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Oct 31, 2021

How AI is shaping Adobe’s product strategy

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Like many other companies, Adobe is leveraging deep learning to improve its applications and solidify its position in the video and image editing market. In turn, the use of AI is shaping Adobe’s product strategy.

AI-powered image and video editing

Sensei, Adobe’s AI platform, is now integrated into all the products of its Creative Cloud suite. Among the features revealed in this year’s conference is an auto-masking tool in Photoshop, which enables you to select an object simply by hovering your mouse over it. A similar feature automatically creates mask layers for all the objects it detects in a scene.

Oct 31, 2021

Starlink Website Nixes ‘Beta’ Wording, Warns Chip Shortage Is Delaying Orders

Posted by in categories: computing, internet

The change occurs as SpaceX prepares for a nationwide rollout of Starlink before the end of the month.

Oct 31, 2021

How Can Facebook Algorithms Be Accountable to Users?

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

This is the first installment blog summarizing AI Theology’s panel discussion on how to make Facebook algorithms accountable to users.

Oct 31, 2021

Zuckerberg accused other tech firms of stifling innovation with high fees as he laid out plans for metaverse

Posted by in categories: computing, government, virtual reality

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg accused other tech companies of “stifling innovation” with high fees and little choice for consumers during a live stream on Thursday, all while his company faces an antitrust lawsuit from the federal government and heightened pressure from Congress over recently-leaked internal documents

Zuckerberg made the comments at the Facebook Connect event Thursday, where he announced the company has changed its name to Meta.

He also laid out the company’s plans to build a metaverse — a virtual reality experience where people can meet online. His comments seemed to allude to mobile operating systems like those created by Apple and Google, though he did not mention any company by name or specify the types of platforms he was talking about.

Oct 31, 2021

Can These 820 Feet-Long Railless Trains Dethrone Air Travel?

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, transportation

The new rail-less passenger system could give Elon Musk’s Hyperloop a run for its money.

Oct 31, 2021

Elon Musk Says He Wants to Start a University with a Dirty Name

Posted by in categories: education, Elon Musk

Musk took to Twitter to let the world know he was considering creating a school that might make your parents blush if you applied to it.

Oct 30, 2021

How Google’s Wing Drone Delivery Aircraft Works

Posted by in categories: drones, media & arts, robotics/AI

Will drone deliveries be a practical part of our future? We visit the test facilities of Wing to check out how their engineers and aircraft designers have developed a drone and drone fleet control system that is actually in operation today in parts of the world. Here’s how their VTOL drone works and what it’s like to both load and receive a package carried by an autonomous aircraft!

Shot by Joey Fameli and edited by Norman Chan.
Additional footage courtesy of Wing.
Music by Jinglepunks.

Continue reading “How Google’s Wing Drone Delivery Aircraft Works” »

Oct 30, 2021

Scientists Identify the Cause of Alzheimer’s Progression in the Brain — Very Different Than Previously Thought

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

For the first time, researchers have used human data to quantify the speed of different processes that lead to Alzheimer’s disease and found that it develops in a very different way than previously thought. Their results could have important implications for the development of potential treatments.

The international team, led by the University of Cambridge, found that instead of starting from a single point in the brain and initiating a chain reaction that leads to the death of brain cells, Alzheimer’s disease reaches different regions of the brain early. How quickly the disease kills cells in these regions, through the production of toxic protein clusters, limits how quickly the disease progresses overall.

The researchers used post-mortem brain samples from Alzheimer’s patients, as well as PET scans from living patients, who ranged from those with mild cognitive impairment to those with late-stage Alzheimer’s disease, to track the aggregation of tau, one of two key proteins implicated in the condition.

Oct 30, 2021

NASA confirms massive solar flare will hit Earth, arrival time found

Posted by in category: space

NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory has confirmed that a massive solar flare has erupted from an Earth-facing sunspot on October 28.

Oct 30, 2021

RNA Control Switch: Engineers Devise a Way To Selectively Turn On Gene Therapies in Human Cells

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Researchers at MIT and Harvard University have designed a way to selectively turn on gene expression in target cells, including human cells. Their technology can detect specific mRNA sequences (represented in the center of the illustration), which triggers production of a specific protein (bottom right). Credit: Jose-Luis Olivares, MIT, with figures from iStockphoto.

“This brings new control circuitry to the emerging field of RNA therapeutics, opening up the next generation of RNA therapeutics that could be designed to only turn on in a cell-specific or tissue-specific way,” says James Collins, the Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering and Science in MIT’s Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES) and Department of Biological Engineering and the senior author of the study.

This highly targeted approach, which is based on a genetic element used by viruses to control gene translation in host cells, could help to avoid some of the side effects of therapies that affect the entire body, the researchers say.