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Mar 8, 2020
Apple Issues New Warning Affecting Millions Of iPhone Users
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: mobile phones
Mar 8, 2020
Coronavirus: Revenge of the Pangolins?
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biotech/medical
China has banned the trade of wildlife, suspecting that exotic animals infected humans. What will that really do?
Mar 8, 2020
The enduring enigma of the cosmic cold spot
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: space
Why does the cosmic microwave background have a strange patch that is much colder than expected? Syed Faisal ur Rahman looks at some possible explanations.
Mar 8, 2020
Researchers create the Jimi Hendrix of lasers
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: innovation, materials
Photonics experts at Heriot-Watt university are hailing a breakthrough in laser research.
They have come up with a new and relatively inexpensive way of creating a laser supercontinuum.
They hope it could eventually have applications in bio-imaging and optical communications.
Continue reading “Researchers create the Jimi Hendrix of lasers” »
Mar 8, 2020
Kepler’s decision to build its own cubesats surprises manufacturers
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: internet, satellites
That’s no longer the case. Blue Canyon Technologies, AAC Clyde Space, GomSpace, NanoAvionics, Tyvak and several others are ready and willing to build cubesats en masse. So it came as a surprise to many cubesat manufacturers when Kepler Communications announced plans in January to manufacture its constellation of 140 Internet of Things satellites in-house.
Kepler is poised to become one of the world’s largest cubesat operators once its constellation is fully in orbit, a target set for the end of 2022. Only Planet currently operates a fleet that large.
Instead of formally soliciting bids from a wide range of cubesat builders, though, Toronto-based Kepler turned to the University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Space Flight Laboratory (SFL) for help setting up its own manufacturing line. Kepler also received 1 million Canadian dollars ($760,000) from the Canadian Space Agency to mature its bus design and production techniques, leading some observers to conclude national pride could play a role. Through Kepler, Canada is establishing a robust cubesat manufacturing capability.
Mar 8, 2020
How designers could help free AI systems from gender and ethnicity biases
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
Did you know TNW Conference has a track fully dedicated to exploring new design trends this year? Check out the full ‘Sprint’ program here.
There’s been a lot of discussion in recent times around the need to get more women into AI and the primary focus of this discussion has been on developing AI systems that represent both men and women in order to reduce bias. The necessity of including women in the development of AI is universally accepted as being a positive step, and of course, it extends beyond gender to ethnicity and nationality as well if we are to truly create anything without bias.
However, there’s a narrow focus within this discussion on including women with technical skills and we need to look beyond this. There’s a whole host of skills required to develop AI systems, from designing the user interface, user experience, user testing, product development, and the system testing and training required to successfully launch an AI solution.
Mar 8, 2020
Lithium-Sulfur Battery Promises to Power a Phone for 5 Days
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: mobile phones, sustainability, transportation
Monash University is claiming its lithium-sulfur battery is the world’s most efficient and capable of allowing an electric car to travel over 600 miles between charges.
Mar 8, 2020
Intel AI gives women career advice for Int’l Women’s Day
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: information science, robotics/AI
Intel Israel announced that the project is the first of its kind which uses AI to create “female intelligence.” The experts who worked on the project, led by data scientist and researcher Shira Guskin, analyzed thousands of insights from “veteran career women.” Once the initial advice was submitted by many women across the Israeli work force, the researchers passed the data through three algorithm models: Topic Extraction, Grouping and Summarization. This led to an algorithm which “processed the tips pool and extracted the key tips and guidelines.”
The AI said that women should fully invest in their careers, be confident, network, love, and trust their guts.
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