagnosis

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, nanotechnology, wearables

A new technology that incorporates flexible fiber sensors into shoes has been developed by the National Nanotechnology Research Center (UNAM) at Bilkent University and is able to identify a number of health issues, including Parkinson’s disease and gait disorders.

Project manager Mustafa Ordu, who specialized in the production and characterization of fiber cables that can generate electricity for wearable devices, explained that the technology developed at UNAM is loaded with smart sensors that can monitor body movements and determine issues and diseases, with the potential to diagnose many health problems.

Further explaining the cutting-edge technology, he said that it can be woven into body wear or incorporated into footwear since by knitting these cables together like a type of threaded fabric, they can be incorporated into clothing as fibers. “This is what makes our team stand out among the existing laboratories in the world; we make smart sensors with flexible fiber and two-dimensional materials,” said Ordu.

Oct 16, 2022

Google Replaces Title Tags With Site Names For Homepage Results

Posted by in category: futurism

Google is now only showing the site name in mobile search results that are for the entire website, such as for the home page.

Oct 16, 2022

Nanotechnology’s spring

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, robotics/AI

Nanotechnology sometimes sounds as much like science fiction as artificial intelligence once did. But the problems holding it back seem solvable, and some of the answers may lie inside our own bodies.

Oct 16, 2022

Space Force will be one of the first customers of a new gas station in space

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

This week, in-space refueling company Orbit Fab won a $13.3 million USSF contract to gas up geostationary (GEO) military satellites starting in 2025. Under the four-year contract, which was first reported by Bloomberg, the Colorado-based space startup will deliver hydrazine propellant to at least one Space Force satellite in GEO.

If you build it, they will come

Jeremy Schiel, cofounder and chief development officer of Orbit Fab, says he expects the Defense Department’s buy-in to boost the company’s credibility on the commercial market.

Oct 16, 2022

Harvard Medical Researchers Discover Surprising Protective Properties of Pain

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution, neuroscience

New research in mice illuminates how pain neurons shield the gut from damage.

Pain is one of evolution’s most effective mechanisms for detecting injury and letting us know that something is wrong. It acts as a warning system, telling us to stop and pay attention to our body.

But what if pain is more than just a mere alarm signal? What if pain is in itself a form of protection?

Oct 16, 2022

Astronomers just spotted the most powerful flash of light ever seen

Posted by in categories: cosmology, military, satellites

Astronomers just detected what may be the most powerful flash of light ever seen.

The so-called gamma-ray burst, the most energetic type of electromagnetic explosion known to exist in the universe, was first spotted by telescopes Sunday (Oct. 9).

Gamma-ray bursts, which were discovered accidentally by U.S. military satellites in the 1960s, are likely produced when giant stars explode at the ends of their lives before collapsing into black holes, or when ultradense stellar remnants known as neutron stars collide. Within seconds, these explosions unleash as much energy as the sun will emit during its entire 10-billion-year lifetime.

Oct 16, 2022

A Huge New Data Set Pushes the Limits of Neuroscience

Posted by in category: neuroscience

The Allen Institute’s release includes recordings from a whopping 300,000 mouse neurons. Now the challenge is figuring out what to do with all that data.