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Jul 5, 2022
Dystopian fiction: How likely are “dark future” scenarios today?
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: futurism
Jul 5, 2022
Airbus’ solar-powered Zephyr S has been flying non-stop for more than 17 days
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: sustainability, transportation
Jul 5, 2022
IBM Builds an AI-Powered Electronic Tongue
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in category: chemistry
Jul 5, 2022
Regenerage Global LLC Establishes Regenerage Clinic Abu Dhabi In Collaboration with Aesthetic Polyclinic / Reviv UAE
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Regenerage global LLC expanding clinical network to UAE.
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (PRWEB) July 5, 2022.
Regenerage Global LLC, an emerging global leader in clinical, integrative regenerative healthcare and longevity, in collaboration with Aesthetic Polyclinic / Reviv UAE, a medical spa and polyclinic based in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Al Ain, specializing in plastic surgery, dermatology, dental services and aesthetic services, announce the establishing of Regenerage Clinic Abu Dhabi.
Jul 5, 2022
Why Tesla built New Radar
Posted by Ken Otwell in categories: computing, quantum physics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSRLLVXKPWg&feature=youtu.be
Major change for Tesla? Adding radar after years of claiming it isn’t needed for FSD?
Radars are fun! In this video I explain New Tesla Radar.
Why Tesla did build New Radar in house?
Jul 5, 2022
China’s AI system ‘can check loyalty of party members’
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: education, robotics/AI
“China claims to have developed an AI that can read the minds of Communist Party members to determine how receptive they are to ‘thought education’ in since-deleted article”.
AI developed by experts at Hefei Comprehensive National Science Centre is reportedly intended to check loyalty of Communist Party members.
Jul 5, 2022
Connectivity of Language Areas Unique in the Human Brain
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: neuroscience
Summary: Researchers shed new light on how the human brain evolved to be language-ready. Compared to the brains of chimps, the patterns of connections of language areas in the human brain expanded more than was previously thought.
Source: Radboud University.
Neuroscientists have gained new insight into how our brain evolved into a language-ready brain. Compared to chimpanzee brains, the pattern of connections of language areas in our brain has expanded more than previously thought.
Jul 5, 2022
Magnetic spins that ‘freeze’ when heated: nature in the wrong direction
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: materials, particle physics
Physicists observed a strange new type of behaviour in a magnetic material when it’s heated up. The magnetic spins ‘freeze’ into a static pattern when the temperature rises, a phenomenon that normally occurs when the temperature decreases. They publish their findings in Nature Physics on July 4th.
The researchers discovered the phenomenon in the material neodymium, an element that they described several years ago as a ‘self-induced spin glass’. Spin glasses are typically alloys where iron atoms for example are randomly mixed into a grid of copper atoms. Each iron atom behaves like a small magnet, or a spin. These randomly placed spins point in all kinds of directions.
Unlike conventional spin glasses, where there is random mixing of magnetic materials, neodymium is an element and without significant amounts of any other material, shows glassy behavior in its crystalline form. The spins form patterns that whirl like a helix, and this whirling is random and constantly changes.
Jul 5, 2022
Quantum Processor Completes 9,000 Years of Work in 36 Microseconds
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: information science, quantum physics, supercomputing
The future is now!
Technology continues to move forward at incredible speeds and it seems like every week we learn about a new breakthrough that changes our minds about what is possible.
Researchers in Toronto used a photonic quantum computer chip to solve a sampling problem that went way beyond the fastest computers and algorithms.
Continue reading “Quantum Processor Completes 9,000 Years of Work in 36 Microseconds” »