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Oct 15, 2020
4000° Lightsaber Test (Cuts Anything!)
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: media & arts, weapons
Video of them testing their prototype lightsaber.
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Oct 15, 2020
Scientists Found a New Way to Control the Brain With Light—No Surgery Required
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Controlling brains with light.
Thanks to optogenetics, in just ten years we’ve been able to artificially incept memories in mice, decipher brain signals that lead to pain, untangle the neural code for addiction, reverse depression, restore rudimentary sight in blinded mice, and overwrite terrible memories with happy ones. Optogenetics is akin to a universal programming language for the brain.
But it’s got two serious downfalls: it requires gene therapy, and it needs brain surgery to implant optical fibers into the brain.
Continue reading “Scientists Found a New Way to Control the Brain With Light—No Surgery Required” »
Oct 15, 2020
‘Machines set loose to slaughter’: the dangerous rise of military AI
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: military, robotics/AI
Doug Robinson
‘Machines set loose to slaughter’: Dangerous rise of military AI…
Continue reading “‘Machines set loose to slaughter’: the dangerous rise of military AI” »
Oct 15, 2020
Elon Musk Shows Off Underside of Gigantic New Starship Prototype
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
Oct 15, 2020
Airbus wins ambitious ESA mission to bring first Mars samples back to Earth
Posted by Malak Trabelsi Loeb in category: space
Luxembourg, 14 October 2020. – Airbus has been selected by the European Space Agency (ESA) for its ambitious five-year mission to go to Mars and bring the first samples from the Red Planet back to Earth, the company announced in Toulouse.
Airbus acts as ESA’s prime contractor for the Earth Return Orbiter (ERO), the first ever spacecraft to bring Martian samples back to Earth, the company said. The value of the contract is € 491 million.
Continue reading “Airbus wins ambitious ESA mission to bring first Mars samples back to Earth” »
Oct 15, 2020
Nvidia will power world’s fastest AI supercomputer, to be located in Europe
Posted by Malak Trabelsi Loeb in categories: robotics/AI, supercomputing
Nvidia is is going to be powering the world’s fastest AI supercomputer, a new system dubbed “Leonardo” that’s being built by the Italian multi-university consortium CINECA, a global supercomputing leader. The Leonardo system will offer as much as 10 exaflops of FP16 AI performance capabilities, and be made up of more than 14,000 Nvidia Ampere-based GPUS once completed.
Leonardo will be one of four new supercomputers supported by a cross-European effort to advance high-performance computing capabilities in the region, which will eventually offer advanced AI capabilities for processing applications across both science and industry. Nvidia will also be supplying its Mellanox HDR InfiniBand networks to the project in order to enable performance across the clusters with low-latency broadband connections.
The other computers in the cluster include MeluXina in Luxembourg and Vega in Slovenia, as well as a new supercooling unit coming online in the Czech Republic. The pan-European consortium also plans four more Supercomputers for Bulgaria, Finland, Portugal and Spain; though, those will follow later and specifics around their performance and locations aren’t yet available.
Oct 15, 2020
A New Approach to Analyzing the Morphology of Dendritic Spines
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Summary: A clusterization approach allows researchers to analyze dendritic spines in new ways.
Source: SPbPU
Dendritic spines are small protrusions from a neuron’s dendrite membrane, where contact with neighboring axons is formed to receive synaptic input. These spines have different sizes, shapes, and density. Changes in the characteristics of the dendritic spines are associated with learning and memory and could be a feature of neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s disease and Huntington’s disease.
While surveying globular clusters in the nearby Andromeda galaxy in October 2019, a group of astronomers stumbled upon a cluster that just didn’t seem quite right.