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Aug 24, 2024

Whole Brain Emulation & Mind Uploading with Keith Wiley & Randal Koene

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, neuroscience

I don’t know what’s causing the sound problem my apologies.


Randal and Keith discuss WBE, Mind Uploading and fascinating tangents in neuroscience and neuroprosthetics and pathways for the future, as well as the Carbon Copies foundation and the new book ‘Contemplating Oblivion’ by Keith Wiley.

Continue reading “Whole Brain Emulation & Mind Uploading with Keith Wiley & Randal Koene” »

Aug 24, 2024

Scientists Discover “Spatial Grammar” in DNA: Breakthrough Could Rewrite Genetics Textbooks

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Researchers have discovered a “spatial grammar” in DNA that redefines the role of transcription factors in gene regulation, influencing our understanding of genetic variations and disease.

A recently uncovered code within DNA, referred to as “spatial grammar,” may unlock the secret to how gene activity is encoded in the human genome.

This breakthrough finding, identified by researchers at Washington State University and the University of California, San Diego and published in Nature, revealed a long-postulated hidden spatial grammar embedded in DNA. The research could reshape scientists’ understanding of gene regulation and how genetic variations may influence gene expression in development or disease.

Aug 24, 2024

Halliburton shuts down systems after cyberattack

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

A company spokesperson for the oil drilling and fracking giant declined to name the executive overseeing cybersecurity, if any.

Aug 24, 2024

First-Ever Coral Crossbreeding Hopes to Mimic the Resilience of an ‘Invincible’ Reef in Honduras

Posted by in category: food

The reef of Tela Bay should be dead if anything we know about coral reefs is true. The harms it faces are manifold, from warm waters to boat traffic to agricultural runoff and murky water.

Not only can the Tela reef survive these hazards, it thrives—as no other reef in the Caribbean thrives. On any given day, live coral cover in Tela is around 65%, almost four times more than the average for the Caribbean (18%).

Scientists are now working hard and fast to try and solve the mystery of why the Tela Reef seems partially invincible, and whether its secret sauce can be applied to other reefs at peril in the Gulf of Mexico.

Aug 24, 2024

Validation of superconductor theory: Cooper pairs display wave-like distribution in Kagome metals

Posted by in categories: computing, physics

A superconductivity theory proposed by a Würzburg physics team has been validated in an international experiment that showed Cooper pairs display wave-like distribution in Kagome metals. The finding will enable new technological applications such as superconducting diodes.

Aug 24, 2024

The Breakthrough We’ve Been Waiting For

Posted by in category: innovation

Get a 20% discount on The Economist’s annual digital subscriptions at https://www.economist.com/TOEProfessor Ivette Fuentes is a leading theoretical physicis…

Aug 24, 2024

Newly Created ‘AI Scientist’ Is About to Start Churning Out Research

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Can a process as complex as science be automated?


Scientific discovery is one of the most sophisticated human activities. First, scientists must understand the existing knowledge and identify a significant gap.

Next, they must formulate a research question and design and conduct an experiment in pursuit of an answer.

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Aug 24, 2024

Here’s how people are actually using AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Two years on, most of those productivity gains haven’t materialized. And we’ve seen something peculiar and slightly unexpected happen: People have started forming relationships with AI systems. We talk to them, say please and thank you, and have started to invite AIs into our lives as friends, lovers, mentors, therapists, and teachers.

We’re seeing a giant, real-world experiment unfold, and it’s still uncertain what impact these AI companions will have either on us individually or on society as a whole, argue Robert Mahari, a joint JD-PhD candidate at the MIT Media Lab and Harvard Law School, and Pat Pataranutaporn, a researcher at the MIT Media Lab. They say we need to prepare for “addictive intelligence”, or AI companions that have dark patterns built into them to get us hooked. You can read their piece here. They look at how smart regulation can help us prevent some of the risks associated with AI chatbots that get deep inside our heads.

The idea that we’ll form bonds with AI companions is no longer just hypothetical. Chatbots with even more emotive voices, such as OpenAI’s GPT-4o, are likely to reel us in even deeper. During safety testing, OpenAI observed that users would use language that indicated they had formed connections with AI models, such as “This is our last day together.” The company itself admits that emotional reliance is one risk that might be heightened by its new voice-enabled chatbot.

Aug 24, 2024

Ahead of October Launch, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin Rocket Explodes During Testing

Posted by in category: space travel

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origins is tripping over its own feet as it races to meet an October deadline. One rocket portion exploded during testing.

Aug 24, 2024

2023 Whole Brain Emulation Workshop

Posted by in category: neuroscience

This two-day event invites leading researchers, entrepreneurs, and funders to drive progress. Explore new opportunities, form lasting collaborations, and joi…

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