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Apr 21, 2018
How Music Generated
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: information science, internet, media & arts, robotics/AI
There is an enduring fear in the music industry that artificial intelligence will replace the artists we love, and end creativity as we know it.
As ridiculous as this claim may be, it’s grounded in concrete evidence. Last December, an AI-composed song populated several New Music Friday playlists on Spotify, with full support from Spotify execs. An entire startup ecosystem is emerging around services that give artists automated songwriting recommendations, or enable the average internet user to generate customized instrumental tracks at the click of a button.
But AI’s long-term impact on music creation isn’t so cut and dried. In fact, if we as an industry are already thinking so reductively and pessimistically about AI from the beginning, we’re sealing our own fates as slaves to the algorithm. Instead, if we take the long view on how technological innovation has made it progressively easier for artists to realize their creative visions, we can see AI’s genuine potential as a powerful tool and partner, rather than as a threat.
Apr 20, 2018
Holographic sails fixes last technical issues for interstellar laser pushed sails
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
Apr 20, 2018
UK man’s super-gonorrhoea cured — but now two Australians have it
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, health, sex
A UK man who caught what was dubbed the world’s “worst-ever” case of super-gonorrhoea has been cured, Public Health England (PHE) said — but two similar cases have been reported in Australia.
The unidentified heterosexual man, who had a partner in the UK, picked up the infection having sex with another woman in South-East Asia, PHE said.
Health officials said it was the first time the infection could not be cured with the regular treatment — a combination of antibiotics azithromycin and ceftriaxone.
Continue reading “UK man’s super-gonorrhoea cured — but now two Australians have it” »
Apr 20, 2018
The Yellowstone supervolcano is a disaster waiting to happen
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Scientists have new insight into the restless magma chambers underlying Yellowstone National Park.
Apr 20, 2018
Kepler Telescope Finds Ten More Possibly Life Supporting Planets
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: alien life
The planets are rocky and 1.75 times the size of Earth, and are being referred to as ‘super-Earths’ or ‘mini-Neptunes’.
Apr 20, 2018
University of Central Florida planetary scientist highlights CubeSat progress
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
ORLANDO, Fla.—Adrienne Dove, a University of Central Florida (UCF) planetary scientist, physicist, and associate professor, capped off the university’s 2018 Distinguished Speaker series with a talk about CubeSats and UCF’s involvement with CubeSat-based science missions.
Highlights of a growing program
Dove began her talk detailing some of the key activities of the university’s Physics Department.
Continue reading “University of Central Florida planetary scientist highlights CubeSat progress” »
Apr 20, 2018
27-Million-Year-Old Fossil Found In New Zealand Helps Identify World’s Oldest Known Baleen Whale
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: evolution
Ignored for 30 years after its discovery, this archaic baleen whale finally gets a place in the spotlight.
A whale fossil unearthed three decades ago in New Zealand’s South Canterbury district has led to an unexpected find that rewrites the history of whale evolution, National Geographic reports.
The fossil dates back 27 million years ago and was identified as a previously unknown genus of baleen whale.
Apr 20, 2018
Taking the Pulse of Greenhouse Gases
Posted by Michael Lance in category: transportation
It can happen in a flash — airborne science, that is.
Two hundred microseconds, to be exact. With lasers shot from the belly of a King Air B200 aircraft.
That’s right, scientists are shooting lasers at atmospheric gases — not to zap them out of existence, but to measure them.