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Archive for the ‘robotics/AI’ category: Page 1572

Dec 31, 2020

Vertical Farms Run by AI and Robots To Solve the Land Crisis

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI, sustainability

Do you agree Eric Klien.


Ag-tech startup Plenty’s vertical farm produces 400 times more food per acre than a flat farm. Learn about the future of farming here.

Dec 30, 2020

Video Shows Boston Dynamics Robots Busting Impressive Dance Moves

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Atlas shimmies.

Dec 30, 2020

Boston Dynamics’ robots dance to ‘Do you love me’

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Boston Dynamics’ robots dance to “Do you love me”

Boston Dynamics, already well known for its cutting-edge robotics technology, has released a new video in which its latest machines can be seen dancing to the classic song “Do You Love Me” by the Contours.

This line-up includes the bipedal humanoid Atlas, the four-legged canine-inspired Spot, and the two-wheeled Handle. The robots’ moves appear eerily human-like as they strut their stuff – an effect known as the uncanny valley.

Dec 30, 2020

LeukemiaAiResearch/HIAS

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, encryption, robotics/AI

Genies like Adam are busy.


HIAS is an open-source Hospital Intelligent Automation System designed to control and manage an intelligent network of IoT connected devices. The network server provides locally hosted and encrypted databases, and a secure proxy to route traffic to the connected devices.

Dec 30, 2020

Making Money in a Futuristic World (Jobs and Future Business Ideas)

Posted by in categories: business, economics, Elon Musk, employment, physics, robotics/AI, space

In the not so distant future you could be making money from home by controlling robots, robots that are in another country. Or there will be products, such as a self driving Tesla car, that can go out and earn money on their own.

This video takes a look at the futuristic ways people will be earning money. From telepresence jobs and future business ideas, to new space businesses, and even how people will be storing their money — moving away from cash and credit cards to using chips that are in their bodies.

Continue reading “Making Money in a Futuristic World (Jobs and Future Business Ideas)” »

Dec 29, 2020

Boston Dynamics Robots Dance To Postmodern Jukebox

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Nothing to see here-just our future robot overlords dancing to retro PMJ tracks before they take over the world.

Dec 29, 2020

Sí, los robots de Boston Dynamics ya bailan mejor que muchos humanos

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

En un video, Boston Dynamics presumió el avance que ha alcanzado con sus robots al ejecutar tareas, antes limitadas a los humanos.

Dec 29, 2020

The Turing Test is obsolete. It’s time to build a new barometer for AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The head scientist for Alexa thinks the old benchmark for computing is no longer relevant for today’s AI era.

Dec 29, 2020

DeepMind’s MuZero conquers and learns the rules as it does

Posted by in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI

Albert Einstein once said, “You have to learn the rules of the game, and then you have to play better than anyone else.” That could well be the motto at DeepMind, as a new report reveals it has developed a program that can master complex games without even knowing the rules.

DeepMind, a subsidiary of Alphabet, has previously made groundbreaking strides using reinforcement learning to teach programs to master the Chinese board Go and the Japanese strategy game Shogi, as well as chess and challenging Atari video games. In all those instances, computers were given the rules of the game.

But Nature reported today that DeepMind’s MuZero has accomplished the same feats—and in some instances, beat the earlier programs—without first learning the rules.

Dec 29, 2020

Exploring the notion of shortcut learning in deep neural networks

Posted by in categories: biological, robotics/AI

Over the past few years, artificial intelligence (AI) tools, particularly deep neural networks, have achieved remarkable results on a number of tasks. However, recent studies have found that these computational techniques have a number of limitations. In a recent paper published in Nature Machine Intelligence, researchers at Tübingen and Toronto universities explored and discussed a problem known as ‘shortcut learning’ that appears to underpin many of the shortcomings of deep neural networks identified in recent years.

“I decided to start working on this project during a science-related travel in the U.S., together with Claudio Michaelis, a dear colleague and friend of mine,” Robert Geirhos, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told TechXplore. “We first attended a deep learning conference, then visited an animal research laboratory, and finally, a human vision conference. Somewhat surprisingly, we noticed the very same pattern in very different settings: ‘shortcut learning,’ or ‘cheating,’ appeared to be a common characteristic across both artificial and biological intelligence.”

Geirhos and Michaelis believed that shortcut learning, the phenomenon they observed, could explain the discrepancy between the excellent performance and iconic failures of many deep neural networks. To investigate this idea further, they teamed up with other colleagues, including Jörn-Henrik Jacobsen, Richard Zemel, Wieland Brendel, Matthias Bethge and Felix Wichmann.