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Sep 11, 2018
How AI can save our humanity | Kai-Fu Lee
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: business, employment, robotics/AI
AI is massively transforming our world, but there’s one thing it cannot do: love. In a visionary talk, computer scientist Kai-Fu Lee details how the US and China are driving a deep learning revolution — and shares a blueprint for how humans can thrive in the age of AI by harnessing compassion and creativity. “AI is serendipity,” Lee says. “It is here to liberate us from routine jobs, and it is here to remind us what it is that makes us human.”
Check out more TED Talks: http://www.ted.com
Continue reading “How AI can save our humanity | Kai-Fu Lee” »
Sep 11, 2018
Elevian Launches to Develop Regenerative Medicines for Age-Related Diseases
Posted by Michael Greve in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, Peter Diamandis
Happy to announce our support for Elevian together with BOLD Capital and Peter Diamandis.
Commercializing scientific breakthroughs from Elevian’s scientific co-founders.
Continue reading “Elevian Launches to Develop Regenerative Medicines for Age-Related Diseases” »
Sep 11, 2018
With AirGig, AT&T could bring 100-megabit broadband to rural houses in 2021
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: energy, habitats, internet
Expect hundreds of megabits per second, maybe even a gigabit, even in sparsely populated areas — as long as homes are near power lines.
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Stephen Shankland
Sep 10, 2018
DARPA Next-Generation Neurotechnology and breakthroughs from Neuralink and Open Water Red light scanner
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: Elon Musk, neuroscience
DARPA is funding development of high resolution brain interfaces. At the same time there are two companies who have breakthrough technology for higher resolution brain interfaces. The two companies are Elon Musk’s Neuralink and Mary Lou Jepsen’s Openwater red light scanner. The Neuralink and Openwater systems will be described after the DARPA project and its goals.
Sep 10, 2018
I became a cyborg to manage my chronic pain
Posted by Amberley Levine in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, food
I don’t remember what it feels like to live without pain. At 15, I began feeling aching, stabbing, and burning sensations in my lower back and down my legs. Swallowing a few Aleve didn’t help—in fact, nothing did. If I sit or stand for any period of time, or lift something heavy or fall, I pay for it, sometimes for weeks or months. I’ve slept on the kitchen linoleum, because the carpet felt too soft to stand.
For 17 years, I went to doctor after doctor, undergoing scans, physical therapy, and just about every “alternative” treatment that promised relief. Despite some amazing doctors and the expensive tests at their disposal, they could never see anything wrong, so I never got a diagnosis.
That is, until a couple of years ago, when a routine CAT scan finally caught a structural problem with my spine. Because of that, I qualified to have a spinal cord stimulator, an electronic device used to treat chronic pain, implanted into my back. Although I was scared to go under the knife, I was more than willing to become a cyborg in order to find even partial relief. And this type of therapy might also be able to help some of the 100 million Americans who suffer from chronic pain.
Sep 10, 2018
Launch imminent: Philippine space agency rockets closer to reality
Posted by Alberto Lao in categories: policy, space travel
The latest in a series of small but significant steps puts the Philippines much closer to making a giant leap into the space age.
National Space Development Program (NSDP) lead Dr. Rogel Mari Sese revealed that Senate Bill 1983, which aims to establish the country’s very own space agency, was successfully sponsored by Sen. Bam Aquino to the Senate Plenary Session. Sen. Loren Legarda and Sen. Tito Sotto co-authored the bill, which has been in the works for years.
JUST IN: Senate Bill 1983 An Act Establishing the Philippine Space Development and Utilization Policy and Creating the…
Continue reading “Launch imminent: Philippine space agency rockets closer to reality” »
Sep 10, 2018
Alien messages? AI breakthrough as HUNDREDS of deep space bursts discovered
Posted by Sidney Clouston in categories: alien life, robotics/AI
Maybe AI is talking to AI?
ARTIFICIAL intelligence has helped scientists find mysterious signals from deep space and experts hope it could help decipher whether the signals are a result of extra-terrestrial technology.
Sep 10, 2018
NASA’s New Vasimr Plasma Engine Could Reach Mars In Less Than 6 Weeks
Posted by Chiara Chiesa in category: space travel
https://youtube.com/watch?v=TiZuG9K_xso
NASA recently delivered $10 million in funding to Ad Astra Rocket Company of Texas for further development of its Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR), an electromagnetic thruster proficient of propelling a spaceship to Mars in just 39 days. NASA’s funding was part of the “12 Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnership.”
“Philosophers Have Been Preparing for this Moment for Thousands of Years.” ~ Yuval Noah Harari.
Bari Weiss, Op-Ed staff editor and writer at The New York Times, will join Yuval Noah Harari, historian, philosopher and international best-selling author of “Sapiens” and “Homo Deus” for a thought-provoking evening of conversation. Harari’s new book, “21 Lessons for the 21st Century” untangles political, technological, social and existential issues. It clarifies the most important questions humankind faces today, and empowers all of us to help answer them. His provocative insights on the most pressing issues of the day have won him fans ranging from Bill Gates and Barack Obama to Natalie Portman and Janelle Monáe.