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Jun 26, 2024

June 1871: Maxwell and His Demon

Posted by in category: physics

This month in 1,871, James Clerk demonstrated entropy with a thought experiment now known as’s Demon.


The American Physical Society is a nonprofit membership organization working to advance physics by fostering a vibrant, inclusive, and global community dedicated to science and society.

Jun 26, 2024

The Future of Technology: Impact on Labor, Economy, and Society

Posted by in categories: economics, robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation

Disruptive innovations in technology, such as humanoid robots and electric vehicles, will lead to significant changes in labor, economy, and society, posing both opportunities and challenges for the future.

Questions to inspire discussion.

Continue reading “The Future of Technology: Impact on Labor, Economy, and Society” »

Jun 26, 2024

Immunotherapy Significantly Increases the Number of Patients Free from Bowel Cancer: Clinical trial

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

An immunotherapy drug given before surgery instead of chemotherapy meant that over ten times more patients with a certain genetic profile were cancer-free after surgery, according to clinical trial results presented by researchers at UCL and UCLH.

The findings, presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting 2024, are interim results from the NEOPRISM-CRC phase II clinical trial assessing whether the immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab can improve outcomes for patients with stage two or stage three MMR deficient/MSI-High bowel cancer. The trial was a collaboration among UCL, UCLH, the Christie NHS Foundation Trust in Manchester, St. James’s University Hospital in Leeds, University Hospital Southampton and the University of Glasgow.

Bowel cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK, with around 42,900 cases a year. Though still predominantly a cancer that affects older people, cases among the under 50s have been increasing in recent decades.

Jun 26, 2024

Marzenakrp/Nocha

Posted by in category: futurism

One Thousand and One Pairs: A “novel” challenge for long-context language models.

Marzena Karpinska, Katherine Thai, Kyle Lo, Tanya Goyal, Mohit Iyyer UMass NLP, Allen Institute, & Princeton June 2024 📃 Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.16264 👩‍💻 Code & Sample Data: https://github.com/notifications/beta/shelf


Contribute to marzenakrp/nocha development by creating an account on GitHub.

Jun 26, 2024

How China’s Moon mission could reveal the origins of life on Earth

Posted by in categories: biological, nuclear energy, space, sustainability

Update: China´s Moon Mission Returned Now Samples from the #Moon to #Earth. Why this is important, specially for the origin of life:


On June 1, China’s Chang’e-6 lander touched down in the South Pole-Atkin Basin — the largest, deepest, and oldest impact crater on the Moon. The probe almost immediately set to work drilling into the ground to collect about 2 kilograms of lunar material, which is already headed back to Earth, with a landing in Mongolia planned for June 25. It isn’t just planetary geologists who are excited at what the returning rocks and soil might reveal. If we’re lucky, the first samples from the lunar farside could also include some of the oldest fossils ever found.

The SPA basin, as it’s sometimes called, is the result of a gigantic impact that occurred between 4.2 and 4.3 billion years ago, at a time when the Moon and Earth were very close neighbors. The crater is roughly 2,500 kilometers (1,600 miles) in diameter and between 6.2 km and 8.2 km (3.9 to 5.1 mi) deep, encompassing several smaller craters like the Apollo basin, where Chang’e-6 landed, and Shackleton crater, parts of which lie in perpetual shadow.

Continue reading “How China’s Moon mission could reveal the origins of life on Earth” »

Jun 26, 2024

AI Startup Etched Unveils Transformer ASIC Claiming 20x Speed-up Over NVIDIA H100

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A new startup emerged out of stealth mode today to power the next generation of generative AI. Etched is a company that makes an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) to process “Transformers.” The transformer is an architecture for designing deep learning models developed by Google and is now the powerhouse behind models like OpenAI’s GPT-4o in ChatGPT, Antrophic Claude, Google Gemini, and Meta’s Llama family. Etched wanted to create an ASIC for processing only the transformer models, making a chip called Sohu. The claim is Sohu outperforms NVIDIA’s latest and greatest by an entire order of magnitude. Where a server configuration with eight NVIDIA H100 GPU clusters pushes Llama-3 70B models at 25,000 tokens per second, and the latest eight B200 “Blackwell” GPU cluster pushes 43,000 tokens/s, the eight Sohu clusters manage to output 500,000 tokens per second.

Jun 26, 2024

Video Shows OpenAI Engineer Admitting It’s “Deeply Unfair” to “Build AI and Take Everyone’s Job Away”

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

You want to do anything about it, bud?


A resurfaced video shows an OpenAI engineer conceding that it’s “deeply unfair” to “build AI and take everyone’s job away.”

Jun 26, 2024

Should social media come with a health warning?

Posted by in category: health

Yes, use of these platforms can sometimes harm. But it’s not all bad.

Jun 26, 2024

Supershoes are reshaping distance running

Posted by in category: futurism

Kenyan runners, like many others, are grappling with the impact of expensive, high-performance shoes.

The track at Moi University’s Eldoret Town Campus doesn’t look like a facility designed for champions.

Jun 26, 2024

AI Hype Or Reality: The Singularity — Will AI Surpass Human Intelligence?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, singularity

Explore the concept of the singularity— the point where AI could surpass human intelligence—and its potential impact on society.

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