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Nov 29, 2022

OpenAI successfully trained a Minecraft bot using 70,000 hours of gameplay videos

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, bitcoin, finance, robotics/AI

This superintelligent AI is quite astounding learning similarly to a human even. What I am wanting someday is from labor to digital commerce like bitcoin to even stock markets to everything could essentially automated. Also with the neuralink we could essentially have similar intelligence as the superintelligence allowing for humans to attain a superintelligent level of abilities. I think with DNA computers could be better than essentially for implants or essentially downloading information onto human DNA computers or even brain downloads from simple impulses from devices could give binary code files for abilities or making the superintelligence abilities a simple download rather than other forms of technology.


OpenAI has always focused on artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning advances that benefit humanity. Recently, the company successfully trained a bot to play Minecraft using more than 70,000 hours of gameplay videos. The achievement is far more than just a bot playing a game. It marks a giant stride forward in advanced machine learning using observation and imitation.

Nov 29, 2022

Bridging the Bio-Electronic Divide: How We’re Translating Brain Activity Into Binary

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

Year 2016 face_with_colon_three


In the future, can humans control computer-operated machines by simply “thinking”?

Nov 29, 2022

Mind-Controlled Mice Navigate Mazes, No Longer Crave Food

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

Year 2018 o.o! This could be the first step toward avatars and as well as medical sciences finding a way to treat a human being better essentially with more precision. Also this means we really are wetware computers that can be coded and controlled much like robots are which can lead to our own level of superintelligence in the future by having more abilities with downloaded information.


Cannot be used to help you avoid snack food.

Nov 29, 2022

Watch a Human Mind-Control a Cyborg Mouse

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, food, genetics, neuroscience, sex

Year 2018 face_with_colon_three


A group of researchers used optogenetics and brain implants to make mice ignore sex and food.

Nov 29, 2022

Researchers Steer Cyborg Mice Through Maze with Brain Stimulation

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, food, neuroscience, sex

Video shows a cyborg mouse ignoring sex and food as it obeys humans’ navigation commands.

Nov 29, 2022

Mind-controlled Mouse Enables People With Paralysis To Use Tablet

Posted by in category: futurism

Year 2018 face_with_colon_three


A new mind-controlling device has enabled people with paralysis to move and click a mouse cursor just by thinking about it, enabling them many freedoms.

Nov 29, 2022

Centre starts drive to prevent cyber threats to state entities

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cybercrime/malcode, government

The central government has started a drive to upgrade its IT equipment and infrastructure so that all electronic, data storage and communication devices used in government departments and agencies remain within the life span specified by the manufacturer and remain immune to cyber threats.

The move comes in the wake of a large number of cyber security incidents reported by Cert-In, a nodal agency for responding to such incidents and a recent ransomware attack at country’s top medical institute All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi on 23 November.

The ministry of electronics and information technology (Meity) has directed all secretaries of central ministries to actively take actions with regards to cyber security. Use of out-of-date operating systems and IT equipment must be discontinued, Meity said in a communication reviewed by Mint.

Nov 29, 2022

Chemotherapy could increase disease susceptibility in future generations

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

A common chemotherapy drug could carry a toxic inheritance for children and grandchildren of adolescent cancer survivors, Washington State University-led research indicates.

The study, published online in iScience, found that male rats who received the ifosfamide during adolescence had offspring and grand-offspring with increased incidence of disease. While other research has shown that cancer treatments can increase patients’ chance of developing disease later in life, this is one of the first-known studies showing that susceptibility can be passed down to a third generation of unexposed offspring.

“The findings suggest that if a patient receives , and then later has children, that their grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren, may have an increased disease susceptibility due to their ancestors’ chemotherapy exposure,” said Michael Skinner, a WSU biologist and corresponding author on the study.

Nov 29, 2022

Whole Foods shoppers can now pay with palm scans

Posted by in categories: food, mobile phones, privacy

Amazon is bringing its palm print-scanning biometric payment technology to several Whole Foods locations.

Biometrics: Every person has measurable physical characteristics that are unique to them — and because these attributes are unique and measurable, they can be used to verify our identity.

Biometric technologies — like the one that probably unlocks your phone — automate this verification, analyzing a face, fingerprint, or palm for distinct identifiers linked to a specific person.

Nov 29, 2022

A crystal shape conundrum is finally solved

Posted by in categories: chemistry, materials

A crystal’s shape is determined by its inherent chemistry, a characteristic that ultimately determines its final form from the most basic of details. But sometimes the lack of symmetry in a crystal makes the surface energies of its facets unknowable, confounding any theoretical prediction of its shape.

Theorists at Rice University say they’ve found a way around this conundrum by assigning arbitrary latent energies to its surfaces or, in the case of two-dimensional materials, its edges.

Yes, it seems like cheating, but in the same way a magician finds a select card in a deck by narrowing the possibilities, a little algebraic sleight-of-hand goes a long way to solve the problem of predicting a crystal’s shape.