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Feb 2, 2022

Michigan finalizing plan to build first-ever wireless charging road for electric cars

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

LANSING, Mich. — Michigan has finalized a contract to build the country’s first wireless charging road system in Detroit, the state announced Tuesday.

The Michigan Department of Transportation awarded the project to Electreon, an electric vehicle solutions firm that will construct a 1-mile stretch of road open to the public and capable of charging battery-powered cars and trucks in real time.

The road where it will be built hasn’t been selected yet, the state said. It will be located somewhere in Detroit.

Feb 2, 2022

Motor Trend reimagines the ‘Apple Car,’ sees autonomous rideshare in Apple’s future

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

American auto magazine Motor Trend is back to rehash its initial predictions for Apple’s yet unannounced “Apple Car”, this time updating it for the “inevitable” autonomous future.

The new report is, once again, a think piece that collates a collection of rumors into Motor Trend’s best guess at what Apple might have in the works.

It doesn’t take long for the publication to reference its first stab at imagining the “Apple Car,” one which wound up being ridiculed for being too “podlike.” Yet, as Motor Trend points out, podlike cars are being developed all over.

Feb 2, 2022

Ansys free student downloads: Master simulation skills to solve real-life problems

Posted by in category: engineering

Feb 2, 2022

Accelerating Growth Using AI — A Look At Complexity And The Metaverse Series 1/5

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

When I did my doctoral studies I studied a number of growth disciplines in areas like: complexity science, social network science (relationship and collaboration science), system thinking science, information science, and cognitive science. As a result of this knowledge, I learned how to connect business strategy goals using diverse growth strategies and analyze underlying operating systems that were either enabling relationship strength and growth outcomes or creating negative systemic feedback loops that prevented revenue acceleration.

There is a word in the English language seldom used called quaquaversal which means looking in all directions all at once which represents the field of complexity science and is the reality of the executive mindset that needs to operate in the board room and in today’s fast paced world — *what one sees as relevant today may well be obsolete tomorrow.*

This blog series will explore each of these discipline areas and connect real life examples of AI approaches that are enabling growth acceleration techniques using these science and social science techniques. This is the first blog in this five part blog series and will focus on complexity science.

Continue reading “Accelerating Growth Using AI — A Look At Complexity And The Metaverse Series 1/5” »

Feb 2, 2022

New petition with 40,000 signatures urges Biden to acknowledge Tesla’s leadership in EVs

Posted by in category: futurism

Feb 2, 2022

Antimicrobial resistance linked to 1.27 million deaths in 2019

Posted by in category: futurism

After analyzing the data, the researchers found that 1.27 million deaths across the globe could be attributed to antimicrobial resistance, whereas 4.95 million deaths were associated with antimicrobial resistance.

Western sub-Saharan Africa had the highest rate of deaths attributable to and associated with antimicrobial resistance.

The study authors also found that the entire region of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia had the highest rate of both types of deaths.

Feb 2, 2022

Why the metaverse must be open but regulated

Posted by in categories: innovation, internet

But meta company can easily regulate our activity. Eg:- blocking our account.


Widespread accessibility for the metaverse and the technologies that develop it is vital for the metaverse to reach its full potential. Will the metaverse follow a similar path of innovation and regulation as the internet did?

Feb 2, 2022

Scientists use ‘sticky’ DNA to build organized structures of gel blocks

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, engineering

Researchers from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) have used microscopic strands of DNA to guide the assembly of gel blocks that are visible to the naked eye.

The blocks, which measure up to 2mm in length and contain DNA on their surface, self-assembled in around 10–15 minutes when mixed in a solution, the scientists reported today in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

“These hydrogel blocks are, we believe, the largest objects so far that have been programmed by DNA to form organized structures,” said Dr. Vyankat Sontakke, first author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher in the OIST Nucleic Acid Chemistry and Engineering Unit.

Feb 2, 2022

Electreon, Ford Developing In-Road Charging System Near Mobility Tech Hub

Posted by in categories: economics, robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation

Ford Motor Co. is working with Israeli startup Electreon to construct a mile-long road near Detroit’s Michigan Central Terminal that will charge electric vehicles as they travel on it. The pilot program will deploy an inductive in-road charging system in partnership with the Michigan Department of Transportation, the Michigan Office of Future Mobility and Electrification and the Michigan Economic Development Corp. “As we aim to lead the future of mobility and electrification by boosting electric vehicle production and lowering consumer costs, a wireless in-road charging system is the next piece to the puzzle for sustainability,” Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer said in a statement. Also supporting the project, which is expected to be operational in 2023, are Next Energy and the Jacobs Engineering Group. Ford purchased the long-abandoned train station and is converting it to be the hub of what it calls its “mobility innovation district,” where software developers and others will focus on making electrified and autonomous transportation more practical.

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Feb 2, 2022

DeepMind says its new AI coding engine is as good as an average human programmer

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Alphabet’s AI lab DeepMind says it’s created an AI coding engine that is as good as the average human programmer. However, the system was only tested on specific coding challenges that do not reflect real-world tasks.