Menu

Blog

Page 8796

May 20, 2019

Computers will be like humans by 2029: Google’s Ray Kurzweil

Posted by in categories: engineering, finance, Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI

In less than two decades, you won’t just use your computers, you will have relationships with them.

Because of artificial intelligence, computers will be able to read at human levels by 2029 and will also begin to have different human characteristics, said Ray Kurzweil, a director of engineering at Google.

“My timeline is computers will be at human levels, such as you can have a human relationship with them, 15 years from now,” he said. Kurzweil’s comments came at the Exponential Finance conference in New York on Wednesday.

Continue reading “Computers will be like humans by 2029: Google’s Ray Kurzweil” »

May 20, 2019

Captain Marvel’s Suit Was Entirely CGI in AVENGERS: ENDGAME

Posted by in category: entertainment

As you saw in Avengers: Endgame, Captain Marvel not only sported a new haircut, she was also sporting a new suit. It wasn’t always like that, though. Since Endgame was shot before Captain Marvel, the suit she originally wore while shooting the film, was the same suit that she wore in the solo Captain Marvel movie.

After her scenes were shot, the creative team decided that they needed to give her suit a different look since so much time had passed since the 90s. Weta Digital’s Matt Aitken, who was a VFX supervisor on Endgame, explained when they changed up the suit design it was all done digitally, so the final suit design that was shown on screen was 100% CGI.

Aitken talked to CB about the new suit design, explaining:

Continue reading “Captain Marvel’s Suit Was Entirely CGI in AVENGERS: ENDGAME” »

May 20, 2019

AMD says its chips are immune to crippling new vulnerabilities

Posted by in category: computing

AMD’s chips are immune to the latest vulnerabilities, and Intel is taking a huge performance hit.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Tabletop dryer vacuum-evaporates water out of clothing

Posted by in category: futurism

For apartment-dwellers who don’t like going to laundromats, there are already compact washing machines – but what happens when the washed clothes need to be dried? Well, that’s where the diminutive Morus Zero comes in.


May 20, 2019

The average person in Europe loses two years of their life due to air pollution

Posted by in category: sustainability

It also causes 800,000 premature deaths in Europe every year, with an ‘Iron Curtain’ dividing East and West.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Self-driving electric wheelchairs to be tested at Narita Airport

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

In a bid to help those with limited mobility get to the gate, Tokyo Narita International Airport is set to welcome a number of self-driving wheelchairs to its floors. With the ability to navigate the airport all on their own, the new wheelchairs are hoped to streamline foot traffic in one of Japan’s busiest airports and form part of a wider plan to boost mobility options at such facilities.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Next-gen milk carton designed to help reduce food waste

Posted by in category: food

Although many people throw milk away once it reaches its “best before” date, the fact is that the milk will still likely be good for several more days. In order to eliminate such waste, scientists at Cornell University are designing a “smart” carton.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Google’s AI can now translate your speech while keeping your voice

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Researchers trained a neural network to map audio “voiceprints” from one language to another.

Read more

May 20, 2019

Smallest pixels ever created have a heart of gold

Posted by in category: mobile phones

The display on a smartphone is a modern marvel, cramming millions of pixels into the space of a few inches – but soon this may look decidedly retro. Researchers at Cambridge University have managed to create the smallest pixels in the world, about a million times tinier than those in a phone. These new pixels could be used in huge, flexible displays that are relatively easy to manufacture and cheaper to run.

Read more

May 20, 2019

An AI-generated Salvador Dali is alive and taking selfies in a Florida museum

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Visitors to The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, will now be greeted by a digitally resurrected simulation of Salvador Dali. Created using machine learning and deepfake technologies, the digital Dali is programmed to communicate in novel ways, from commenting on the day’s weather to taking a selfie with museum patrons.

Read more