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Mar 3, 2022

AI computer maker Graphcore unveils 3D chip, promises 500-trillion-parameter ‘ultra-intelligence’ machine

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A mini brain with trillions of petaflops in your pant pocket? Sounds Good!

“This is what we’re announcing today,” said Knowles. “A machine that in fact will exceed the parametric capacity of the human brain.”

That next-gen IPU, he said, would realize the vision of 1960s compute scientist Jack Good, a colleague of Alan Turing’s who conceived of an “intelligence explosion.”

Continue reading “AI computer maker Graphcore unveils 3D chip, promises 500-trillion-parameter ‘ultra-intelligence’ machine” »

Mar 3, 2022

Web3 gaming in the third world: Axie facilitating billions

Posted by in category: futurism

According to data from Nansen, 2.8 million unique addresses hold 11.1 million Axies, alongside 97% of users having a minimum of three Axie nonfungible tokens.

Mar 3, 2022

New Brain Map Charts Every Component in the Biological Universe

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

It’s easy to see why: as shockingly powerful mini-processors, neurons and their connections—together dubbed the connectome—hold the secret to highly efficient and flexible computation. Nestled inside the brain’s wiring diagrams are the keys to consciousness, memories, and emotion. To connectomics, mapping the brain isn’t just an academic exercise to better understand ourselves—it could lead to more efficient AI that thinks like us.

But often ignored are the brain’s supporting characters: astrocytes—brain cells shaped like stars—and microglia, specialized immune cells. Previously considered “wallflowers,” these cells nurture neurons and fine-tune their connections, ultimately shaping the connectome. Without this long-forgotten half, the brain wouldn’t be the computing wizard we strive to imitate with machines.

In a stunning new brain map published in Cell, these cells are finally having their time in the spotlight. Led by Dr. H. Sebastian Seung at Princeton University, the original prophet of the connectome, the map captures a tiny chunk of the mouse’s visual cortex, less than 1,000 times smaller than a pea. Yet jam-packed inside the map aren’t just neurons; in a technical tour de force, the team mapped all brain cells, their connections, blood vessels, and even the compartments inside cells that house DNA and produce energy.

Mar 3, 2022

Ford creates business unit for electric cars

Posted by in categories: business, sustainability, transportation

Ford this morning said it’s separating its electric vehicle and internal combustion businesses into separate units. Why it matters: The creation of distinct business lines — called “Model e” and “Ford Blue” — underscores how auto giants are reorienting around EV development. Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free. How it works: Ford said the two units would be “strategically interdependent” and share relevant tech. Together with the Ford Pro commercial services line launched last year, Ford said the three units will begin to separately report profits and losses in 2023.

Mar 3, 2022

Life on the Early Moon?

Posted by in category: space

Earth´s Moon may have been habitable and hosted life billions of years ago: a hypothesis re-evaluated.


An Outrageous Hypothesis Re-Evaluated.

Mar 3, 2022

We are entering the era of AI biological robots. How can we harness this powerful innovation so it doesn’t control us?

Posted by in categories: biological, robotics/AI

It should come as little surprise that pioneering work in biological robotics is as controversial as it is exciting. Take for example the article published in December 2021 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Sam Kreigman and Douglas Blackiston at Tufts University and colleagues. This article, entitled “Kinematic self-replication in reconfigurable organisms,” is the third installment of the authors’ “xenobots” series.

Mar 3, 2022

Catalyst turns carbon dioxide into gasoline 1,000 times more efficiently

Posted by in categories: chemistry, engineering, particle physics

Engineers working to reverse the proliferation of greenhouse gases know that in addition to reducing carbon dioxide emissions we will also need to remove carbon dioxide from power plant fumes or from the skies. But, what do we do with all that captured carbon? Matteo Cargnello, a chemical engineer at Stanford University, is working to turn it into other useful chemicals, such as propane, butane or other hydrocarbon fuels that are made up of long chains of carbon and hydrogen.

“We can create gasoline, basically,” said Cargnello, who is an assistant professor of chemical engineering. “To capture as much as possible, you want the longest chain hydrocarbons. Chains with eight to 12 would be the ideal.”

A new catalyst, invented by Cargnello and colleagues, moves toward this goal by increasing the production of long-chain hydrocarbons in chemical reactions. It produced 1,000 times more butane—the longest hydrocarbon it could produce under its maximum pressure—than the standard catalyst given the same amounts of carbon , hydrogen, catalyst, pressure, heat and time. The new catalyst is composed of the element ruthenium—a rare transition metal belonging to the platinum group—coated in a thin layer of plastic. Like any catalyst, this invention speeds up chemical reactions without getting used up in the process. Ruthenium also has the advantage of being less expensive than other high-quality catalysts, like palladium and platinum.

Mar 3, 2022

These Two Black Hole Behemoths Will Merge in 10,000 Years

Posted by in categories: cosmology, materials

Astronomers have discovered a pair of supermassive black holes that whirl around each other every two years.

A team of astronomers has caught two supermassive black holes in the process of merging. It’s only the second time we’ve observed such a close cosmic tango and this pair are even more tightly entwined than the first duo, offering unique insights into how such mergers unfold.

The black holes in question sit some 9 billion light-years away in the heart of a distant galaxy. As one of them gorges on surrounding material, it creates a radio jet that just so happens to be pointing directly at Earth. Such objects, which we call blazars, are volatile, typically flaring and dimming randomly.

Mar 3, 2022

“Vulva Spaceship” aims to counter prevalence of phallic spacecraft

Posted by in category: space travel

A German feminist art group has revealed a vulva-shaped spaceship design, which it is encouraging the European Space Agency to help realize in order to better represent humanity in space and “restore gender equality to the cosmos.”

The group Wer Braucht Feminismus? (WBF?), which translates to “Who Needs Feminism?”, created its Vulva Spaceship concept to challenge the convention of phallic spacecraft design.

It says sending a yonic craft instead would signal inclusivity and has started a petition on change.org calling on the European Space Agency to consider the project.

Mar 3, 2022

AI computer maker Cerebras nabs TotalEnergies SE as first energy sector customer

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

“There are a lot of partnerships where you’re carpooling to go to the nightclub, and then there are long-term collaborations,” said Saubestre. “We are fiancés for the time being, but we are trying to make this couple work.”

“There’s a lot that can be optimized, and there’s a lot of potential, and that was the reason to go into this partnership with someone who is as keen as we are to make it happen,” said Saubestre. “We’re hoping to retain this competitive advantage that we’ve had over the years and inventing the future machines to run our simulations.”

Added Saubestre, some vendors with whom TotalEnergies works focus on selling cloud services, but such services aren’t necessarily ideal for the kinds of work the energy giant needs to get done.