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Mar 12, 2018
Tax the terminator: Chinese adviser calls for levy to stop robots taking over the workplace
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: government, robotics/AI
Cai, a delegate to the National People’s Congress in Beijing, said the idea made sense.
As the country rides a wave of investment in automation, Cai is among the first Chinese academics to call for restrictions on robots.
NPC delegate Cai Fang says it won’t be long before machines can do most things better than humans.
Mar 12, 2018
Can we turn back time? Muscles’ own protective systems could help reduce frailty
Posted by Ian Hale in category: futurism
Mar 12, 2018
Elon Musk still thinks a Mars colony will save us from a future dark age
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: climatology, Elon Musk, existential risks, robotics/AI, space travel, sustainability
Elon Musk, the head of SpaceX and Tesla, came to SXSW this week and gave a grave talk about the future of humanity, warning about the dangers of nuclear war, climate, change, and runaway AI and telling the audience that the only way to keep humanity alive is to colonize the Solar System.
Mar 11, 2018
Chinese satellite filled with corrosive fuel could hit lower Michigan
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, space
Look out for—falling space debris?
A large Chinese satellite that’s free-falling to Earth could crash into southern Michigan sometime between now and early April, researchers say.
According to a new report from the Aerospace Corporation, southern portions of lower Michigan fall into the regions listed as having a high probability of debris landing from the 8.5-ton space station. The report also identifies northern China, central Italy and northern Spain as regions with higher chances of impact.
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Mar 11, 2018
Putin shows world how he could start World War Three with new missile
Posted by John Gallagher in category: military
Russia said today that it successfully launched a hypersonic missile capable carrying a nuclear warhead.
President Vladimir Putin called it ‘an ideal weapon’ when he unveiled a new array of next-generation arms earlier this month.
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Mar 11, 2018
The freshest herbs in Manhattan were grown in this office building basement
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: food, sustainability
New York City’s discerning high-end chefs often ship in rare herbs and edible flowers from other states or even overseas. But Farm.One, an organic farm in the basement of an office building in Manhattan, can pick and deliver the precious leaves and flowers within the same day, says Robert Laing, the company’s CEO.
With its stacked shelves of hydroponic plants and grow lights, Farm. One is part of a growing movement of vertical farming across the world. The tech-enabled system uses less space and water than traditional farming.
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Mar 11, 2018
This cauliflower-picking robot aims to make up for a shortage of human labor in the UK
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: food, robotics/AI
Meet GummiArm, the soft-handed robot that could fill in for a lack of human crop pickers—if British farmers can afford the cost.
The problem: The Telegraph notes that 40 percent of the growing costs for cauliflower, and similar crops like cabbage and broccoli, comes from harvesting in the UK. And that could rise, as crop-picking labor supply is set to decline in the country following Brexit.
Robots could help: University of Plymouth researchers say their GummiArm bot can pick up the slack. Computer vision allows it to work out which vegetable it should try to pick, while its hand can become more or less stiff to gently pick brassicas from their stems. It’s currently being tested in fields in southwestern England.
Mar 11, 2018
India’s Switch from Environmental Victim to Renewable Energy Champ
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: climatology, sustainability
“A few months from now, a group of people will come here with something called an electric car. I need to know whether or not you have the right voltage connection for them to plug in their vehicles. Do you understand what I’m asking for?”
Mr. Dev Reddy, manager of a gas station in rural Anantapur district of India’s Andhra Pradesh looked at me as if he understood. It was 2008, and most people in India had never seen an electric car, but without flinching he took me to a shed to reveal a large plug point, which was used to power an electric sugar cane juicing machine. One look at it and I knew that there was sufficient voltage coming through the connection to be able to charge the lithium-ion battery in the REVA electric vehicles my friends and I would be driving 3,500 kilometers across India.
In 2008, it was folly to imagine India creating new technological solutions to address the climate crisis. For decades India had called itself a victim of climate change and thus incapable of acting to reduce emissions; what’s more, 400 million Indians had no access to electricity at all.
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Mar 11, 2018
What if billionaires could live forever?
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, Peter Diamandis
Several billionaires, most of them Californians, have been funding firms involved in developing life-extension technologies. What if they succeed? What if billionaires alive today live indefinitely and get ever richer?
February saw the announcement in Silicon Valley by X Prize founder, serial entrepreneur, and all-round gee-whiz future-technology promoter Peter Diamandis that he had cofounded a new company called Celularity.
He did so together with Dr. Bob Hariri, a renowned biomedical entrepreneur known for innovations in harvesting placental stem cells. Hariri had previously founded Celgene Cellular Therapeutics.
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