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Dec 18, 2021

US Space Force awards $67M deal to Raytheon to test prototype weather satellite

Posted by in categories: climatology, satellites

The new prototype is part of a program designed to replace the aging Defense Meteorological Satellite Program satellites on orbit.

Dec 18, 2021

See the ISS pass over Rome’s Colosseum in stunning ‘once in a lifetime’ image

Posted by in category: space travel

“Looking at the starry sky, with those thousand-year-old walls embracing the ancient constellations and the passing, modern ISS, was undoubtedly a once-in-a-lifetime experience,” Masi said in a statement on Thursday.

Masi also released an annotated version of the image showing constellations marked and labeled, from Pegasus to Ursa Minor.

The Colosseum is nearly 2,000 years old. The ISS has been in space for over 20 years. They are very different kinds of monuments, but they meld together beautifully in an image that speaks to the past and the present and how far humans have traveled.

Dec 18, 2021

Video: 3D imaging reveals a supermassive black hole’s secrets

Posted by in category: cosmology

A zoom into M87’s monster black hole, thanks to Hubble.


The supermassive black hole located at the heart of the M87 galaxy is home to one of the most impressive natural patterns in nature.

Dec 18, 2021

Siemens Healthineers and Varian present AI ecosystem for cancer care at ASTRO 2021

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

In this short video, filmed at ASTRO 2021, Siemens Healthineers’ Gabriel Haras introduces the company’s portfolio of artificial intelligence (AI)-based products. Such technologies support the entire care pathway for cancer patients, from screening and diagnostics to treatment and follow-up, including innovations such as AI-based autocontouring and generation of synthetic CT from an MRI scan for radiotherapy planning.

Next, Varian’s Kevin O’Reilly comments on the combining of Varian and Siemens Healthineers into one united company. He notes that the integration of AI capabilities has increased Varian’s ability to innovate, and will help accelerate its intelligent cancer care strategy: accelerating the path to treatment, increasing global access to care, exploiting data-driven insight and improving personalization.

Dec 18, 2021

Digital dress codes: What will we wear in the metaverse?

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, entertainment

Digital fashion marketplaces have recently opened, including DressX, hoping that shoppers will be keen to start a virtual wardrobe. Credit: DressX

Outfitting our digital personas is nothing new, from making pixelated Dollz in the early 2000s to shopping these days for new wardrobe additions in Animal Crossing. The video game industry has more recently laid the groundwork for digital fashion, with outfits or “skins,” in games like Overwatch and Fortnite generating billions in revenue.

Some major fashion players have already begun capitalizing on the gaming market — in 2019, Louis Vuitton designed skins for League of Legends, and Nike and Ralph Lauren have this year offered avatar accessories through the virtual world-building platform Roblox. Outside of gaming environments, NFTs — or non-fungible tokens, which use blockchain technology to verify ownership of digital assets — have allowed digital fashion to be monetized more broadly as well. (This fall, Dolce & Gabbana’s NFT collection sold out for 1,885.719 ETH, at the time equivalent to $6 million).

Dec 18, 2021

Top 5 Edge AI Trends to Watch in 2022

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

2021 saw massive growth in the demand for edge computing — driven by the pandemic, the need for more efficient business processes, as well as key advances in the Internet of Things, 5G and AI.

In a study published by IBM in May, for example, 94 percent of surveyed executives said their organizations will implement edge computing in the next five years.

Continue reading “Top 5 Edge AI Trends to Watch in 2022” »

Dec 18, 2021

Welcome To 2032: A Merged Physical/Digital World

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, health, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Kindly see my latest FORBES article on technology predictions for the next decade:

Thanks and have a great weekend! Chuck Brooks.


We are approaching 2022 and rather than ponder the immediate future, I want to explore what may beckon in the ecosystem of disruptive technologies a decade from now. We are in the initial stages of an era of rapid and technological change that will witness regeneration of body parts, new cures for diseases, augmented reality, artificial intelligence, human/computer interface, autonomous vehicles, advanced robotics, flying cars, quantum computing, and connected smart cities. Exciting times may be ahead.

Continue reading “Welcome To 2032: A Merged Physical/Digital World” »

Dec 18, 2021

MIT Researchers Just Discovered an AI Mimicking the Brain on Its Own

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI

A new study claims machine learning is starting to look a lot like human cognition.

In 2019, The MIT Press Reader published a pair of interviews with Noam Chomsky and Steven Pinker, two of the world’s foremost linguistic and cognitive scientists. The conversations, like the men themselves, vary in their framing and treatment of key issues surrounding their areas of expertise. When asked about machine learning and its contributions to cognitive science, however, their opinions gather under the banner of skepticism and something approaching disappointment.

“In just about every relevant respect it is hard to see how [machine learning] makes any kind of contribution to science,” Chomsky laments, “specifically to cognitive science, whatever value it may have for constructing useful devices or for exploring the properties of the computational processes being employed.”

Continue reading “MIT Researchers Just Discovered an AI Mimicking the Brain on Its Own” »

Dec 18, 2021

The Universe Might Be a Self-Learning Computer. Here’s What That Means

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, space

Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking – the most famous physicists of the twentieth century — both spent decades trying to find a single law that could explain how the world works on the scale of the atom and on the scale of galaxies. In short, the Standard Model describes the physics of the very small. General relativity describes the physics of the very large. The problem? The two theories tell different stories about the fundamental nature of reality. Einstein described the problem nearly a century ago in his 1923 Nobel lecture 0, telling the audience that a physicist who searches for, “an integrated theory cannot rest content with the assumption that there exist two distinct fields totally independent of each other by their nature.” Even while on his deathbed, Einstein worked on a way to unite all the laws of physics under one unifying theory.

Dec 18, 2021

Beware, That ‘Anti-5G’ Necklace Might Actually Poison You

Posted by in categories: health, mobile phones

5G will probably not hurt you, but having these products anywhere around definitely will.

5G is rapidly overtaking other wireless technology networks and may very soon become the standard for cell phone coverage. But there has been a lot of backlash with protesters stating the technology might be harmful to human health.

This has resulted in a rise of anti-5G products that claim to protect against the supposedly harmful radiation. A lot of these products have been discovered to be scams and now a new report from BBC reveals they may actually be dangerous.

Continue reading “Beware, That ‘Anti-5G’ Necklace Might Actually Poison You” »