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Mar 17, 2018

The best drones you can buy

Posted by in category: drones

D rones have become the must-have gadget for tech fans and videographers. Drones let you become a pilot and aerial photographer, getting incredible footage or even taking part in activities like drone racing.

There are a couple of major drone brands out there. DJI is known for making high-end drones close to those used by professionals. Parrot makes cheaper drones, which have slightly less powerful cameras but come cheaper.

Until recently, GoPro produced the GoPro Karma, but the company has recently cut its drone division and will no longer be producing it, so we have left it out for the purposes of this review.

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Mar 17, 2018

Is There a Mind-Body Connection, Or Do Our Brains Work Alone?

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Our brains aren’t flying solo; our emotions also come into play when we’re interacting with the world, new research finds.

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Mar 17, 2018

North Korea’s Most Powerful Missile Now Has Its Own Shrine

Posted by in category: existential risks

Satellite imaging, astronomy and a smart hunch about North Korea propaganda confirmed the launching site of the North Korean missile and a new monument.

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Mar 17, 2018

Stephen Hawking Lived Beyond His Body

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, sustainability

For all of us, the act of being and thinking requires a network of complex support. The late physicist’s disability made it visible.

Midnight. As I was browsing the internet, I saw, like shooting stars, emails suddenly appear and disappear from the right-hand corner of my computer screen. The first from CNN announcing the death of Stephen Hawking, the second from an editor at The Atlantic asking me to write about him.

I had written about the man for 10 years—as a biographer of some sort, or an anthropologist of science to be more precise, studying the traces of Hawking’s presence. But now I felt a powerless inertia, unable to write anything. I didn’t think I would be affected by his death, but it touched me deeply. I was overwhelmed by the numerous articles that started to appear all over the world doing precisely what I had studied for so long and so carefully: recycling over and over again the same stories about him. Born 300 years after the death of Galileo Galilei, holder of Cambridge’s Lucasian Chair of Mathematics (once held by Isaac Newton), and now … died on the same day Albert Einstein was born. The life paths of history’s most iconic scientists intersected in weird ways. The puzzle seemed complete: Hawking had fully entered the pantheon of the great.

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Mar 17, 2018

Let the robots have the damn jobs—all of them!

Posted by in categories: economics, employment, robotics/AI

There are several ways we can deal with the troubles that lie ahead during the transition to full automation. Some experts and companies are exploring basic income, the centuries-old idea of giving unconditional money to all citizens, enough for them to live their lives. Other thought leaders such as Bill Gates are proposing robot taxes, where companies that use automation pay certain fees for the jobs they take away from humans. Other solutions might emerge.

Automation will continue to move forward at an accelerating pace. We don’t need to fear about the destination. Instead, we must prepare ourselves for the rocky road ahead. I’m not worried about the robots taking all the jobs. I’m worried about them leaving some to the humans.

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Mar 17, 2018

Aubrey and myself announcing a new way to get more scientists to work on cures for aging — The Forever Healthy Foundation Fellowship in Rejuvenation Biotechnology

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

All Ph.D.s invited smile

Details: https://www.undoing-aging.org/news/request-for-proposal-anno…technology

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Mar 17, 2018

The New Age of Manufacturing

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

Hundreds of millions of jobs affected. Trillions of dollars of wealth created. These are the potential impacts of a coming wave of automation. In this episode of Moving Upstream, we travelled to Asia to see the next generation of industrial robots, what they’re capable of, and whether they’re friend or foe to low-skilled workers.

Watch more episodes: wsj.com/upstream

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Mar 16, 2018

Physical Review Journals

Posted by in category: futurism

Throughout 2018 APS is celebrating the 125th anniversary of The Physical Review. To commemorate this milestone the editors present a selection of important articles.

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Mar 16, 2018

‘What Is Real?’ Review: Quarks and Quandaries

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Many physicists sidestep the philosophical puzzles altogether, preferring to “shut up and calculate.”

If quantum mechanics can be said to have a capital city it is surely Copenhagen, birthplace of the physicist Niels Bohr (1885−1962) and of the formalism he and others developed to make sense of the subatomic realm. Their approach, the “Copenhagen Interpretation,” is expounded in every textbook. Yet it has been questioned many times, and in “What Is Real?” Adam Becker tells a fascinating if complex story of quantum dissidents. Two of the most important not only displeased Bohr, they also attracted the attention of the FBI.

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Mar 16, 2018

America Already Has a ‘Space Force’

Posted by in category: space

The Air Force controls most of America’s plans for warfighting in space—but politicians have voiced concerns that the U.S. could be vulnerable to Russian and Chinese attacks.

David AxeDavid Axe

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