Menu

Blog

Page 6252

Apr 26, 2021

Farming Robot Kills 100,000 Weeds per Hour With Lasers

Posted by in categories: chemistry, food, health, robotics/AI, space

A person can weed about one acre of crops a day. This smart robot can weed 20.


Carbon Robotics has unveiled the third-generation of its Autonomous Weeder, a smart farming robot that identifies weeds and then destroys them with high-power lasers.

The weedkiller challenge: Weeds compete with plants for space, sunlight, and soil nutrients. They can also make it easier for insect pests to harm crops, so weed control is a top concern for farmers.

Continue reading “Farming Robot Kills 100,000 Weeds per Hour With Lasers” »

Apr 26, 2021

How AI is transforming the creative industries | The Economist

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

Artificial intelligence is helping humans make new kinds of art. It is more likely to emerge as a collaborator than a competitor for those working in creative industries. Film supported by Mishcon de Reya.

Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3dm9rp9

Continue reading “How AI is transforming the creative industries | The Economist” »

Apr 26, 2021

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory: New view of the universe

Posted by in category: space

The next era of astronomy will be defined by a wider view of the cosmos.


The next era of our investigation of the cosmos is about to be kick-started by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, a ground-based telescope currently under construction on the El Penón peak of Cerro Pachón in northern Chile. The observatory is a federal project run by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the U.S. Department of Energy.

The new observatory — named in honor of astronomer Vera Rubin — is scheduled to begin operations in October 2023, according to a statement published on the Rubin Observatory website. When it’s up and running, Rubin will allow astronomers to consider some of the universe’s most pressing mysteries.

Apr 26, 2021

Watch SpaceX’s Crew-1 astronauts plummet to an ocean landing on Saturday, ending the longest human spaceflight in NASA history

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA has never flown its own astronauts to and from space for a mission this long. Now SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spaceship must bring them back to Earth.

Apr 26, 2021

AMD earnings: Are data center owners ‘digesting’ or just not buying Intel chips?

Posted by in category: computing

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. earnings will serve as an indication if the data-center market is truly in a “digestion” phase, as Intel Corp. reported.

AMD AMD, +3.20% is scheduled to report its first-quarter earnings on Tuesday after the close of markets. When Intel INTC,-0.81% reported results last week, the market-share leader noted that the market was just bottoming from a “digestion phase” as its data-center sales dropped 20% year-over-year.

Apr 26, 2021

SpaceX fires up Starship SN15 prototype to prep for test flight

Posted by in category: space travel

SpaceX performed the first static fire test on Starship SN15 today (April 26), prepping the vehicle for a high-altitude test flight in the near future.

Apr 26, 2021

Tesla posts record net income of $438 million, revenue surges

Posted by in category: futurism

Tesla beat expectations on revenue and earnings in Q1, but the stock dropped slightly after hours.

Apr 26, 2021

Incredible Cosmic Conditions: Bringing Neutron Stars Down to Earth

Posted by in categories: physics, space

An international research team led by Michigan State University has helped create cosmic conditions at RIKEN’s heavy-ion accelerator in Japan.

Imagine taking all of the water in Lake Michigan — more than a quadrillion gallons — and squeezing it into a 4-gallon bucket, the kind you’d find at a hardware store.

A quick review of the numbers suggests that this should be impossible: that’s too much stuff and not enough space. But this outlandish density is a defining feature of celestial objects known as neutron stars. These stars are only about 15 miles across, yet they hold more mass than our sun thanks to some extreme physics.

Apr 26, 2021

A 33-year-old Dogecoin investor says he became a millionaire in 2 months after Elon Musk inspired him to pile into the meme currency

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

Glauber Contessoto of Los Angeles posted a screenshot of his Robinhood balance of Dogecoin on Reddit.

Apr 26, 2021

Advancing AI With a Supercomputer: A Blueprint for an Optoelectronic ‘Brain’

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry, robotics/AI, supercomputing

Others think we’re still missing fundamental aspects of how intelligence works, and that the best way to fill the gaps is to borrow from nature. For many that means building “neuromorphic” hardware that more closely mimics the architecture and operation of biological brains.

The problem is that the existing computer technology we have at our disposal looks very different from biological information processing systems, and operates on completely different principles. For a start, modern computers are digital and neurons are analog. And although both rely on electrical signals, they come in very different flavors, and the brain also uses a host of chemical signals to carry out processing.

Now though, researchers at NIST think they’ve found a way to combine existing technologies in a way that could mimic the core attributes of the brain. Using their approach, they outline a blueprint for a “neuromorphic supercomputer” that could not only match, but surpass the physical limits of biological systems.