If you or someone you know has multiple myeloma, I HIGHLY recommend world renowned medical oncologist and multiple myeloma expert Dr. Landgren.
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Oct 22, 2022
Tentacle robot can gently grasp fragile objects
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: entertainment, information science, robotics/AI
If you’ve ever played the claw game at an arcade, you know how hard it is to grab and hold onto objects using robotics grippers. Imagine how much more nerve-wracking that game would be if, instead of plush stuffed animals, you were trying to grab a fragile piece of endangered coral or a priceless artifact from a sunken ship.
Most of today’s robotic grippers rely on embedded sensors, complex feedback loops, or advanced machine learning algorithms, combined with the skill of the operator, to grasp fragile or irregularly shaped objects. But researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have demonstrated an easier way.
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Oct 22, 2022
How retail AI is helping sellers keep up this holiday shopping season (and beyond)
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: robotics/AI
Register now for your free virtual pass to the Low-Code/No-Code Summit this November 9. Hear from executives from Service Now, Credit Karma, Stitch Fix, Appian, and more. Learn more.
Retail AI is everywhere this holiday season — even if you don’t realize it.
Say you’re a fashion retailer. You’ve always had to try to predict trends — but now with a slowed supply chain, you have to look 12 months out instead of six.
Oct 22, 2022
Scientists Create AI-Powered Laser Turret That Kills Cockroaches
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: chemistry
Aside from the open-sourced nature of the project, the possible widespread applications of the technology also makes it noteworthy. It could be a plausible alternative to mechanical traps, as well as chemicals that often damage the environment and target non-pest insect species. Not to mention, it’s cheaper (the paper notes that all devices cost not more than $250) and more compact than other current pest-controlling technologies.
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That being said, although the prototype is suitable for academic research, there’s a lot more to be done before it can be deployed on a larger scale. For example, the paper notes that a smaller laser point would be more effective at killing the roaches but is difficult to implement experimentally. The ability to precisely control which parts of the cockroach’s bodies were hit would also be helpful, the paper says.
Oct 22, 2022
Machine Learning’s New Math
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: mathematics, robotics/AI
“We got a thousand times improvement [in training performance per chip] over the last 10 years, and a lot of it has been due to number representation,” Bill Dally, chief scientist and senior vice president of research at Nvidia said at the recent IEEE Symposium on Computer Arithmetic.
Oct 22, 2022
Fake News Detection with Model Selection and Hyperparameter Optimization in Python
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
Originally published on Towards AI the World’s Leading AI and Technology News and Media Company. If you are building an AI-related product or service, we invite you to consider becoming an AI sponsor. At Towards AI, we help scale AI and technology startups. Let us help you unleash your technology to the masses.
Oct 21, 2022
Scientists Transformed Pure Water Into a Metal, And There’s Footage
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
Pure water is an almost perfect insulator.
Yes, water found in nature conducts electricity – but that’s because of the impurities therein, which dissolve into free ions that allow an electric current to flow. Pure water only becomes “metallic” – electronically conductive – at extremely high pressures, beyond our current abilities to produce in a lab.
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Oct 21, 2022
What is the multiverse—and is there any evidence it really exists?
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cosmology
Scientists can only see so far before they run into the edge of the universe. Will we ever know if anything lies beyond?
Oct 21, 2022
How drones could determine the direction of gravity without accelerometers
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: drones, robotics/AI
For proper operation, drones usually use accelerometers to determine the direction of gravity. In a new study published in Nature on October 19, 2022, a team of scientists from Delft University of Technology, the CNRS and Aix-Marseille University has shown that drones can estimate the direction of gravity by combining visual detection of movement with a model of how they move. These results may explain how flying insects determine the direction of gravity and are a major step toward the creation of tiny autonomous drones.
While drones typically use accelerometers to estimate the direction of gravity, the way flying insects achieve this has been shrouded in mystery until now, as they have no specific sense of acceleration. In this study, a European team of scientists led by the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands and involving a CNRS researcher has shown that drones can assess gravity using visual motion detection and motion modeling together.
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