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Jul 19, 2024

Man, 60, declared ‘free’ of HIV after revolutionary cancer treatment

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A SEVENTH person has been “cured” of HIV after revolutionary stem cell treatment, it is hoped.

The man, 60, who also had acute myeloid leukaemia when he had the procedure to replace his bone marrow in October 2015, is now thought to be free of both diseases.

Jul 19, 2024

How Nvidia became an AI Giant

Posted by in categories: finance, robotics/AI

It all started at a Denny’s in San Jose in 1993. Three engineers—Jensen Huang, Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem—gathered at the diner in what is now the heart of Silicon Valley to discuss building a computer chip that would make graphics for video games faster and more realistic. That conversation, and the ones that followed, led to the founding of Nvidia, the tech company that soared through the ranks of the stock market to briefly top Microsoft as the most valuable company in the S&P 500 this week.

The company is now worth over $3.2 trillion, with its dominance as a chipmaker cementing Nvidia’s place as the poster child of the artificial intelligence boom—a moment that Huang, Nvidia’s CEO, has dubbed “the next industrial revolution.”

On a conference call with analysts last month, Huang predicted that the companies using Nvidia chips would build a new type of data center called “AI factories.”

Jul 19, 2024

Beyond CRISPR: seekRNA delivers a New Pathway for Accurate Gene Editing

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, food, genetics

Scientists at the University of Sydney have developed a gene-editing tool with greater accuracy and flexibility than the industry standard, CRISPR, which has revolutionized genetic engineering in medicine, agriculture and biotechnology.

SeekRNA uses a programmable ribonucleic acid (RNA) strand that can directly identify sites for insertion in genetic sequences, simplifying the editing process and reducing errors.

The new gene-editing tool is being developed by a team led by Dr. Sandro Ataide in the School of Life and Environmental Sciences. Their findings have been published in Nature Communications.

Jul 19, 2024

Bioplausible Artificial Intelligence

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Listen to this episode from The Futurists on Spotify. Monica Anderson returns to the Futurists to share a radical concept: future AI models based on Darwinism. The “AI epistemologist” shares provocative opinions about where the current crop of generative AI systems went wrong, and why generative AI is computationally expensive and energy intensive, and why scaling AI with hardware will not achieve general intelligence. Instead she offers a radical alternative: a design for machine intelligence that is inspired by biology, and in particular by the Darwinian process of selection. Topics include: why generative AI is not a plagiarism machine; syntax versus semantics and why AI needs both; there is only one algorithm for creativity; and how to construct an AI that consumes a million times less energy.

Jul 19, 2024

Slingshotting Around the Sun would make a Spacecraft the Fastest Ever

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA is very interested in developing a propulsion method to allow spacecraft to go faster. We’ve reported several times on different ideas to support that goal, and most of the more successful have utilized the sun’s gravity well, typically by slingshotting around it, as is commonly done with Jupiter currently.

But, there are still significant hurdles when doing so, not the least of which is the energy radiating from the sun simply vaporizing anything that gets close enough to utilize a gravity assist. That’s the problem a project supported by NASA’s Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) and run by Jason Benkoski, now of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, is trying to solve.

The project was awarded a NIAC Phase I grant in 2022, focused on combining two separate systems—a heat shield and a thermal propellant system. According to the project’s final report, combining those two technologies could allow a spacecraft to perform what is known as an Oberth maneuver around the sun.

Jul 19, 2024

A new material for small electronics that gives batteries longer life

Posted by in categories: military, wearables

Scientists have achieved a series of milestones in growing a high-quality thin film conductor, suggesting in a new study that the material is a promising candidate platform for future wearable electronics and other miniature applications.

Researchers at The Ohio State University, the Army Research Laboratory and MIT determined that the material is the best among similarly built films for its electron mobility—an index of how easy it is for an electrical current to pass through it.

Coupled with low defect density to reduce interference with electron movement on the surface, the material is like a tiny empty freeway where all the electrons can easily get where they need to go with no traffic to be seen.

Jul 19, 2024

GPT-4o mini: advancing cost-efficient intelligence

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

OpenAI unveils GPT-4o mini, a smaller and cheaper AI model.

OpenAI introduced GPT-4o mini on Thursday, its latest small AI model.


Introducing the most cost-efficient small model in the market.

Jul 19, 2024

Scientists Intrigued by Drug That Extended Lifespans of Mice While Keeping Them Young-Looking

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

In a new study, lab mice given an experimental drug were jokingly referred to as “supermodel grannies” because they looked so youthful even while aging beyond their expected lifespan.

As the BBC reports, the trials for a drug believed to flush out a protein known as interleukin-11 — which in early development helps build our bones but later in life causes the kinds of inflammation that triggers much of the illness of aging — have already had intriguing success in mice.

Published in the journal Nature, a paper about the research undertaken by scientists at Imperial College London, Duke-NUS in Singapore, and the MRC Lab of Medical Sciences found that when given a drug that purges interleukin-11, the mice became more lean, had healthier fur, and had significantly lower levels of cancer than their counterparts of the same age.

Jul 19, 2024

The science of how Earth will meet its ultimate end

Posted by in category: science

The last ~4 billion years have been an incredibly successful, unbroken run for life on Earth. The ultimate end won’t be nearly so bright.

Jul 19, 2024

Australia’s Slow Internet Lags Behind The USA in Speed and Affordability

Posted by in categories: government, internet

15 july 2024.


According to the Speedtest Global Index, Australia ranks 64th in the world for fixed broadband speeds making it the slowest internet connected developed country with an average download speed of 46.24 Mbps. New Zealand ranks slightly higher at 50th, with an average download speed of 73.87 Mbps.

Australia’s Internet Infrastructure Falls ShortOceania – Internet SpeedsInternet Usage in Oceania Surges Over The Past DecadeFactors Affecting Internet Speed In AustraliaAustralia’s High-Cost Low Speed Internet.Australia’s Explanation For Slow Internet Speeds Australia Median Country Speeds July 2023Government Policies11 Years Past When The Australian Government Admits It Was Wrong About Broadband$3.5 Billion Investment A Waste Of MoneyUSA’s Lightning-Fast 10Gbps Internet Speed Plans at Just $49 a Month Leaves Australia In The Slow LaneList Of Countries With The Best Internet SpeedThe Digital Gulf Widens

The Akamai State of the Internet Report says Australia’s internet connection speeds are now slower than 50 other nations, including Thailand, Estonia, Bulgaria and Kenya.

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