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Jan 29, 2022

Dear Architects: Please Save Us From Suburban Sprawl

Posted by in category: futurism

How can architects design for the inevitable suburban sprawl that comes with our rapidly growing cities?

Jan 29, 2022

Fast radio bursts could help solve mystery of the universe’s expansion

Posted by in category: space

Astronomers use fast radio bursts for the first time to measure the Hubble constant in hopes of ending the debate on the universe’s expansion rate.

Jan 29, 2022

Building global AI with local impact in an AI economy

Posted by in categories: economics, robotics/AI

The new foundation of the artificial intelligence (AI) economy is flexible, remote work. Thanks to advances in technology that enable remote work at an unimaginable scale, organizations developing AI can now collaborate with people from almost anywhere, including previously inaccessible areas. People across the globe can now contribute to building AI in meaningful ways, particularly through data preparation and annotation work. This has led to the emergence of a new and growing freelance category — focused on AI training data annotation and collection.

While many AI economy participants join searching for additional income, a good portion of data annotators join the AI economy because they are seeking challenging opportunities. Whatever their reason, contributors benefit positively from the new opportunities flexible work affords. Geography is no longer an impediment to skill development or participation in projects that they’re enthusiastic about.

Organizations building AI are embracing remote contracting arrangements in order to access the contributions of people around the world. These contributors may not necessarily live in technology hubs, nor have had the opportunity to participate in AI before the arrival of these remote options. In fact, professional options in their locale may be limited as a whole. Appen recently released their Impact Pulse survey of the crowd and found that 40% of contributors rely on the work from home model due to barriers of accessing traditional work. Thirty-two percent were living below the global poverty line before starting with Appen, and of those, 53% have been lifted above due to their work in the AI Economy.

Jan 29, 2022

Race to salvage US F-35C fighter jet that crashed in hostile South China Sea

Posted by in category: military

Fears that subs from China, which claims the area, could be first to reach wreckage that plunged from deck of aircraft carrier.

Jan 29, 2022

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has reached its final destination. Let’s celebrate the team that got it there (op-ed)

Posted by in category: space

Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen is associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. He contributed this article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

There is a new speck of light in the sky right now, best observable from Earth around midnight. This blurry speck — dim as it may be, small as it may be — represents the grit and unity of thousands of people who worked together to place it in the heavens.

Jan 29, 2022

Multiple clients for Sunflower Lab’s security drone-dock system

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI, security

Sunflower Labs announces a flurry of client acquisitions of its security drone-in-dock Beehive System in both the US and Europe.


San Carlos-based Sunflower Labs has announced a spate of new clients for its automated Beehive System security drone-and-dock, in deals ranging from Switzerland to the US South.

Continue reading “Multiple clients for Sunflower Lab’s security drone-dock system” »

Jan 29, 2022

Data mesh: What it is and why you should care

Posted by in category: futurism

This year, you won’t be able to escape the data mesh, one of the most disruptive trends currently operating in the data and analytics world.

Jan 29, 2022

Scientists Create Synthetic Dimensions To Better Understand the Fundamental Laws of the Universe

Posted by in categories: physics, space

Humans experience the world in three dimensions, but a collaboration in Japan has developed a way to create synthetic dimensions to better understand the fundamental laws of the Universe and possibly apply them to advanced technologies.

They published their results today (January 28, 2022) in Science Advances.

“The concept of dimensionality has become a central fixture in diverse fields of contemporary physics and technology in past years,” said paper author Toshihiko Baba, professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Yokohama National University. “While inquiries into lower-dimensional materials and structures have been fruitful, rapid advances in topology have uncovered a further abundance of potentially useful phenomena depending on the dimensionality of the system, even going beyond the three spatial dimensions available in the world around us.”

Jan 29, 2022

Lazarus hackers use Windows Update to deploy malware

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

North Korean-backed hacking group Lazarus has added the Windows Update client to its list of living-off-the-land binaries (LoLBins) and is now actively using it to execute malicious code on Windows systems.

The new malware deployment method was discovered by the Malwarebytes Threat Intelligence team while analyzing a January spearphishing campaign impersonating the American security and aerospace company Lockheed Martin.

After the victims open the malicious attachments and enable macro execution, an embedded macro drops a WindowsUpdateConf.lnk file in the startup folder and a DLL file (wuaueng.dll) in a hidden Windows/System32 folder.

Jan 29, 2022

A plan to chase down the 1st-known interstellar visitor

Posted by in category: space travel

In 2017, ‘Oumuamua became the 1st-known interstellar visitor. Since then, we’ve seen one other. Can astronomers now chase it down?