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Jan 22, 2021

China Wants to Be the World’s AI Superpower. Does It Have What It Takes?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Both AlphaFold’s and GPT-3’s success was due largely to the massive datasets they were trained on; no revolutionary new training methods or architectures were involved. If all it was going to take to advance AI was a continuation or scaling-up of this paradigm—more input data yields increased capability—China could well have an advantage.

But one of the biggest hurdles AI needs to clear to advance in leaps and bounds rather than baby steps is precisely this reliance on extensive, task-specific data. Other significant challenges include the technology’s fast approach to the limits of current computing power and its immense energy consumption.

Thus, while China’s trove of data may give it an advantage now, it may not be much of a long-term foothold on the climb to AI dominance. It’s useful for building products that incorporate or rely on today’s AI, but not for pushing the needle on how artificially intelligent systems learn. WeChat data on users’ spending habits, for example, would be valuable in building an AI that helps people save money or suggests items they might want to purchase. It will enable (and already has enabled) highly tailored products that will earn their creators and the companies that use them a lot of money.

Jan 22, 2021

Extraterrestrial Mineral Harder than Diamonds Discovered in Israel

Posted by in category: materials

A new discovery in the mountains of northern Israel has caused significant excitement for geologists around the world. While working in the Zevulun Valley, close to Mount Carmel, Israeli mining company Shefa Yamim found a new mineral never before discovered on earth.

The International Mineralogical Association regularly approves new minerals for its official list, with up to 100 new substances added to the register each year.

However, this latest discovery was hailed as a significant event, as it was previously believed that this type of mineral was only found on extraterrestrial material.

Jan 22, 2021

Researchers Turn Air into Clean Water Using Smart Aerogel

Posted by in category: futurism

Major water shortages are becoming more and more prevalent across our planet, with over a billion people already suffering from water scarcity.

Now, researchers at the National University of Singapore (NUS) have joined the fight to find solutions. The team has created a substance that pulls water from air without using any external power sources.

Their study was published in Science Advances.

Jan 22, 2021

AI and Big Data Memory Solutions: Improving our everyday lives | Samsung

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SV774u0LrOA

Samsung’s memory technology innovates artificial intelligence and Big Data analytics to bring impactful change to the way we live, work, and interact with each other. Through next-generation memory technology that enables faster and more complex tasks in AI and Big Data, Samsung takes part in the revolutionary advancement of technology that is enriching our everyday lives.

Jan 22, 2021

Healthy skin with OneSkin — Interview//Presentation with Carolina Reis Oliveira

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, life extension

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syFLnFSa6tg&feature=youtu.be

Oneskin — the first skin cream that destroys senescent cells:


Longevity, Health, Long Lifespans, and Halthspans, Psychology, Spirituality — I and Carolina Reis Oliveira talk about all these things in relation to the skin. Find out how you can have very healthy skin with OneSkin!

Continue reading “Healthy skin with OneSkin -- Interview//Presentation with Carolina Reis Oliveira” »

Jan 22, 2021

Quantum Computer Breakthrough: New Blueprint for Better, Faster Qubits

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

Researchers at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI have put forward a detailed plan of how faster and better defined quantum bits — qubits — can be created. The central elements are magnetic atoms from the class of so-called rare-earth metals, which would be selectively implanted into the crystal lattice of a material. Each of these atoms represents one qubit. The researchers have demonstrated how these qubits can be activated, entangled, used as memory bits, and read out. They have now published their design concept and supporting calculations in the journal PRX Quantum.

On the way to quantum computers, an initial requirement is to create so-called quantum bits or “qubits”: memory bits that can, unlike classical bits, take on not only the binary values of zero and one, but also any arbitrary combination of these states. “With this, an entirely new kind of computation and data processing becomes possible, which for specific applications means an enormous acceleration of computing power,” explains PSI researcher Manuel Grimm, first author of a new paper on the topic of qubits.

Jan 22, 2021

This is the World’s First Home Hydrogen Battery

Posted by in category: habitats

It’s not a perfect solution.

Jan 22, 2021

Experimental glider smashes record for high-altitude flight

Posted by in categories: surveillance, transportation

Circa 2018


Riding the wind above the Andes Mountains, an experimental glider has set a world record for high-altitude flight.

On Sept. 2, the sleek Perlan 2 glider carried two pilots to 76100 feet, or more than 14 miles, over the El Calafate region in southern Argentina. That’s the highest altitude ever reached by humans aboard an unpowered fixed-wing aircraft, and one of the highest altitudes reached by an aircraft of any description. Only spy planes and specialized balloons have flown higher.

Continue reading “Experimental glider smashes record for high-altitude flight” »

Jan 22, 2021

New website launched to document vulnerabilities in malware strains

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Controversy brewing?

But the site also touches on a sensitive topic in the cyber-security industry. For decades, security researchers have been secretly hacking back against malware operators.

Just like malware sometimes uses bugs in legitimate apps to infiltrate systems, security firms have also used bugs in malware code to infiltrate the attacker’s infrastructure.

Jan 22, 2021

Tini Veltman (1931–2021): From Assembly Language to a Nobel Prize—Stephen Wolfram Writings

Posted by in category: computing

Stephen Wolfram shares how he met physicist Tini Veltman, their conversations about computers and a bit about Veltman’s Nobel Prize-winning work.