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Oct 18, 2022

DeepMind’s AlphaCode AI writes code at a competitive level

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

DeepMind has created an AI capable of writing code to solve arbitrary problems posed to it, as proven by participating in a coding challenge and placing — well, somewhere in the middle. It won’t be taking any software engineers’ jobs just yet, but it’s promising and may help automate basic tasks.

The team at DeepMind, a subsidiary of Alphabet, is aiming to create intelligence in as many forms as it can, and of course these days the task to which many of our great minds are bent is coding. Code is a fusion of language, logic and problem-solving that is both a natural fit for a computer’s capabilities and a tough one to crack.

Of course it isn’t the first to attempt something like this: OpenAI has its own Codex natural-language coding project, and it powers both GitHub Copilot and a test from Microsoft to let GPT-3 finish your lines.

Oct 18, 2022

Mathematicians Surprised

Posted by in category: mathematics

Recent explorations of unique geometric worlds reveal perplexing patterns, including the Fibonacci sequence and the golden ratio.

Oct 18, 2022

Florida sees surge in deadly bacterial infections post-Hurricane Ian

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Florida is reporting a surge in deadly infections caused by the bacteria Vibrio vulnificus in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian.

Driving the news: Lee County alone has recorded 29 cases and 4 deaths as of Friday, according to Florida’s Department of Health. The state’s overall numbers have risen to 65 cases and 11 deaths, compared to 34 cases and 10 deaths in 2021.

Details: Found in warm, brackish water, Vibrio vulnificus usually enters human bodies through the consumption of raw or undercooked seafood, though it can also cause infections through open wounds, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Oct 18, 2022

Meet Aurea, the first baby in the world to be ‘selected’ after being genetically screened before birth for a host of diseases

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

BECOMING a parent for the first time is a major moment for anyone — but for Laura Gayton, giving birth to a healthy, crying baby boy…

Oct 18, 2022

NASA prepares to break the sound barrier with Lockheed Martin’s X-59

Posted by in category: space

With the help of NASA’s QueSST mission, aeronautical innovators hope to break the sound barrier once more, but this time in a totally different fashion that…

Oct 18, 2022

Astronomers decipher a few early warning signs for stars about to go supernova

Posted by in category: cosmology

Keep an eye on the sky.


New models show that stars about to blow up in a supernovae begin exhibiting strange behaviors a few months in advance.

Oct 18, 2022

The ‘world’s largest capacity’ floating wave energy device will be tested in Scotland over the next four years

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Thanks to a $19.2 million collaboration co-funded by the European Union.

Irish firm Ocean Energy has signed up to a collaboration project with 14 industry and university partners in the UK, Ireland, France, Germany, and Spain. The project will test its OE35 floating wave energy device at scale over the next four years.

Continue reading “The ‘world’s largest capacity’ floating wave energy device will be tested in Scotland over the next four years” »

Oct 18, 2022

Boston Dynamics’ robot Spot has “permission to dance” to BTS’ popular hit song

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The dancing robots performed in a video that was in conjunction with a concert held by BTS in Busan, South Korea.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEW-9SbXahI

Boston Dynamics robot dog, Spot, is dancing, once more. This time, it’s to the hit song “Permission to Dance” by group BTS, a popular band from South Korea, in a new video (featured below).

Continue reading “Boston Dynamics’ robot Spot has ‘permission to dance’ to BTS’ popular hit song” »

Oct 18, 2022

Colloidal crystals can change their shape and have memories thanks to DNA, research suggests

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

The crystals are significantly larger than any that have ever been created previously.

A hitherto unknown characteristic of colloidal crystals, highly organized three-dimensional arrays of nanoparticles, has been discovered by Northwestern University researchers very recently.

According to Northwestern University’s release, similar to the natural structures found in chameleon skin and butterfly wings, DNA-engineered colloidal crystals demonstrate shape-shifting and structural memory.

Oct 18, 2022

A new AI model can predict human responses to drug compounds, transforming medicine

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

It’s more affordable and effective.

City College of New York’s new AI model will be able to predict accurately human response to novel drug compounds. Moreover, it is less costly and faster. Published in Nature Mature Intelligence.

According to research, the new CODE-AE model can screen brand-new medication molecules and reliably forecast their effectiveness in people. In tests, it was also able to find potentially more effective tailored medications for over 9,000 patients.

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