Archive for the ‘computing’ category: Page 753
Jul 24, 2016
DARPA’s Cyber Grand Challenge Aims To Beat Viruses for Good
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, robotics/AI, security
Get ready, set, GO!!!
The culmination of the Cyber Grand Challenge, the world’s first tournament of automated computer security systems hosted by DARPA, will take place next month in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Jul 24, 2016
An AI Watched 600 Hours of TV and Started to Accurately Predict What Happens Next
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, information science, robotics/AI, security
MIT researchers have created an algorithm that hopes to understand human visual social cues and predict what would happen next. Giving AI the ability to understand and predict human social interaction could one day pave the way to efficient home assistant systems as well as intelligent security cameras that can call an ambulance or the police ahead of time.
MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory created an algorithm that utilizes deep learning, which enables artificial intelligence (AI) to use patterns of human interaction to predict what will happen next. Researchers fed the program with videos featuring human social interactions and tested it to see if it “learned” well enough to be able to predict them.
Jul 24, 2016
Hello, Monumental Storage. Now You Can Get A 10TB Hard Drive For Your Home PC
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: business, computing
Seagate has just released a trio of storage options, including a 10TB desktop drive, allowing users to get a massive amount of storage.
The natural drive for companies is to provide something bigger than what the competition has to offer. That’s true especially in the storage business, where making drives with higher and higher capacity is the name of the game.
Which is what drove Seagate to make this monumental beast. Say “hello” to 10 TB of hardware storage for your desktop PC. That’s right: a desktop drive with the capacity of an entire server.
Continue reading “Hello, Monumental Storage. Now You Can Get A 10TB Hard Drive For Your Home PC” »
Jul 24, 2016
Biotech Executive Martine Rothblatt Envisions Legal Rights for AI
Posted by Roman Mednitzer in categories: biotech/medical, computing, law, robotics/AI
Jul 23, 2016
CAD Is a Lie: Generative Design to the Rescue
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: computing
Discover how, with generative design, computers can “learn” a designer’s project goals and collaborate to create products never before possible.
Jul 23, 2016
What if instead of using the computer to draw what you already know, you could tell the computer what you want to accomplish?
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: computing
Jul 23, 2016
Scientists work toward storing digital information in DNA
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: biotech/medical, computing, education, mathematics
Her computer, Karin Strauss says, contains her “digital attic”—a place where she stores that published math paper she wrote in high school, and computer science schoolwork from college.
She’d like to preserve the stuff “as long as I live, at least,” says Strauss, 37. But computers must be replaced every few years, and each time she must copy the information over, “which is a little bit of a headache.”
It would be much better, she says, if she could store it in DNA—the stuff our genes are made of.
Jul 22, 2016
Most of the universe may be trapped inside of ancient black holes
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: computing, cosmology, particle physics
(A computer simulation of a black hole. NASA, ESA, and D. Coe, J. Anderson, and R. van der Marel (STScI))
In case you haven’t heard, there is a very, very big problem with the universe: About 80% of all of the stuff inside it is missing.
Astronomers call this material “dark matter.” They know it’s out there because its huge mass tugs on and shapes galaxies, but no one has ever detected the material itself. Aside from exerting a gravitational pull, dark matter doesn’t seem to interact with stars, planets, dust, atoms, subatomic particles, or any other “normal” matter as we know it. It’s essentially invisible.
Continue reading “Most of the universe may be trapped inside of ancient black holes” »
Jul 22, 2016
Quantum Computer Accurately Simulates Hydrogen Molecule, Could Revolutionize Many Industries
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, quantum physics
Google and a team of researchers from various universities managed to simulate the hydrogen molecule on a quantum computer for the first time.