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Jul 2, 2015
The case for transhumanism
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: futurism, transhumanism
I’m excited to see transhumanism getting this broadly out there in major media. This 4-minute interview is the Financial Times “Video of the Day”, and has also been picked up by AOL, MSN, Nasdaq news, and Toshiba news, among others:http://video.ft.com/4332303826001/The-case-for-transhumanism/world and http://www.ft.com/fastft/353931/firstft-mario-brothers-beats
Jul 1, 2015
Pax Google — By Paul Ford | The New Republic
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in category: mapping
Google, as a search engine, had built a fine business by “indexing” all of these documents and making them searchable. The company was built on a principle of centralization: If you take the chaotic Web and bestow order upon it, merge it into a single consolidated index, make it make sense, you can make users very, very happy. And upon that index, and that shared happiness, and the willingness of some users to click on targeted advertising, Google could construct a tremendous enterprise. An empire, if you will. Except empires are not traditionally constructed from indexing documents. But maps are.
Tags: Cartography, Geography, Google
Jul 1, 2015
Why Send Humans to Space When We Can Send Robots? — Daniel Oberhaus | Motherboard
Posted by Seb in categories: robotics/AI, space, space travel
“The first marketable, personal computers in the late 70s came about after almost 40 years of research and development, which created the technology at public expense. One of the peculiarities, if you’d like, of our system of innovation and development is that it’s radically anti-capitalist in many ways…People who paid taxes in the 50s and 60s may not have known it, but they were creating what was ultimately marketed by Apple. But they don’t get any of the profit. I think that’s a social pathology and the same carries over into space.” Read more
Jul 1, 2015
Two chatbots talk to each other: “I love crayons. But you are not dressed.”
Posted by Scott Davis in category: robotics/AI
Jun 30, 2015
‘Microswimmer’ robots to drill through blocked arteries within four years
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: biotech/medical, futurism, robotics/AI
Drexel’s microswimmer robots (bottom) are modeled, in form and motion, after spiral-shaped Borrelia burgdorferi bacteria (top), which cause Lyme Disease (credit: Drexel University)
Jun 30, 2015
Google’s artificial-intelligence bot says the purpose of living is ‘to live forever’
Posted by Scott Davis in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI
Jun 30, 2015
A nearby black hole just erupted for the first time in 26 years and scientists are ecstatic
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: cosmology
Lurking 8,000 light years from Earth is a black hole 12 times more massive than our sun. It’s…
Jun 30, 2015
Kurzweil Responds to ‘When Robots Are Everywhere, What Will Humans Be Good For?’ — By David J. Hill
Posted by Seb in categories: employment, futurism, human trajectories, posthumanism, robotics/AI
Lately, media around the web has been bracing for robots — not time-traveling robots per se, but robot workers. Specifically, the increased sophistication of artificial intelligence and improved engineering of robotics has spurred a growing concern about what people are going to do when all the regular jobs are done by robots.
A variety of solutions have been proposed to this potential technological unemployment (we even had an entire Future of Work series dealing with this topic in March), many of which suggest that there will still be things that humans can do that robots can’t, but what are they? Read more