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Sep 1, 2022
Customer retention challenges? This company can help with ‘multidimensional’ data listening
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: business
California-based StepFunction, which helps enterprises improve customer retention rate, has raised $5 million.
Were you unable to attend Transform 2022? Check out all of the summit sessions in our on-demand library now! Watch here.
Modern-day software-as-a-service (SaaS) enterprises are racing to acquire new users and convert them into paying customers. The rush is great for the industry, but it has also left many organizations looking at only half of the picture.
Sep 1, 2022
Meet China’s Cyber Dog — The Future Of Robotics
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI, transhumanism
This post is also available in: עברית (Hebrew)
China has developed the world’s largest electric-powered quadruped bionic robot, which is expected to join logistics delivery and reconnaissance missions in complex environments that have proven too challenging for human soldiers, including remote border regions and highly risky combat zones, analysts said.
In December, China announced that it would work to become a leading global player in robotics by 2025 under a five-year plan.
Sep 1, 2022
It takes roughly two days to send a message to Voyager 1 and get a response
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space travel
Despite the challenges of operating a 45-year-old spacecraft, NASA says the team is working to keep it operational and returning new science.
Sep 1, 2022
China’s new “sky train” floats under an elevated track, using magnets and AI
Posted by Robin Indeededo in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
The 2,600-foot-long experimental rail is located in Southern China. A typical maglev train glides above its track, supported by magnetic repulsion and propelled by a linear motor. This one, however, moves underneath its track at a speed of 50 mph. It operates about 32 feet above the ground and makes no physical contact with the rail.
SEE: São Paulo subway ordered to suspend use of facial recognition
After some test runs, local authorities said the line could even increase to 4.7 miles and its top operational speed can reach 75 mph.
Sep 1, 2022
Anti-laser can make any object suck in light
Posted by Tristan Hambling in category: materials
Inserting any material into a special maze of mirrors and lenses can make it absorb light perfectly. This approach could be used to detect faint starlight or for charging faraway devices with lasers.
Ori Katz at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel and his colleagues created an almost perfect absorber of light by building an “anti-laser”.
In a laser, light bounces between mirrors until it becomes amplified enough to exit the device in a concentrated beam. In an “anti-laser”, says co-author Stefan Rotter at Vienna University of Technology in Austria, light enters the device then gets stuck in an inescapable series of bounces within it.
Sep 1, 2022
These NASA photos of lightning strikes at the Artemis 1 moon rocket launch pad are amazing
Posted by Tristan Hambling in categories: climatology, space
Bolts of lightning struck several lightning towers surrounding the Artemis 1 mega moon rocket Saturday (Aug. 27), and there are epic photos showing just how it looked.
Sep 1, 2022
Existential Hope Special with Morgan Levine
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension, mathematics, robotics/AI
Foresight Existential Hope Group.
Program & apply to join: https://foresight.org/existential-hope/
In the Existential Hope-podcast (https://www.existentialhope.com), we invite scientists to speak about long-termism. Each month, we drop a podcast episode where we interview a visionary scientist to discuss the science and technology that can accelerate humanity towards desirable outcomes.
Xhope Special with Foresight Fellow Morgan Levine.
Morgan Levine is a ladder-rank Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology at the Yale School of Medicine and a member of both the Yale Combined Program in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, and the Yale Center for Research on Aging. Her work relies on an interdisciplinary approach, integrating theories and methods from statistical genetics, computational biology, and mathematical demography to develop biomarkers of aging for humans and animal models using high-dimensional omics data. As PI or co-Investigator on multiple NIH-, Foundation-, and University-funded projects, she has extensive experience using systems-level and machine learning approaches to track epigenetic, transcriptomic, and proteomic changes with aging and incorporate.
this information to develop measures of risk stratification for major chronic diseases, such as cancer and Alzheimer’s disease. Her work also involves development of systems-level outcome measures of aging, aimed at facilitating evaluation for geroprotective interventions.
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