Menu

Blog

Page 6362

Jan 31, 2021

AI needs an open labeling platform

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Training data platforms are emerging as the best way to handle the collection, labeling, and feeding of data into supervised learning models.

Jan 31, 2021

The Robots Return, How Have Atlas, ASIMO, Cheetah, Spot and Pepper faired 4+ Years On?

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

https://brilliant.org/CuriousDroid.
About 4−1÷2 years ago I did a video about the most advanced robots at the time, ASIMO, Atlas, Cheetah, Spot and Pepper. After seeing the Atlas dance video I thought it would be good to see what has happened to our famous five robots and what the future might be for legged robots and humanoid style robots.

This video is sponsored by Brilliant.org :
https://brilliant.org/CuriousDroid.

Continue reading “The Robots Return, How Have Atlas, ASIMO, Cheetah, Spot and Pepper faired 4+ Years On?” »

Jan 31, 2021

Fujifilm and IBM Set World Record With 580TB Magnetic Tapes

Posted by in category: computing

Working together for over 15 years, IBM Research and Fujifilm achieved a recording density of 317Gbpsi.

Jan 31, 2021

Autonomous food delivery company Starship Technologies, which has enjoyed explosive growth, says kids are feeding its robots bananas

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI

Autonomous food delivery company Starship Technologies hit 1 million deliveries this month, and has doubled the size of its robot fleet.


Starship Technologies, the autonomous delivery company that sends little six-wheeled robots to people’s doorsteps with groceries and takeout, has had an astonishing year.

Jan 31, 2021

2020 Was a Breakout Year for Crispr

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Between glimpses of a medical cure and winning science’s shiniest prize, this proved to the gene-editing technology’s biggest year yet.

Jan 31, 2021

Watch a Badass Wearable Robot Arm Hulk Smash Through a Wall

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, wearables

😃


The arm itself weighs about as much as a real human arm and can lift 11 pounds.

Jan 31, 2021

Will Covid-19 evolve resistance to vaccines?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Many believe that drug companies should already be updating their vaccines to target mutated versions of the Covid-19 spike protein. But can the patterns of mutations scientists are seeing popping up in Covid-19 around the world offer any clues about how the virus will continue to evolve?

“It is hard to speculate, but it is interesting that all of a sudden there does seem to be a lot of mutations appearing that could be associated with immune escape or immune recognition,” says Brendan Larsen, a PhD student working with Worobey in Arizona. He recently identified a new variant of Covid-19 circulating in Arizona that has the H69/V70 deletion seen in several other versions of the virus. While still only spreading at a relatively low level there and in other states of the US, it suggests that this particular mutation is recurring independently around the world.


Every time the coronavirus passes from person to person it picks up tiny changes to its genetic code, but scientists are starting to notice patterns in how the virus is mutating.

Continue reading “Will Covid-19 evolve resistance to vaccines?” »

Jan 30, 2021

Enjoy your ride with reTyre ONE bicycle tyre system

Posted by in category: transportation

Enjoy your ride with the world’s first zip-on bicycle tire system!

Jan 30, 2021

New NASA Challenge Seeks Novel Food System Technologies

Posted by in categories: food, space

There is a prize purse of up to $500000 for the team that can keep the astronauts fed during deep space journeys. Read the details here.

Jan 30, 2021

Surround sound from lightweight roll-to-roll printed loudspeaker paper

Posted by in categories: electronics, futurism

If the Institute for Print and Media Technology at Chemnitz University of Technology has its way, many loudspeakers of the future will not only be as thin as paper, but will also sound impressive. This is a reality in the laboratories of the Chemnitz researchers, who back in 2015 developed the multiple award-winning T-Book—a large-format illustrated book equipped with printed electronics. If you turn a page, it begins to sound through a speaker invisibly located inside the sheet of paper. “The T-Book was and is a milestone in the development of printed electronics, but development is continuing all the time,” says Prof. Dr. Arved C. Hübler, under whose leadership this technology trend, which is becoming increasingly important worldwide, has been driven forward for more than 20 years.