Menu

Blog

Page 7877

May 20, 2019

How Uber And Lyft Could Transform Healthcare

Posted by in categories: life extension, transportation

Where #Uber, Facebook, #Apple, #Microsoft, #Google, And #Amazon Are Investing In longevity and health span.


As Uber and Lyft grow their massive footprints, they are beginning to look towards the healthcare industry. Here’s what they’re doing in healthcare already and what they might do next.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Can Exponential Technologies Make Us Better Humans?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, singularity

In this post, Brett Schilke, Singularity University’s Director of Impact, asks us to consider whether exponential technologies like artificial intelligence can make us better people. He astutely observes the impact of his own interactions with AI-powered devices and invites you to do the same.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Does Some Deeper Level of Physics Underlie Quantum Mechanics? An Interview with Nobelist Gerard ’t Hooft

Posted by in category: quantum physics

VIENNA—Over the past several days, I attended a fascinating conference that explored an old idea of Einstein’s, one that was largely dismissed for decades: that quantum mechanics is not the root level of reality, but merely a hazy glimpse of something even deeper.

  • By George Musser on October 7, 2013

Read more

May 20, 2019

Podcast #31: Ethically Aligned Design in Autonomous Systems with John C. Havens

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI

Here is the latest Seeking Delphi™ podcast, with John C. Havens on IEEE’s newly minted guidelines on ethical design of autonomous systems.


“With artificial intelligence we are summoning the demon.”–Elon Musk.

Continue reading “Podcast #31: Ethically Aligned Design in Autonomous Systems with John C. Havens” »

May 20, 2019

New autism research on single neurons suggests signaling problems in brain circuits

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, neuroscience

Autism affects at least 2% of children in the United States—an estimated 1 in 59. This is challenging for both the patients and their parents or caregivers. What’s worse is that today there is no medical treatment for autism. That is in large part because we still don’t fully understand how autism develops and alters normal brain function.

One of the main reasons it is hard to decipher the processes that cause the disease is that it is highly variable. So how do we understand how autism changes the ?

Using a new technology called single-nucleus RNA sequencing, we analyzed the chemistry inside specific brain cells from both and those with autism and identified dramatic differences that may cause this disease. These autism-specific differences could provide valuable new targets for drug development.

Continue reading “New autism research on single neurons suggests signaling problems in brain circuits” »

May 20, 2019

Don’t kill that spider in your house. It’s unlikely to bite you and is good for the environment

Posted by in category: futurism

They’ll catch lots of pests, and most aren’t at all aggressive or dangerous.

Read more

May 20, 2019

NASA launches rah-rah trailer for 2024 moon mission: ‘We are going’

Posted by in category: space travel

Let Captain Kirk get you excited about returning humans to the moon.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Good News, Everybody! Someone Once Patented Plans For Keeping A Severed Head Alive

Posted by in category: futurism

O,.,0.


It was what’s called a “prophetic patent”—one that isn’t real yet.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Geologists Just Discovered a Source of Volcanoes Deeper Than Ever Before

Posted by in categories: materials, space

Researchers have pinpointed a previously unknown source of volcanoes in the extreme depths of Earth — in the transition zone between the upper and lower mantle.

Until now, we thought we had a handle on the ways in which volcanoes form, welling up from the molten regions in the upper mantle beneath our planet’s crust, but the new discovery takes things much farther down.

In the Bermuda islands, which sit atop an extinct volcanic seamount, geologists have found the first direct evidence that material from the transition zone, between 400 and 650 kilometres (250 and 400 miles) below Earth’s surface, can bubble up and be spewed out of volcanoes.

Continue reading “Geologists Just Discovered a Source of Volcanoes Deeper Than Ever Before” »

May 20, 2019

After augmented reality, the virtual world still affects you

Posted by in category: augmented reality

Augmented reality can change “how you turn your head, how well you do on tasks, and how you connect socially with other physical people in the room…”

Read more