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Nov 13, 2021

Industrial computer vision is getting ready for growth

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Landing AI, a California-based startup led by Google Brain co-founder Andrew Ng, has just nabbed $57 million in series A for its computer vision platform.

Landing AI’s flagship product, the LandingLens, doesn’t have the highlights you see at Google I/O or the Apple Event, where tech giants introduce how the latest advances in AI are making your personal devices smarter and useful. But its impact could be no less significant than the kind of artificial intelligence technology that is finding its way into consumer products and services.

Landing AI is one of several companies that is bringing computer vision to the industrial sector. As industrial computer vision platforms mature, they can bring great productivity, cost-efficiency, and safety to different domains.

Nov 12, 2021

The Intense Pressurized Conditions of Earth’s Outer Core Have Been Recreated in a Lab

Posted by in category: space

Thousands of kilometers under Earth’s surface, under crushing pressures and scorching temperatures, the core of the planet can be found. There, an inner core consisting of a solid ball of nickel and iron is super-rotating inside the outer core, where the iron and nickel are fluid.

The conditions of this outer core have now been recreated in a lab, by a team led by physicist Sébastien Merkel of the University of Lille in France – in such a way that scientists have been able to observe the structural deformation of iron.

This not only has implications for understanding our own planet, but can help us to better understand what happens when chunks of iron collide in space.

Nov 12, 2021

GPU-based quantum simulation on Google Cloud

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

O,.o woah!


This instructs qsim to make use of its cuQuantum integration, which provides improved performance on NVIDIA GPUs. If you experience issues with this option, please file an issue on the qsim repository.

After you finish, don’t forget to stop or delete your VM on the Compute Instances dashboard to prevent further billing.

Continue reading “GPU-based quantum simulation on Google Cloud” »

Nov 12, 2021

Animal skeleton of unknown species found in eastern Turkey

Posted by in category: sustainability

Digging in the yard of an old spinning factory in the eastern province of Iğdır last week, some workers discovered an animal skeleton of an unknown species.

The skeleton, which remained intact under the garden, is about 1 meter (3.3 feet) tall and has the teeth of a predator. After the workers noticed that some of the tissue attached to the skeleton had yet not deteriorated, they reported their discovery to the academics at Iğdır University’s Biodiversity Application and Research Center. The academics came to the area where the excavation was made and took the skeleton to the university. They will conduct research to determine the species of the animal skeleton at the university.

Nov 12, 2021

Hyundai Has Transformed Its 1986 Grandeur Into an All-Electric Masterpiece

Posted by in category: sustainability

Hyundai’s latest refurbished classic is the 1986 Grandeur, complete with an electric powertrain! And it’s a blend of luxury and sustainability.

Nov 12, 2021

Engineers create ‘soft’ robots that could move like millipedes or go inside people

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

New techniques have been used to make a robot hand, a flapping fish tail, and a coil that can retrieve a ball.

Nov 12, 2021

Genes Reveal How Some Rockfish Live Up to 200 Years

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Scientists surveyed dozens of species’ genomes to uncover keys to longevity.

Nov 12, 2021

“Snake Robot” Eelume to Enter Into Service

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Shipping.

Nov 12, 2021

North American companies rush to add robots as demand surges

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

Nov 11 (Reuters) — Companies in North America added a record number of robots in the first nine months of this year as they rushed to speed up assembly lines and struggled to add human workers.

Factories and other industrial users ordered 29,000 robots, 37% more than during the same period last year, valued at $1.48 billion, according to data compiled by the industry group the Association for Advancing Automation. That surpassed the previous peak set in the same time period in 2017, before the global pandemic upended economies.

The rush to add robots is part of a larger upswing in investment as companies seek to keep up with strong demand, which in some cases has contributed to shortages of key goods. At the same time, many firms have struggled to lure back workers displaced by the pandemic and view robots as an alternative to adding human muscle on their assembly lines.

Nov 12, 2021

Newly developed compound may enable sustainable, cost-effective, large-scale energy storage

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, engineering, sustainability

To produce a cost-effective redox flow battery, researchers based at the South China University of Technology have synthesized a molecular compound that serves as a low-cost electrolyte, enabling a stable flow battery that retains 99.98% capacity per cycle. They published their approach on August 14 in the Energy Material Advances.

Comprising two tanks of opposing liquid electrolytes, the battery pumps the positive and negative liquids along a membrane separator sandwiched between electrodes, facilitating ion exchanges to produce energy. Significant work has been dedicated to developing the negative electrolyte liquid, while the positive electrolyte liquid has received less attention, according to corresponding author Zhenxing Liang, professor in the Key Laboratory of Fuel Cell Technology of Guangdong Province, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, South China University of Technology.

“Aqueous redox flow batteries can realize the stable electrical output for using unsteady solar and wind energy, and they have been recognized as a promising large-scale energy storage ,” Liang said. “Electroactive organic merit of element abundance, low cost and flexible molecular control over the electrochemical features for both positive and negative electrolytes are regarded as key to developing next-generation redox flow batteries.”