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Dec 27, 2020

How AI and ML innovations are driving the need for hardware transformation (VB Live)

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

Learn how innovations in NLP, visual AI, recommendation models and scientific computing are pushing computer architecture to the cutting edge.

Dec 27, 2020

Ketamine may ease depression

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Jason Asbahr.

Reese Jones


New research suggests that electrophysiological brain signals associated with neural plasticity could help explain the rapid, antidepressant effects of the drug ketamine. The findings, European Neuropsychopharmacology, indicate that ketamine could reverse insensitivity to prediction error in depression.

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Dec 27, 2020

These tiny $17,500 prefab ‘urban escape pods’ from former Tesla and SpaceX designers are now available to preorder

Posted by in category: space travel

They will cost $17,500 and start fulfilling orders in March.

Dec 27, 2020

Arachnauts: NASA Sends Spiders to Space for Experimentation – Here’s What They Found

Posted by in categories: education, space

Humans have taken spiders into space more than once to study the importance of gravity to their web-building. What originally began as a somewhat unsuccessful PR experiment for high school students has yielded the surprising insight that light plays a larger role in arachnid orientation than previously thought.

The spider experiment by the US space agency NASA is a lesson in the frustrating failures and happy accidents that sometimes lead to unexpected research findings. The question was relatively simple: on Earth, spiders build asymmetrical webs with the center displaced towards the upper edge. When resting, spiders sit with their head downwards because they can move towards freshly caught prey faster in the direction of gravity.

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Dec 27, 2020

The Henry Ford Has Set New Milestone

Posted by in category: futurism

By digitizing its 100,000th artifact — a photograph of the 100,000th Fordson tractor produced.

Dec 27, 2020

Microbial Products Affect the Hallmarks Of Aging: 1) Mitochondrial Function

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Here’s my latest video!


The Hallmarks of Aging are well established, but what is less discussed is the impact of microbes and/or microbial products. The bacterial metabolite, LPS, increases during aging, and it negatively impacts mitochondrial function, thereby demonstrating a role for microbial products on one of the Hallmarks of Aging, mitochondrial dysfunction.

Dec 27, 2020

VR leaps into the disruptive phase

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, education, robotics/AI, virtual reality

In 2016, combined venture investments in VR, AR, and mixed reality (MR) exceeded $1.25 billion. In 2019, that number increased more than 3X to $4.1 billion. And today, major players are bringing new, second-generation VR headsets to market that have the power to revolutionize the VR industry, as well as countless others. Already, VR headset sales volumes are expected to reach 30 million per year by 2022. For example, Facebook’s new Oculus Quest 2 headset has outsold its predecessor by 5X in the initial weeks of the product launch. With the FAANG tech giants pouring billions into improving VR hardware, the VR space is massively heating up. In this blog, we will dive into a brief history of VR, recent investment surges, and the future of this revolutionary technology.


“Virtual reality is not a media experience,” explains Bailenson. “When it’s done well, it’s an actual experience. In general our findings show that VR causes more behavior changes, causes more engagement, causes more influence than other types of traditional media.”

Nor is empathy the only emotion VR appears capable of training. In research conducted at USC, psychologist Skip Rizzo has had considerable success using virtual reality to treat PTSD in soldiers. Other scientists have extended this to the full range of anxiety disorders.

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Dec 26, 2020

China Floats Covid-19 Theories That Point to Foreign Origins, Frozen Food

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food, government

HONG KONG—China is aggressively advancing alternative theories about the source of the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, muddying the waters as the World Health Organization prepares to launch a long-awaited investigation into the origins of the pandemic. In recent weeks, Chinese state media, often suggesting the virus came from outside China, have seized on a series of recent studies that show it was spreading outside the country earlier than first assumed. Government officials have also pushed the theory that the virus could have hitched a ride into the central Chinese city of Wuhan on frozen-food imports. After outbreaks in multiple Chinese cities in recent months including Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin and elsewhere, authorities pointed to frozen-food packaging as the potential origin. https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-pushes-alternative-theori…1607445463


WSJ Membership.

Dec 26, 2020

Apple’s 2021 chip strategy will create a massively parallel universe

Posted by in categories: cosmology, robotics/AI

Apple’s Macs will soon march into datacenters, equipped with multi-core CPU, GPU, and AI capabilities in tiny, power-efficient form factors.

Dec 26, 2020

Tiny Nuclear Reactors Are the Future of Energy

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

Nuclear energy accounts for nearly 20% of electricity generated in the US, more than wind, solar and hydro combined. But now, new nuclear reactor designs could bring far more widespread use and public acceptance of this powerful form of energy.

Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com.

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