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Jan 15, 2020
The hunt for the ‘angel particle’ continues
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: particle physics
In 2017, researchers believed they had found evidence for the elusive Majorana fermion. Now, a new study found that the exotic class of particles may still be confined to theory.
Jan 15, 2020
Art therapy is finally being taken seriously as a tool for boosting health
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: health
In the past two decades, scientists have also starting looking at art as a way to keep people mentally and physically healthy. In a report, the World Health Organization points to just how powerful art can be as a therapy. The report has problems but could lend heft and credibility to the field.
Jan 15, 2020
City of Las Vegas detects and deters major cyberattack
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: cybercrime/malcode
Security breach took place on January 7, but the city said it detected the intrusion in time to prevent any damage.
Jan 15, 2020
Windows 10 Has a Security Flaw So Severe the NSA Disclosed It
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: privacy, security
In a shift toward transparency, the National Security Agency announced a bug that could have left over 900 million PCs vulnerable to attack.
Jan 15, 2020
Australian man becomes first robotic kidney transplant recipient in the world
Posted by Brent Ellman in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Jan 15, 2020
The Rise of Superhumans and the Challenges for Learning and Development
Posted by Alexandra Whittington in categories: business, education, transhumanism
How will learning and development cope with the growing trend of humans augmenting their basic capabilities with chemical, electronic, physical, and genetic enhancements?
We’ve been entertained by a never ending stream of Marvel and DC Comics characters with super powers ranging from x-ray vision to mind control. Many of us have also spent time fantasising about the additional capabilities we’d like to help see us through the day. But what happens when those boundaries blur between science fantasy and everyday reality?
The practice of human enhancement or augmentation is a phenomena well underway across society – although the concept may be new to many of us. Over the next 25 years, the integration of information and communications technologies (ICTs), cognitive science, new materials, and bio-medicine could fundamentally improve the human condition and greatly enhance human intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities. As a result, the notion of the “transhuman” could emerge. For example, we are well underway with the process of augmenting human beings’ cognitive and intellectual abilities through technological implants, such as memory storage. These enhancements mean humans could achieve heightened senses and biological capabilities that are largely the prerogative of other species (e.g. speed, resistance, adaptation to extreme conditions, etc.).
The speed of development is truly mind blowing. Advances in cognitive enhancement drugs and “nootropic” supplements, electronic brain stimulation techniques, genetic modification, age extension treatments, 3D printed limbs and organs, and body worn exoskeletons, have given rise to the notion of enhancing the human brain and body well beyond the limits of natural evolutionary processes. Indeed, many leaders in the field of AI are fierce advocates of Transhumanism as the next stage of human evolution—arguing that if humans want to keep up with AI, we ourselves will have to become machines—embedding technology in our brains and bodies to give us similar levels of processing power.
Continue reading “The Rise of Superhumans and the Challenges for Learning and Development” »
Jan 15, 2020
An ‘unknown’ burst of gravitational waves just lit up Earth’s detectors
Posted by Michael Lance in category: physics
In 2019, many large tech firms announced plans to offer financial products and services. WSJ’s Liz Hoffman explains why Google, Apple, and others are offering products that might someday replace your wallet.
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Continue reading “Why Big Tech Is Getting Into Finance | WSJ” »
Jan 15, 2020
Scientists Discovered ‘Mini-Computers’ in Human Neurons—and That’s Great News for AI
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
The neurons in our cortex, the outermost “crust” of our brain, seem to have uniquely evolved to sustain complex computations in their input cables.