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May 7, 2016
The World’s Smartest People Speak on Artificial Intelligence
Posted by Aleksandar Vukovic in categories: robotics/AI, supercomputing
Michio Kaku.
The 69-year-old bestselling author, theoretical physicist and futurist takes a longer, more pragmatic view, calling AI an end-of-the-century problem. He adds that even then, if humanity’s come up with no better methods to constrain rogue AI, it’ll be a matter of putting ‘a chip in [artificially intelligent robot] brains to shut them off.’
Artificial intelligence (AI) will end us, save us or—less jazzy-sounding but the more probable intersection of both—eventually obsolete us. From humbling chess grandmaster losses at the hands of mathematically brilliant supercomputers to semantic networks with the linguistic grasp of a four-year-old, one thing seems certain: AI is coming.
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May 7, 2016
Life In A Lunar Lava Tube: Nearside Tunnels As Ready-Made Moonbases
Posted by Bruce Dorminey in categories: education, habitats, space
New reports that Russia is considering lava tubes as habitat; here’s one from my lava tube archives…
Nearside of Moon, by Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
With only a trace of an exosphere, future lunar astronauts working nights outside will likely feel as if they are walking a catwalk through space itself.
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May 7, 2016
A breakthrough in science of memory: How a “Spotless Mind” could soon be Reality
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, science
We could see commercials for the “Spotless Mind” someday and in various releases. However, why stop there?
Recently, scientists did find the gene that ties serial and mass murders together as a cause for their evil deeds and CRISPR could someday eliminate these people from existing which is a great thing. However, what happens if folks in power believe everyone in Europe and the US cannot have any religious belief and/ or values in order (in their own belief) to keep everyone equal; so they use this technolgy to eradicate how people believe or view the world. Just imagine; like John Lennon’s “Imagine”.
Jim Carrey’s role as shy and morose Joel Barish in “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” is deeply memorable in the context of his predominantly comedic repertoire of movie roles. And context is everything when it comes to recollection of memories. Though the kind of memory erasing technologies showcased in Eternal Sunshine may be too farfetched to ever become reality, scientists have nonetheless managed to make astounding progress in understanding and manipulating memories.
May 7, 2016
DARPA looking to develop new technology to ID cybercriminals
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, cybercrime/malcode, government, law enforcement
CRISPR to take bio- and dirty-bombs to new levels.
Great; however, QC needs to be front and center on this; or, I see a bunch of funding spent on research that will be render useless by the time it goes to market due to the progress in QC.
I truly feel bad for the labs who are having to tests for bio- and dirty-bomb material. Really a dangerous job.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is looking for research proposals to develop a system that would enable the government and law enforcement to identify the actual individual behind a cyber attack.
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May 7, 2016
Harold Cohen, a Pioneer of Computer-Generated Art, Dies at 87
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: computing
Harold Cohen, an abstract painter who developed Aaron, one of the first and eventually one of the most complex computer software programs for generating works of art, died on April 27 at his home in Encinitas, Calif. He was 87.
The cause was congestive heart failure, his son, Paul, said.
Mr. Cohen was a painter growing weary with the traditional practice of art in the late 1960s when he taught himself, out of curiosity, how to program a computer.
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May 7, 2016
Robot to sit for China’s national college entrance exam
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: mathematics, robotics/AI
A Chinese robot is set to compete with grade 12 students during the country’s national college entrance examination next year and get a score qualifying it to enter first-class universities.
The robot being designed will appear in three exams – math, Chinese and a comprehensive test of liberal arts, which includes history, politics and geography, said Lin Hui, CEO of an artificial intelligence company in Chengdu.
The robot will have to finish the exams during designated periods like the other examinees. It will take its exams in a closed room with just proctors and a notary present.
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May 7, 2016
New study looks into the everyday miracle that is water
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: quantum physics
Whatever the truth about claims that cloud-seeding was responsible for the floods in March, one thing is certain – during the downpours, thousands of people in the UAE were exposed to a bizarre quantum substance at the focus of intense scientific research.
Colourless and odourless, its behaviour is unlike that of any other known compound. While most shrink when they freeze, this stuff expands. It’s very hard to be heated up but once turned into liquid, it’s extremely resistant to pressure.
Exposure to it in any form can be fatal. Its liquid form is responsible for dozens of deaths each year in the UAE.
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May 7, 2016
Mechanism of Hepatocellular Toxicity Decoded With Quantum Chemical Computations
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: quantum physics
Finally, how Quantum Chemical Computations is changing our world today.
Awesome!
Hepatocellular carcinoma is one of the most common forms of cancer, and the primary cause has been attributed to liver fibrosis by chemical toxins, which is followed by liver cirrhosis.
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May 7, 2016
Government Lab Reveals It Has Operated Quantum Internet for Over Two Years
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: government, internet, quantum physics
Old article from 3 yrs ago shared by MIT on Los Alamos Q-Net. Cannot wait for it; I believe we’re reading for it.
A quantum internet capable of sending perfectly secure messages has been running at Los Alamos National Labs for the last two and a half years, say researchers.