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Nov 15, 2022

The Cryonics Institute Newsletter Issue 03

Posted by in categories: cryonics, life extension

2022 https://cryonics.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/CI_NEWS-2022-03.pdf.

This issue features:
* President’s Report — New Science Advisory Board.
* 2022 AGM Photos.
* Board of Directors Winners.
* Scale Model CI Cryostats for Sale.
* Cryonics Survey.
* Robert Ettinger’s YOUNIVERSE — Chapter 5
* Latest Cryonics & Life Extension News from Around the Web.

Nov 15, 2022

Epidemiology of Glaucoma: The Past, Present, and Predictions for the Future

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health

Glaucoma impacts tens of millions of people globally, and is the second leading cause of blindness, after cataracts. Now, Purdue University researchers have developed smart contact lenses that may help save people’s sight.


Glaucoma is a multifactorial optic degenerative neuropathy characterized by the loss of retinal ganglion cells. It is a combination of vascular, genetic, anatomical, and immune factors. Glaucoma poses a significant public health concern as it is the second leading cause of blindness after cataracts, and this blindness is usually irreversible. It is estimated that 57.5 million people worldwide are affected by primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). People over 60 years of age, family members of those already diagnosed with glaucoma, steroid users, diabetics, as well as those with high myopia, hypertension, central cornea thickness of.

Nov 15, 2022

With all this focus on Elon Musk and Twitter, you may have missed this one from Twitter

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

The White House deleted a tweet after it was fact checked by not only Twitter, but CNN’s fact-checker Daniel Dale. Elections to me are often more comedy than content. Ironically the White House and all who want the blue tic authenticity will have to pay Musk whether they like it or not. The exodus should be interesting to watch, but if Musk makes some magic on Twitter, many may have to join again and pay to have relevance on Twitter, so Musk’s main focus right now should be on features. If it should be on something else, by all means tell me what has more value. I said focus on Twitter as there is no need to tell competitors everything but the kitchen sink (that Musk brought in on day one). Its nice to watch people find one feature try to respond, not knowing many features are coming before they can even implement one. Its a psychological war that can have someone beat, and thinking they can’t compete. MySpace has been better than Facebook. Drake was discovered on MySpace, not Facebook. Yet MySpace hasn’t been able to capitalize on such realities. Transmeta also could not focus on it’s strengths, and Intel easily beat them.

Nov 15, 2022

Esper Hand is a “human-like” prosthetic arm that can be controlled by the mind

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, robotics/AI, transhumanism

Video on prosthetic Esper hand.


New York-based engineering startup Esper Bionics has developed a flexible prosthetic mind-controlled hand that learns how to suggest the best grip faster than similar prosthetics.
Esper Bionics’ robotic arm is designed to be lighter and learn faster than many of the prosthetics currently available for amputees. The more the wearer uses the hand, the better and quicker it is to suggest the right grip.

Continue reading “Esper Hand is a ‘human-like’ prosthetic arm that can be controlled by the mind” »

Nov 15, 2022

From science fiction to reality, ‘no kill’ meat may be coming soon

Posted by in category: futurism

The meat of the future may be cultured directly from animal cells without slaughtering livestock. It’s not yet sold in the U.S., but NPR got a tour of a leading start-up and a taste of their chicken.

Nov 15, 2022

Unexpectedly, the cosmos didn’t start with the Big Bang anymore

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

In the beginning, there was … well, maybe there was no beginning. Perhaps our universe has always existed — and a new theory of quantum gravity reveals how that could work.

“Reality has so many things that most people would associate with sci-fi or even fantasy,” said Bruno Bento, a physicist who studies the nature of time at the University of Liverpool in the U.K.

In his work, he employed a new theory of quantum gravity, called causal set theory, in which space and time are broken down into discrete chunks of space-time. At some level, there’s a fundamental unit of space-time, according to this theory.

Nov 14, 2022

Ukraine War: Russia gave Iran cash and captured UK & US weapons for drones

Posted by in categories: drones, security

A security source has told Sky News that Russia flew €140m in cash to Tehran in exchange for dozens of deadly “suicide drones”.

Moscow also included Western weapons it had captured in Ukraine in the shipment.

Continue reading “Ukraine War: Russia gave Iran cash and captured UK & US weapons for drones” »

Nov 14, 2022

Powerful linear accelerator begins smashing atoms — 2 scientists on the team explain how it could reveal rare forms of matter

Posted by in category: particle physics

A new particle accelerator has just begun operation. It is the most powerful accelerator of its kind on Earth and will allow physicists to study some of the rarest matter in the universe.

Nov 14, 2022

AI, Sentience & the Binding Problem of Consciousness — is LaMDA sentient? — Andrés Gómez Emilsson

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Is LaMDA at Google sentient? Is the current state of the art AI showing signs of having qualia? The phenomenal binding problem asks us to consider, ‘how can huge set of discrete neurons form a unified mind?’ Is topological binding a requirement for AI to be sentient?

Many thanks for tuning in!

Continue reading “AI, Sentience & the Binding Problem of Consciousness — is LaMDA sentient? — Andrés Gómez Emilsson” »

Nov 14, 2022

Meta AI Has Built A Neural Theorem Prover That Has Solved 10 International Math Olympiad (IMO) Problems — 5x More Than Any Previous Artificial Intelligence AI System

Posted by in categories: mathematics, robotics/AI

The scientific world has long acknowledged that proving mathematical theorems is an essential first step in developing artificial intelligence. To prove the truth or falsity of a conjecture, one must use symbolic thinking and sort through an unlimited number of alternatives. These tasks are beyond the capabilities of even the most sophisticated AI systems.

The state of the art in artificial intelligence today is to create machines that can “solve at once” or come up with a whole answer to a problem in a single go. However, this is not how most individuals approach difficult situations. Mathematical reasoning is significantly more challenging to formalize and measure.

Meta AI has made an important development at the intersection of artificial intelligence and mathematics. The neural theorem prover developed by the team has completed five times as many IMO problems as any other AI system before it, totaling ten. Concerning miniF2F, a popular mathematics test, the AI model outperforms the state of art by 20% and outperforms Metamath by 10%.