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Oct 15, 2017
BMW is putting IBM’s Watson AI in the passenger seat
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
The BMW i8 is already one of the most futuristic-looking cars on the road, but it’s about to get more innovative inside, too. BMW has just announced a brand-new tech collaboration with IBM, which will see the tech giant’s Watson AI tested in four of BMW’s hybrid sports cars. The project will see BMW engineers and IBM researchers work together in Germany, as both IBM and BMW have research facilities in Munich.
The project aims to make driving assistance and information more personalised and intuitive – and Watson looks to be the perfect candidate for the job. IBM’s powerful AI should make the car’s existing systems much easier to use, and BMW has already given a few examples of how it could work. The i8’s manual will be by Watson, so drivers will be able to enquire about vehicle information in natural language, rather than select phrases. In the same way, BMW and IBM want the Watson-fitted i8 to provide updates on everything from fuel levels to traffic updates in a simple, easy way.
However, Watson’s machine learning will have another benefit, too: personalisation. By gradually learning the routes, language and needs of a driver, Watson will be able to deliver the right amount of information almost before it’s needed.
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Oct 15, 2017
Your future companion in your old age could be a robot
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: food, habitats, robotics/AI
The market is definitely there. But, it needs to be able to do a minimum amount of practical things, in about this order: 1. it needs to be able to cook even the most basic of meals, being unable to cook for themselves is usually the main reason someone has to go into a nursing home; 2. being able to clean your average kitchen and bathroom; 3. being able to do basic yard tasks, operating a lawnmower and a snowblower. Those would be the most important, after those get mastered have it equipped to do more niche tasks and entertainment features.
As to when, we have clumsy humanoid robots right now, and AI will supposedly reach human level around 2029. It will just be a task of merging those two between now and then, and getting that robot down to a reasonable cost, which i think would be in the neighborhood of a brand new SUV.
As artificial intelligence advances, we humans will form relationships with our robot helpers and caregivers.
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Oct 15, 2017
Wiping Off all Life From Earth is Not Easy
Posted by Yugal Agrawal in category: existential risks
Have you ever imagined what it would take to wipe of all life from Earth? It turns out that another mass extinction is highly improbable.
Oct 15, 2017
Lost in Transportation: Nucleocytoplasmic Transport Defects in ALS and Other Neurodegenerative Diseases
Posted by Ian Hale in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Oct 15, 2017
Synthetic organs, nanobots and DNA ‘scissors’: the future of medicine (w/video)
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology
Nanobots that patrol our bodies, killer immune cells hunting and destroying cancer cells, biological scissors that cut out defective genes: these are just some of technologies that Cambridge researchers are developing which are set to revolutionise medicine in the future.
In a new film to coincide with the recent launch of the Cambridge Academy of Therapeutic Sciences, researchers discuss some of the most exciting developments in medical research and set out their vision for the next 50 years.
Oct 15, 2017
Can We Rejuvenate Our Bodies Using Telomerase to Lengthen Telomeres?
Posted by Brady Hartman in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Telomerase replenishes telomeres, extending the cell’s lifespan. Researchers hope that telomerase enhancement will rejuvenate our organs.
Oct 15, 2017
New Senolytics Reverse Aging
Posted by Brady Hartman in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Senolytics have been a hot topic lately. Here’s a primer.
Senolytics reverse aging by killing senescent cells. Researchers have found seven senolytics and are testing them in clinical trials.
Oct 15, 2017
The nature of warfare is changing. It’s time governments caught up
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: evolution, military
The future of military success will now be owned by those who conceive, design, build and operate combinations of information-based technologies to deliver new combat power. Caution, bureaucratic inertia, vested interest and institutional preference for evolution won’t work: this will only leave room for competitors to steal decisive advantage in the most challenging of competitions on Earth.
Unless the private and public sectors start sharing ideas, the UK will be left behind in the new arms race says former Joint Forces Command chief Richard Barrons.
Oct 15, 2017
When Cell Death Goes Bad — Researchers Discover Role in Cancer and Inflammation-linked Diseases
Posted by Brady Hartman in category: biotech/medical
There’s good cell death and then there’s the bad kind.
Programmed cell death goes haywire and causes cancer and many inflammation-related diseases, such as arthritis, atherosclerosis, and diabetes.