Menu

Blog

Page 8

Jul 6, 2024

Is AI lying to me? Scientists warn of growing capacity for deception

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Researchers find instances of systems double-crossing opponents, bluffing, pretending to be human and modifying behaviour in tests.

Jul 6, 2024

A.I. Begins Ushering In an Age of Killer Robots

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Driven by the war with Russia, many Ukrainian companies are working on a major leap forward in the weaponization of consumer technology.

Jul 6, 2024

Japan introduces enormous humanoid robot to maintain train lines

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

The 12-metre high machine has coke bottle eyes and a crude Wall-E-like head, as well as large arms that can be fitted with blades or paint brushes.

Jul 6, 2024

New study shows mysterious solar particle blasts can devastate the ozone layer, bathing Earth in radiation for years

Posted by in category: particle physics

Every few thousand years, the Sun unleashes a burst of high-energy particles that can have serious consequences for life on Earth.

Jul 6, 2024

Hopper Is a German-Built Three-Wheeler That Unifies the Benefits of E-Bikes and Cars

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability, transportation

As the modern world faces various environmental challenges, city dwellers are increasingly looking for more sustainable and energy-efficient mobility solutions for their daily commutes.


With a partially-enclosed body, comfy seats, and a steering wheel, this electric three-wheeler is much comfier and more stable than a regular bike.

Continue reading “Hopper Is a German-Built Three-Wheeler That Unifies the Benefits of E-Bikes and Cars” »

Jul 6, 2024

Huge Progress Happening In PS4 Emulation With ShadPS4

Posted by in category: entertainment

With another emulator capable of running 3D PlayStation 4 games, good PS4 emulation might arrive sooner than a PC port of Bloodborne.

Jul 6, 2024

Engineers find a way to protect microbes from extreme conditions

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food, health

Microbes that are used for health, agricultural, or other applications need to be able to withstand extreme conditions, and ideally the manufacturing processes used to make tablets for long-term storage. MIT researchers have now developed a new way to make microbes hardy enough to withstand these extreme conditions.

Their method involves mixing bacteria with food and drug additives from a list of compounds that the FDA classifies as “generally regarded as safe.” The researchers identified formulations that help to stabilize several different types of microbes, including yeast and bacteria, and they showed that these formulations could withstand high temperatures, radiation, and industrial processing that can damage unprotected microbes.

In an even more extreme test, some of the microbes recently returned from a trip to the International Space Station, coordinated by Space Center Houston Manager of Science and Research Phyllis Friello, and the researchers are now analyzing how well the microbes were able to withstand those conditions.

Jul 6, 2024

Elon Musk’s liquid-cooled ‘Gigafactory’ AI data centers get a plug from Supermicro CEO — Tesla and xAI’s new supercomputers will have 350,000 Nvidia GPUs, both will be online within months

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, supercomputing, sustainability

The massive data centers use liquid cooling for top performance.

Jul 6, 2024

SpaceX’s first Polaris Dawn mission to launch after July 30

Posted by in categories: government, space travel

The first commercial spacewalk mission looks to be back on schedule with Polaris Dawn saying that it will launch no earlier than July 31, 2024. The Dragon spacecraft is slated to carry the four-person crew farther from Earth than any mission in over 50 years.

Commercial space flights mean a lot more than private firms filling government space contracts. Though most private missions today carry cargo and crews to and from the International Space Station (ISS), the future will see more and more private visits to orbit that have nothing to do with national governments.

On September 15, 2021, the first completely private mission in history, a privately owned and operated rocket putting a privately owned and operated spacecraft into orbit with private astronauts aboard on a private charter, lifted off from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The craft was a SpaceX Crew Dragon and the launch vehicle a Falcon 9 rocket that boosted the Inspiration4 mission to an altitude of 357 miles (575 km).

Jul 6, 2024

Wormholes and quantum entanglement | Juan Maldacena

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

[2023 APCTP Spring Colloquium] Wormholes and quantum entanglement.

Date: 10 March, 2023
Speaker: Prof. Juan Maldacena.

Continue reading “Wormholes and quantum entanglement | Juan Maldacena” »

Page 8 of 11,416First56789101112Last