Menu

Blog

Page 4552

Dec 11, 2021

Is Relying Solely On Data From Published Studies A Suboptimal Strategy For Optimal Health?

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

Join us on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/MichaelLustgartenPhD

Paper referenced in the video:
Predicting age by mining electronic medical records with deep learning characterizes differences between chronological and physiological age.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29113935/

Dec 11, 2021

After 10 Days of Dangerous, Careful Work, James Webb has Been Fully Fueled up

Posted by in category: satellites

After many MANY delays, the James Webb Space Telescope is fully-fueled and ready for the final stage of preparations before launch (still on for Dec. 22nd)!


On Oct. 12th, 2021, after years of waiting and cost overruns, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) finally arrived safely at Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. The crews began unboxing the next-generation observatory and getting it ready for integration with the Ariane 5 rocket that will take it to space. Then, an “incident” occurred where a clamp band suddenly released, sending vibrations throughout the facility. Once again, the JWST’s launch date was pushed back while crews investigated the source of the problem.

Continue reading “After 10 Days of Dangerous, Careful Work, James Webb has Been Fully Fueled up” »

Dec 11, 2021

Can a Tiny AI Group Stand Up to Google?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Scientist Timnit Gebru has set up an AI research group one year after getting fired from Google, but she and others are fighting an uphill battle.

Dec 11, 2021

Katcher’s Elixir update — 2nd control rat dies, TNF-alpha and IL-6 improvement persists

Posted by in category: life extension

Good E5 news.


Key points summary of Live Forever Club article. Rejuvenation continues after 4th dose — will be very interesting to see if max lifespan increases.

Dec 11, 2021

Revolutionary New AI can be Run Anywhere

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The biggest hurdle of developing an Artificial Intelligence which could match the human brain in both efficiency and capabilities is the enormous energy consumption of today’s computer chips. But recent advancements in neural-optimized chips and the emergence of the first neuromorphic computing chips, start painting a clearer picture on how we may soon develop an Artificial Intelligence which matches and even beats us in most areas.

Timing is crucial when it comes to brain computing. It’s the way neurons connect to form circuits. It’s how these circuits analyze extremely complicated data, resulting to life-or-death decisions. It’s the ability of our brains to make split-second judgments, even when confronted with completely novel situations. We accomplish this without frying the brain as a result of excessive energy usage.

To summarize, the brain is a wonderful example of a very powerful computer to imitate, and computer scientists and engineers have already taken the initial steps in this direction.

Dec 11, 2021

Did That Chatbot Just Make A Rude Joke?

Posted by in categories: ethics, humor, robotics/AI

PolyAI Ltd. is an ambitious startup that creates artificial voices to replace call center operators. Based in London, it has raised $28 million to bring AI-powered customer service to Metro Bank Plc, BP Plc and more. The idea is that instead of the nightmare of dialing random digits in a decision tree, you can instead ask to, say, book a table and a voice — with just the slightest inflection of its machine-learning origins — responds with great civility. That’s nice. But there was a brief moment two years ago when it wasn’t polite at all.

A software developer with PolyAI who was testing the system, asked about booking a table for himself and a Serbian friend. “Yes, we allow children at the restaurant,” the voice bot replied, according to PolyAI founder Nikola Mrksic. Seemingly out of nowhere, the bot was trying make an obnoxious joke about people from Serbia. When it was asked about bringing a Polish friend, it replied, “Yes, but you can’t bring your own booze.”

Full Story:

Continue reading “Did That Chatbot Just Make A Rude Joke?” »

Dec 11, 2021

Robot artist to perform AI generated poetry in response to Dante

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Dante’s Divine Comedy has inspired countless artists, from William Blake to Franz Liszt, and from Auguste Rodin to CS Lewis. But an exhibition marking the 700th anniversary of the Italian poet’s death will be showcasing the work of a rather more modern devotee: Ai-Da the robot, which will make history by becoming the first robot to publicly perform poetry written by its AI algorithms.

The ultra-realistic Ai-Da, who was devised in Oxford by Aidan Meller and named after computing pioneer Ada Lovelace, was given the whole of Dante’s epic three-part narrative poem, the Divine Comedy, to read, in JG Nichols’ English translation. She then used her algorithms, drawing on her data bank of words and speech pattern analysis, to produce her own reactive work to Dante’s.

Continue reading “Robot artist to perform AI generated poetry in response to Dante” »

Dec 11, 2021

This is what a reef for cities looks like

Posted by in category: futurism

Submit your solution for nature positive cities: https://bit.ly/32iyK9S UpLink — World Economic Forum Urban Reef.

Dec 11, 2021

Ever heard of a fish cannon?

Posted by in category: futurism

Dec 11, 2021

Watch this studio 3D print a castle

Posted by in category: 3D printing

🤯 👍

Credit: Trideo.