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Oct 2, 2022
OpenAI’s Dall•E 2 may mean we never need stock photos again
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
Typing a sentence about a scenario, such as an anxious Windows user seated at their desk seeing a patch warning, could give you just the image you need to accompany an article.
Oct 2, 2022
New superconducting qubit testbed benefits quantum information science development
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: computing, military, particle physics, quantum physics, science
If you’ve ever tried to carry on a conversation in a noisy room, you’ll be able to relate to the scientists and engineers trying to “hear” the signals from experimental quantum computing devices called qubits. These basic units of quantum computers are early in their development and remain temperamental, subject to all manner of interference. Stray “noise” can masquerade as a functioning qubit or even render it inoperable.
That’s why physicist Christian Boutan and his Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) colleagues were in celebration mode recently as they showed off PNNL’s first functional superconducting qubit. It’s not much to look at. Its case—the size of a pack of chewing gum—is connected to wires that transmit signals to a nearby panel of custom radiofrequency receivers. But most important, it’s nestled within a shiny gold cocoon called a dilution refrigerator and shielded from stray electrical signals. When the refrigerator is running, it is among the coldest places on Earth, so very close to absolute zero, less than 6 millikelvin (about −460 degrees F).
The extreme cold and isolation transform the sensitive superconducting device into a functional qubit and slow down the movement of atoms that would destroy the qubit state. Then, the researchers listen for a characteristic signal, a blip on their radiofrequency receivers. The blip is akin to radar signals that the military uses to detect the presence of aircraft. Just as traditional radar systems transmit radio waves and then listen for returning waves, the physicists at PNNL have used a low-temperature detection technique to “hear” the presence of a qubit by broadcasting carefully crafted signals and decoding the returning message.
Oct 2, 2022
Biohacking The Oral Microbiome: Test #2
Posted by Mike Lustgarten in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
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Oct 2, 2022
Michel Colombier — Colossus: The Forbin Project OST (1970) (bootleg)
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: government, military, nuclear weapons, robotics/AI, supercomputing
Once the first artificial super intelligence is created it will help us recursively improve ourselves and then the post human millennium will begin.
Thinking this will prevent war, the US government gives an impenetrable supercomputer total control over launching nuclear missiles. But what the computer does with the power is unimaginable to its creators.
Continue reading “Michel Colombier — Colossus: The Forbin Project OST (1970) (bootleg)” »
Oct 2, 2022
What Sounds Captured by NASA’s Perseverance Rover Reveal About Mars
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in category: space
The ensemble of sounds in this video captured on Mars by NASA’s Perseverance rover includes a dust removal tool for rock analysis, the Ingenuity Mars helicopter, and the impact of a laser on rocks. A new study of some of those sounds, captured mostly by the rover’s SuperCam microphone during the first 216 Martian days of the mission, reveals how sound differs on Mars, including traveling slower than on Earth. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
A new study based on recordings made by the rover finds that the speed of sound is slower on the Red Planet than on Earth and that, mostly, a deep silence prevails.
Continue reading “What Sounds Captured by NASA’s Perseverance Rover Reveal About Mars” »
Oct 2, 2022
Breakthrough research links deformed proteins with schizophrenia « Kurzweil
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, Ray Kurzweil
New research from medical scientists at Johns Hopkins University linked abnormally formed proteins in the human brain with the psychiatric illness called schizophrenia, in a significant number of patients. While they’re not yet sure what the connection is, the study said that deformed proteins were found in the brains of many patients who were diagnosed with schizophrenia.
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Oct 2, 2022
The world’s first AI kitchen assistants « Kurzweil
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: food, Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI
Miso Robotics company creates automated tech that assists + empowers commercial chefs to make food consistently and perfectly — while saving waste + cost through efficiency and precision.
The AI automated food prep robotic system named Flippy is currently being tested + implemented in the kitchens of top global brand restaurants. Miso Robotics has also innovated the world’s first point-of-sale integrated automatic beverage dispenser — named Sippy. All of the Miso Robotics mechanical systems operate on their Miso AI software platform.
The featurette below shows Flippy’s surprising capabilities. You can also see the Sippy’s novel cup-sealing method, designed to save the planet from millions of pounds of plastic lid waste.
Oct 2, 2022
Real Nightclubs Opening Virtual Dance Floors
Posted by Claudio Soprano in categories: business, futurism
What’s a Metaverse, and Why is One Having a Fashion Show?
Experiential Marketing Meets Social Commerce in the Metaverse
For all the hype of the metaverse as the future of entertainment, retail, and social media, there’s only one business that has an actual, proven track record: Concerts from recording artists like Arianna Grande and Travis Scott have drawn millions of fans.
Oct 2, 2022
The next phase of mobile technology will be dominated
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: mobile phones
Smart glasses from the likes of Amazon, Meta, and Snap will complement and then replace smartphones.