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Nov 22, 2024

AI can now create a replica of your personality

Posted by in categories: policy, robotics/AI

Imagine sitting down with an AI model for a spoken two-hour interview. A friendly voice guides you through a conversation that ranges from your childhood, your formative memories, and your career to your thoughts on immigration policy. Not long after, a virtual replica of you is able to embody your values and preferences with stunning accuracy.

That’s now possible, according to a new paper from a team including researchers from Stanford and Google DeepMind, which has been published on arXiv and has not yet been peer-reviewed.

Nov 22, 2024

Upstate NY microchip manufacturer finalizes $1.5B CHIPS Act agreement

Posted by in categories: computing, mobile phones

Money from the CHIPS and Science Act is officially coming to Upstate New York.

GlobalFoundries’ $1.5 billion agreement with the Commerce Department to support expansion plans in Saratoga County and modernization efforts in Vermont has been finalized. The award comes after a Preliminary Memorandum of Terms announced in February.

The award will mainly be used to expand their Malta, New York fab site, adding technology the company already uses in other countries like Germany and Singapore. This will allow them to increase the supply of domestically made computer chips, which are essential in electronic devices from smartphones to aerospace and defense technology.

Nov 22, 2024

Lockheed Martin expands AM capabilities with state-of-the-art Texas facility

Posted by in category: futurism

Lockheed Martin has announced the addition of a state-of-the-art Additive Manufacturing facility at its Grand Prairie, Texas, USA site. The expansion includes the addition of large-format, multi-laser Additive Manufacturing machines, as well as heat treatment and inspection equipment that enables rapid development and production of AM parts across the corporation. This includes the installation of two NXG 600E machines from Nikon SLM Solutions.

“We continue to invest in AM technology to provide value for our customers in a way that empowers our engineers to innovate and rapidly integrate new product designs and capabilities to the production floor,” said Tom Carrubba, vice president of production operations at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control. “This allows us to create affordable and modular designs that can simplify both high and low-volume production processes.”

Nov 22, 2024

Top 5 AI Therapists in 2025

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience, robotics/AI

As we move into 2025, mental health continues to be a vital aspect of overall well-being in an increasingly fast-paced and complex world.


- CBT-based exercises that help users manage anxiety, depression, and emotional stress.

- Daily check-ins with an AI chatbot to track moods and thoughts, enabling users to gain insights into their emotional health.

Continue reading “Top 5 AI Therapists in 2025” »

Nov 22, 2024

THE Seventh EUROSYMPOSIUM ON HEALTHY AGEING : November 2024

Posted by in categories: biological, life extension, robotics/AI

For my presentation at the 7th Eurosymposium on Healthy Aging in Brussels tomorrow, I’ve significantly updated my slides “Solving Aging: Is AI all we need?” — It’s still possible to register and attend remotely today and/or tomorrow.


:The Eurosymposium on Healthy Ageing (EHA) is a unique biennial meeting of scientists working on the biology of ageing.

Nov 22, 2024

Study: EV battery prices to drop by 50% by 2026

Posted by in category: transportation

That will get battery costs below the point needed to achieve EV price parity with gasoline vehicles.

Nov 22, 2024

This AI Agent Will Defend You From Cyber Attacks

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, robotics/AI

Coming out of stealth, cybersecurity startup Twine announced today $12 million in seed funding, co-led by Ten Eleven Ventures and Dell Technologies Capital, with participation from angel investors including the founders of Wiz. Twine plans to address cybersecurity’s critical talent shortage by developing AI agents or “digital employees” to augment companies’ security teams. Alex, Twine’s first digital employee, is an expert in identity and access management or IAM.

Alex is deployed as a SaaS platform, connecting to different systems within the customer’s environment. “The user interacts with the Alex interface in order to ask him questions or assign tasks,” explains Benny Porat, Twine’s co-founder and CEO. “For any task assigned, Alex creates a plan, seeks approval, provides full visibility, and proceeds with an A-to-Z execution of the plan.”

In a report published a few months ago, the World Economic Forum warned that the “cybersecurity industry faces a critical global shortage of nearly 4 million professionals.” This at a time when the rapid adoption of cloud computing, remote work and new AI solutions has significantly increased the number of cyber attacks.

Nov 22, 2024

Former Google X employees come out of stealth with TwinMind, an AI app that hears and remembers everything about you

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A startup from former Google X employees is building an AI app that acts as a “second brain.”

Nov 22, 2024

Nanotech improves antioxidant delivery, efficacy in skin care products: study

Posted by in category: nanotechnology

A recent study by researchers identifies pterostilbene nanoliposomes (PT-NLPs) which addresses long-standing challenges with pterostilbene.

Nov 22, 2024

Mars may have been Habitable much more recently than thought

Posted by in categories: computing, space

Evidence suggests Mars could very well have been teeming with life billions of years ago. Now cold, dry, and stripped of what was once a potentially protective magnetic field, the red planet is a kind of forensic scene for scientists investigating whether Mars was indeed once habitable, and if so, when.

The “when” question in particular has driven researchers in Harvard’s Paleomagnetics Lab in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences. A new paper in Nature Communications makes their most compelling case to date that Mars’ life-enabling magnetic field could have survived until about 3.9 billion years ago, compared with previous estimates of 4.1 billion years—so hundreds of millions of years more recently.

The study was led by Griffin Graduate School of Arts and Sciences student Sarah Steele, who has used simulation and computer modeling to estimate the age of the Martian “dynamo,” or global magnetic field produced by convection in the planet’s iron core, like on Earth. Together with senior author Roger Fu, the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Natural Sciences, the team has doubled down on a theory they first argued last year that the Martian dynamo, capable of deflecting harmful cosmic rays, was around longer than prevailing estimates claim.

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