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Apr 19, 2018
This amateur mathematician just made an enormous “lucky” breakthrough in solving the 60-year-old Hadwiger-Nelson problem
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: innovation
The breakthrough is the first time the problem’s answer has been narrowed down since last century.
Apr 19, 2018
Health Pod Gives You a Check Up Without a Doctor
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, health
Apr 19, 2018
UK satellite makes HD movies of Earth
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: entertainment, space travel
The Carbonite-2 spacecraft can resolve moving cars, lorries, boats and planes from a height of 505km.
Apr 19, 2018
Bolt Threads Debuts New ‘Leather’ Made From Mushroom Roots
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: innovation, materials
The materials innovation startup known for its synthetic spider sillk is rolling out a second bio-material, a leather made from mycelium that can be grown in a small space with a much lower environmental impact than raising cattle.
Apr 19, 2018
Robotic Treatment For Patients With Spinal Cord Injuries
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, drones, robotics/AI
Robots are going to make life a lot easier for amputees and people with spinal cord injuries. Take HAL from CYBERDYNE for instance: it is robotic assistive limb that improves patients’ ability to walk. HAL uses sensors to detect signals from the patient’s body to assist with desired movement.
🛩️ Latest App Smart Drones & Multirotors
Apr 19, 2018
Google AI can pick out voices in a crowd
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Humans are usually good at isolating a single voice in a crowd, but computers? Not so much — just ask anyone trying to talk to a smart speaker at a house party. Google may have a surprisingly straightforward solution, however. Its researchers have developed a deep learning system that can pick out specific voices by looking at people’s faces when they’re speaking. The team trained its neural network model to recognize individual people speaking by themselves, and then created virtual “parties” (complete with background noise) to teach the AI how to isolate multiple voices into distinct audio tracks.
The results, as you can see below, are uncanny. Even when people are clearly trying to compete with each other (such as comedians Jon Dore and Rory Scovel in the Team Coco clip above), the AI can generate a clean audio track for one person just by focusing on their face. That’s true even if the person partially obscures their face with hand gestures or a microphone.
Continue reading “Google AI can pick out voices in a crowd” »
Apr 19, 2018
Low-latency JPEG XS format is optimized for live streaming and VR
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: drones, internet, mobile phones, robotics/AI, virtual reality
You might only know JPEG as the default image compression standard, but the group behind it has now branched out into something new: JPEG XS. JPEG XS is described as a new low-energy format designed to stream live video and VR, even over WiFi and 5G networks. It’s not a replacement for JPEG and the file sizes themselves won’t be smaller; it’s just that this new format is optimized specifically for lower latency and energy efficiency. In other words, JPEG is for downloading, but JPEG XS is more for streaming.
The new standard was introduced this week by the Joint Photographic Experts Group, which says that the aim of JPEG XS is to “stream the files instead of storing them in smartphones or other devices with limited memory.” So in addition to getting faster HD content on your large displays, the group also sees JPEG XS as a valuable format for faster stereoscopic VR streaming plus videos streamed by drones and self-driving cars.
“We are compressing less in order to better preserve quality, and we are making the process faster while using less energy,” says JPEG leader Touradj Ebrahimi in a statement. According to Ebrahimi, the JPEG XS video compression will be less severe than with JPEG photos — while JPEG photos are compressed by a factor of 10, JPEG XS is compressed by a factor of 6. The group promises a “visual lossless” quality to the images of JPEG XS.
Apr 19, 2018
MIT Unleashes a Hypnotic Robot Fish to Help Save the Oceans
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Like a miniaturized Moby Dick, the pure-white fish wiggles slowly over the reef, ducking under corals and ascending, then descending again, up and down and all around. Its insides, though, are not flesh, but electronics. And its flexible tail flicking back and forth is not made of muscle and scales, but elastomer.
The Soft Robotic Fish, aka SoFi, is a hypnotic machine, the likes of which the sea has never seen before. In a paper published today in Science Robotics, MIT researchers detail the evolution of the world’s strangest fish, and describe how it could be a potentially powerful tool for scientists to study ocean life.
Scientists designed SoFi to solve several problems that bedevil oceanic robotics. Problem one: communication. Underwater vehicles are typically tethered to a boat because radio waves don’t do well in water. What SoFi’s inventors have opted for instead is sound.