This material allows light to bend as it travels through it.
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Feb 10, 2016
Black Holes Could Be Gateways After All
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: computing, cosmology, physics
Physicists can now simulate the interiors of black holes using high-powered computers–and it looks like science fiction authors were right: black holes could be portals for space travel.
Feb 10, 2016
Arcaboard will sell for $14,900 in April and will only fly for six minutes
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: transportation
Arca Space Corporation in New Mexico has developed an electronic flying vehicle that can hover over any terrain, including water. The design can hold up to 243 lbs and flies a foot above the ground.
The ArcaBoard’s creators are calling it the first revolutionary breakthrough in motion since the bicycle, automobile, and airplane, and say it will allow every person to fly whenever they want.
Feb 10, 2016
Inside SU’s First Salon: Lab-Grown Organs, Cybersecurity, and AI Music Apps
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, cyborgs, food, media & arts, quantum physics, robotics/AI, singularity, transhumanism
“We will find new things everywhere we look.” –Hunter S. Thompson
At the rate of 21st century technological innovation, each year brings new breakthroughs across industries. Advances in quantum computers, human genome sequencing for under $1,000, lab-grown meat, harnessing our body’s microbes as drugs, and bionic eye implants that give vision to the blind —the list is long.
Continue reading “Inside SU’s First Salon: Lab-Grown Organs, Cybersecurity, and AI Music Apps” »
Feb 10, 2016
Artificial Intelligence is hot, but not in India: Study
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
At a time when the global technology giants are set to leverage the benefits of AI for your daily lives, India seems to be reluctant to get on to this bus.
Feb 10, 2016
We’ve found evidence the Milky Way is one of hundreds of galaxies being sucked in by a mysterious force called the ‘Great Attractor’
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: space
The Milky Way and hundreds of galaxies surrounding it are being drawn toward a mysterious force scientists call the “Great Attractor”.
And it took the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation’s (CSIRO) Parkes telescope to see them.
The force was first revealed back in the 1970s, when it was discovered that the Milky Way was one of hundreds of galaxies deviating from the “universe is expanding” model.
Feb 10, 2016
Should robots be friends or tools? Open-API platforms point strongly in one direction
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: habitats, mobile phones, robotics/AI
“There’s a reason the only robot a person is likely to have in their home today is a cleaning robot,” founder Shlomo Schwarz tells me during a recent call. “It gives added value to the person. You buy a cleaning robot because it cleans your house. You’re not buying a friend.” — when we say value; how do we know for sure. I know many consumers who bought the iRobot vacuums and don’t use them because for many of the women in my own family found it was limited in its usage.
An Israeli startup is modeling its Linux-based, Raspberry Pi-powered robot on the smartphone developer ecosystem.
Feb 10, 2016
Empathy line will check the robots’ advance
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Yesterday, I highlighted one key a reason why robots will not be able to completely eliminate roles like doctors, etc. and that is lack of empathy.
Also, another key barrier that will remain the lack of a diverse set of innovators & development engineers in the space. AI designed today is strictly designed with a subset of the population; therefore, the larger consumer space will continue to see limitations with their own AI experiences. No matter how much you try, you can never replace female thinking & interpretation with male thinking & interpretation and vice versa. Therefore, there will always be something missing in AI for a larger part of the population.
The Future of the Professions, a book by father and son duo Richard and Daniel Susskind predicts radical change about the automated future of professions.
Feb 10, 2016
Ocado’s tech chief gave us an inside look into how it plans to revolutionise the world with automation and robots
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: business, robotics/AI
Machine operating as machine yes; machine trying to operate like a human not even close.
Meanwhile, Ocado is continuing to carve out some cutting edge inventions that are set to transform the logistics and communications sectors. Ocado’s director of technology Paul Clarke gave us an inside look into the tech side of the business and hinted at what’s in store for the future.
OcadoOcado’s director of technology, Paul Clarke.