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Archive for the ‘futurism’ category: Page 11

Apr 15, 2024

Probing the 3D Awareness of Visual Foundation Models

Posted by in category: futurism

This repository contains a re-implementation of the code for the paper Probing the 3D Awareness of Visual Foundation Models (CVPR 2024) which presents an analysis of the 3D awareness of visual foundation models.

Mohamed El Banani, Amit Raj, Kevis-Kokitsi Maninis, Abhishek Kar, Yuanzhen Li, Michael Rubinstein, Deqing Sun, Leonidas Guibas, Justin Johnson, Varun Jampani

If you find this code useful, please consider citing:

Apr 15, 2024

Antarctic Pollution Crisis: Microplastics Found To Be a Greater Threat Than Known

Posted by in category: futurism

Now impacting All Life on Earth.


It’s not the first study on microplastics in Antarctica that researchers from the University of Basel and the Alfred-Wegener Institute (AWI) have conducted. However, data analysis from a spring 2021 expedition reveals that environmental pollution from these tiny plastic particles is a bigger problem in the remote Weddell Sea than was previously known.

The total of 17 seawater samples all indicated higher concentrations of microplastics than in previous studies. “The reason for this is the type of sampling we conducted,” says Clara Leistenschneider, doctoral candidate in the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Basel and lead author of the study.

Continue reading “Antarctic Pollution Crisis: Microplastics Found To Be a Greater Threat Than Known” »

Apr 14, 2024

This Tiny Frog Emits a Powerful Ultrasonic Scream No Human Can Hear

Posted by in category: futurism

The Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest is filled with the ear-piercing ‘screams’ of a tiny amphibian in distress, but until now, we humans have been oblivious to their cries.

For the first time, researchers have recorded South American frogs crying out at a frequency that totally bypasses the human ear – but which would be quite unpleasant to animals with the right kind of receivers.

The leaf litter frog (Haddadus binotatus) is the most abundant species of frog in the forest community. Though abundant, they’re tiny – the largest of the species are females, and even they that barely reach 64 millimeters (2.5 inches) in length.

Apr 14, 2024

FSD Stories

Posted by in category: futurism

Explore the fun and excitement that comes with Tesla FSD We have curated Tesla FSD test drives, stories, and shorts into a map layout so you can explore how people are trying the Tesla FSD and the reactions they are getting. For best results expand the map to full screen and select from these options.

FSD drives: 66 stories: 14 shorts: 6

If you want to add your FSD adventure video, send us an email to: [email protected] Include the youtube video url, and any comments you want to share smile

Apr 14, 2024

What gravitons are and could one detect them in a TGD universe

Posted by in category: futurism

Shared with Dropbox.

Apr 14, 2024

The Mirror Universe Could Actually Be Real And It’s Scarier Than We Thought

Posted by in category: futurism

While the idea of a mirror universe sounds like something from Marvel’s Doctor Strange, scientists now believe it could be real.

Apr 14, 2024

For the first time, Wigner crystal is seen using a quantum device

Posted by in categories: futurism, quantum physics

Physicists at Princeton University successfully visualize the 90-year-old Wigner Crystal theory. This could pave the way for future quantum discoveries.

Apr 14, 2024

Paper page — RecurrentGemma: Moving Past Transformers for Efficient Open Language Models

Posted by in category: futurism

Google presents RecurrentGemma.

Moving past transformers for efficient open language models.

We introduce RecurrentGemma, an open #language model which uses Google’s novel Griffin architecture.

Continue reading “Paper page — RecurrentGemma: Moving Past Transformers for Efficient Open Language Models” »

Apr 13, 2024

This is our Muon Shot

Posted by in categories: futurism, particle physics

In December, the Particle Physics Project Prioritization Panel, called P5, released its recommendations for the future of the field, based on the input from the Snowmass process.


The US physics community dreams of building a muon collider.

Apr 13, 2024

Many-Valued Logic (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

Posted by in category: futurism

Reminds me of the world of null A by AEVan Vogh.


Many-valued logics are non-classical logics. They are similar to classical logic because they accept the principle of truth-functionality, namely, that the truth of a compound sentence is determined by the truth values of its component sentences (and so remains unaffected when one of its component sentences is replaced by another sentence with the same truth value). But they differ from classical logic by the fundamental fact that they do not restrict the number of truth values to only two: they allow for a larger set W W of truth degrees.

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