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Mar 12, 2016
Desktop Genetics: Now You Can Do Genetic Engineering Without Ever Entering a Lab
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
CRISPR may be revolutionary; however, it’s not nearly as easy as it’s made out to be. But thanks to this company, individuals can alter the source code of life without ever needing to enter a lab.
A new genome editing technique is allowing us to alter DNA—the source code of life—with unprecedented precision. It is known as CRISPR, and with it, we can target and change a gene from any cell of any species without interfering with any other genes. If that’s not enough, we are able to edit these genes at just a fraction of the cost of previous methods.
Mar 12, 2016
Interesting Nanotechnology Animation 2
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: nanotechnology
Mar 11, 2016
Ray Kurzweil says nanobots will connect your neocortex to the cloud
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: nanotechnology, neuroscience, Ray Kurzweil
Futurist Ray Kurzweil talks with StarTalk Radio’s Neil DeGrasse Tyson about the expansion of the human brain that he predicts will happen in the 2030’s.
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Mar 11, 2016
Floating Villas With Underwater Rooms In Dubai
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Mar 11, 2016
Google Translate could become more accurate soon thanks to deep learning
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: information science, mobile phones, robotics/AI
Google has smartened up several of its products with a type of artificial intelligence called deep learning, which involves training neural networks on lots of data and then having them make predictions about new data. Google Maps, Google Photos, and Gmail, for example, have been enhanced with this type of technology. The next service that could see gains is Google Translate.
Well, let me back up. Part of Google Translate actually already uses deep learning. That would be the instant visual translations you can get on a mobile device when you hold up your smartphone camera to the words you want to translate. But if you use Google Translate to just translate text, you know that the service isn’t always 100 percent accurate.
In an interview at the Structure Data conference in San Francisco today, Jeff Dean, a Google senior fellow who worked on some of Google’s core search and advertising technology and is now the head of the Google Brain team that works on deep learning, said that his team has been working with Google’s translation team to scale out experiments with translation based on deep learning. Specifically, the work is based on the technology depicted in a 2014 paper entitled “Sequence to Sequence Learning with Neural Networks.”
Continue reading “Google Translate could become more accurate soon thanks to deep learning” »
Mar 11, 2016
We Just Moved One Step Closer to Holographic Long-Distance Conversations
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: augmented reality
Microsoft Research reveals more details about a telepresence technology they are developing that could fundamentally improve communication today.
In this day and age, it almost comes as no surprise when new technology emerges that’s poised to change how people live and work. Take, for instance, Microsoft Research’s Room2Room project.
Continue reading “We Just Moved One Step Closer to Holographic Long-Distance Conversations” »
Interesting.
Giving everyone a “basic income” is the latest trendy idea sweeping Silicon Valley. It’s a terrible solution to a real problem.
Mar 11, 2016
The New Revolution at Dare Devil Dive POV
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: virtual reality
Here is a cool look at The New Revolution at Dare Devil Dive at Six Flags Over Georgia & Hurricane Harbor with a side-by-side shot of what you will see when wearing the VR headset. Are you looking forward to checking out this new technology?