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Jan 20, 2024

The device that can remotely and accurately monitor your breathing

Posted by in category: neuroscience

A new photonic radar system has been tested on cane toads by scientists at Sydney Nano and the School of Physics. It delivers contactless, high-definition detection of vital signs and could be developed for use in ICUs, aged-care facilities and for people with sleep apnoea or infants with breathing concerns.

Jan 20, 2024

New quantum optics technique sheds light on polariton interactions

Posted by in categories: innovation, quantum physics

An international collaboration, led by Macquarie University scientists, has introduced a new quantum optics technique that can provide unprecedented access to the fundamental properties of light-matter interactions in semiconductors.

The research, published Jan. 15 in the journal Nature Physics, uses a novel spectroscopic technique to explore interactions between photons and electrons at the .

Professor Thomas Volz, co-author of the study and research group leader at Macquarie University’s School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, says the work has the potential to drive a breakthrough in the global quest for accessible quantum photonic technologies.

Jan 20, 2024

Stabilityai/stablelm-2-zephyr-1_6b · Hugging Face

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Stability AI presents Stable LM 2 1.6B.

The base model is trained on approximately 2 trillion tokens for two epochs, incorporating multilingual data in English, Spanish, German, Italian, French, Portuguese, and Dutch.


We’re on a journey to advance and democratize artificial intelligence through open source and open science.

Jan 20, 2024

Scientific discovery in the age of artificial intelligence

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

The transformative impact of #AI on #scientific #discovery, showcasing #Breakthroughs and advancements that have the potential to reshape the way #research is conducted.


The advances in artificial intelligence over the past decade are examined, with a discussion on how artificial intelligence systems can aid the scientific process and the central issues that remain despite advances.

Jan 20, 2024

The New Story of the Milky Way’s Surprisingly Turbulent Past

Posted by in categories: mapping, space

The latest star maps are rewriting the story of our Milky Way, revealing a much more tumultuous history than astronomers suspected.

By Ann Finkbeiner

Jan 20, 2024

Crimson Chrome — High Gloss Metallic Red Cybertruck Wrap Ups the Wrap Wars Game

Posted by in category: futurism

A new Cybertruck wrap was just seen and this time, it’s a high gloss metallic red wrap that makes the Cybertruck look like it was made from inside a volcano. This is the most stunning wrap yet.

Jan 20, 2024

Artificial general intelligence — when AI becomes more capable than humans — is just moments away, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg declares

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Mark Zuckerberg said Meta will have “an absolutely massive amount of infrastructure” in place by the end of the year to prime it for training an artificial general intelligence model.

Jan 20, 2024

NEJM Journal Watch: Summaries of and commentary on original medical and scientific articles from key medical journals

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

Should all patients with COPD exacerbations receive oral steroids, or only those with eosinophilia?


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Jan 20, 2024

Supercomputer uses machine learning to set new speed record

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, robotics/AI, space travel, supercomputing

Give people a barrier, and at some point they are bound to smash through. Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier in 1947. Yuri Gagarin burst into orbit for the first manned spaceflight in 1961. The Human Genome Project finished cracking the genetic code in 2003. And we can add one more barrier to humanity’s trophy case: the exascale barrier.

The exascale barrier represents the challenge of achieving exascale-level computing, which has long been considered the benchmark for high performance. To reach that level, however, a computer needs to perform a quintillion calculations per second. You can think of a quintillion as a million trillion, a billion billion, or a million million millions. Whichever you choose, it’s an incomprehensibly large number of calculations.

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Jan 20, 2024

Japan Lands on the Moon Peregrine Reenters Earth’s Atmosphere

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

Japan’s Moon Snipper Landed on the Moon making Japan the fifth nation to accomplish a lunar landing and Astrobiotic’s Peregrine lunar lander reenters Earth’s atmosphere.

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