With conversational AI, organizations can dramatically improve their customer experience. Here’s a look at the technology and where it’s headed.
The Future Of Conversational AI
Posted in futurism, robotics/AI
Posted in futurism, robotics/AI
With conversational AI, organizations can dramatically improve their customer experience. Here’s a look at the technology and where it’s headed.
Liz Parrish has more or less had a real-life ‘Death Becomes Her’ moment. But instead of drinking a magic potion that promises eternal youth, she claims to have become the first person in the world to take dual gene therapies to reverse ageing.
SINGAPORE/NEW DELHI (Reuters) — In the days leading up to the most violent border clash between India and China in decades, China brought in pieces of machinery, cut a trail into a Himalayan mountainside and may have even dammed a river, satellite pictures suggest.
The images, shot on Tuesday, a day after soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat in the freezing Galwan Valley, show an increase in activity from a week earlier.
O,.o I thought this was impossible o.o woah.
A U.S. Navy F/A-18E/F Super Hornet successfully launched a Stormbreaker glide bomb, a major step towards initial operational capability later this year. Stormbreaker is the Pentagon’s most advanced smart bomb to date, capable of seeking out and destroying moving targets and flying in night and adverse weather conditions.
TL;DR 206 | The Google Developer News Show
0:00 Android 11 Beta → https://goo.gle/3fzChBS
0:24 Introducing Google Play Asset Delivery → https://goo.gle/30R2pEn
0:47 Firebase Crashlytics SDK now publicly available → https://goo.gle/30SQxS8
1:05 Filestore now supports high performance → https://goo.gle/2YchJtr
1:33 New features from Google Maps Platform → https://goo.gle/3hCoRHd
1:53 Custom Cloud Monitoring dashboards → https://goo.gle/2AKHmsq
2:15 Introducing table-level access controls in BigQuery → https://goo.gle/3fzMcaJ
2:39 Introducing cross-region replica for Cloud SQL → https://goo.gle/2Bj9p1Q
2:49 Announcing sound null safety for Dart → https://goo.gle/2UTnEBr
Here to bring you the latest developer news from across Google is Developer Advocate Timothy Jordan. Tune in every week for a new episode, and let us know what you think of the latest announcements in the comments below! 😃
Follow Google Developers on Instagram → https://goo.gle/googledevs
Watch more #DevShow → https://goo.gle/GDevShow
New research on the two-dimensional (2-D) material graphene has allowed researchers to create smart adaptive clothing which can lower the body temperature of the wearer in hot climates.
A team of scientists from the University of Manchester’s National Graphene Institute have created a prototype garment to demonstrate dynamic thermal radiation control within a piece of clothing by utilising the remarkable thermal properties and flexibility of graphene. The development also opens the door to new applications such as, interactive infrared displays and covert infrared communication on textiles.
The human body radiates energy in the form of electromagnetic waves in the infrared spectrum (known as blackbody radiation). In a hot climate it is desirable to make use the full extent of the infrared radiation to lower the body temperature which can be achieved by using infrared-transparent textiles. As for the opposite case, infrared-blocking covers are ideal to minimise the energy loss from the body. Emergency blankets are a common example used to deal with treating extreme cases of body temperature fluctuation.
Last year, the Advanced LIGO-VIRGO gravitational-wave detector network recorded data from 35 merging black holes and neutron stars. A great result—but what did they miss? According to Dr. Rory Smith from the ARC Centre of Excellence in Gravitational Wave Discovery at Monash University in Australia—it’s likely there are another 2 million gravitational wave events from merging black holes, “a pair of merging black holes every 200 seconds and a pair of merging neutron stars every 15 seconds” that scientists are not picking up.
Dr. Smith and his colleagues, also at Monash University, have developed a method to detect the presence of these weak or “background” events that to date have gone unnoticed, without having to detect each one individually. The method—which is currently being test driven by the LIGO community—” means that we may be able to look more than 8 billion light years further than we are currently observing,” Dr. Smith said.
“This will give us a snapshot of what the early universe looked like while providing insights into the evolution of the universe.”
Honeywell’s enterprise customers can now access the company’s 64 quantum volume computer.