Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 195
Mar 30, 2016
Reaching for the stars: How lasers could propel spacecraft to relativistic speeds
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: innovation, space travel
In a bold but scientifically sound proposal, NASA-funded research has laid out a roadmap toward spacecraft with relativistic speeds for the exploration of nearby stars (Credit: NASA). View gallery (8 images)
How do you send man-made probes to a nearby star? According to NASA-funded research at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), the answer is simple: assemble a laser array the size of Manhattan in low Earth orbit, and use it to push tiny probes to 26 percent the speed of light. Though the endeavour may raise a few eyebrows, it relies on well-established science – and recent technological breakthroughs have put it within our reach.
Mar 28, 2016
Politicisation of NBN a ‘tragedy’ that has held back innovation, ABC’s Q&A told
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: innovation
Innovations expert Sandy Plunkett joins panellists in criticising government’s controversial NBN model, but Wyatt Roy says it’s about separating ‘rhetoric and reality’.
Mar 25, 2016
This Drone Can Launch from Under Water
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: drones, innovation
CRACUNS, an innovative drone being developed by Johns Hopkins University, can be launched from under water and live completely submerged for as long as two months. http://voc.tv/14JQHoo
Mar 25, 2016
To the Moon! NASA Contest Kick-Starts Innovative Space Tech
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: innovation, space travel
Startup NASA’s “Space Race” program will let companies vie to commercialize space exploration tech.
Mar 23, 2016
Temple Grandin On Her Search Engine — Blank on Blank | PBS Digital Studios, KurzweilAI
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: innovation, science
“What it’s really like to have an autistic brain and how Einstein’s not the only genius who could have been dismissed for being different.”
Tags: autism, technology
Mar 19, 2016
A Student Claims to Have Designed Working Artificial Gills
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: innovation, wearables
In time for vacation/ summer holiday season.
A mysterious site showcases a detailed blueprint of a wearable device that lets users breathe underwater like fish.
Mar 18, 2016
Who’s Afraid of Existential Risk? Or, Why It’s Time to Bring the Cold War out of the Cold
Posted by Steve Fuller in categories: defense, disruptive technology, economics, existential risks, governance, innovation, military, philosophy, policy, robotics/AI, strategy, theory, transhumanism
At least in public relations terms, transhumanism is a house divided against itself. On the one hand, there are the ingenious efforts of Zoltan Istvan – in the guise of an ongoing US presidential bid — to promote an upbeat image of the movement by focusing on human life extension and other tech-based forms of empowerment that might appeal to ordinary voters. On the other hand, there is transhumanism’s image in the ‘serious’ mainstream media, which is currently dominated by Nick Bostrom’s warnings of a superintelligence-based apocalypse. The smart machines will eat not only our jobs but eat us as well, if we don’t introduce enough security measures.
Of course, as a founder of contemporary transhumanism, Bostrom does not wish to stop artificial intelligence research, and he ultimately believes that we can prevent worst case scenarios if we act now. Thus, we see a growing trade in the management of ‘existential risks’, which focusses on how we might prevent if not predict any such tech-based species-annihilating prospects. Nevertheless, this turn of events has made some observers reasonably wonder whether indeed it might not be better simply to put a halt to artificial intelligence research altogether. As a result, the precautionary principle, previously invoked in the context of environmental and health policy, has been given a new lease on life as generalized world-view.
The idea of ‘existential risk’ capitalizes on the prospect of a very unlikely event that, were it to pass, would be extremely catastrophic for the human condition. Thus, the high value of the outcome psychologically counterbalances its low probability. It’s a bit like Pascal’s wager, whereby the potentially negative consequences of you not believing in God – to wit, eternal damnation — rationally compels you to believe in God, despite your instinctive doubts about the deity’s existence.
However, this line of reasoning underestimates both the weakness and the strength of human intelligence. On the one hand, we’re not so powerful as to create a ‘weapon of mass destruction’, however defined, that could annihilate all of humanity; on the other, we’re not so weak as to be unable to recover from whatever errors of design or judgement that might be committed in the normal advance of science and technology in the human life-world. I make this point not to counsel complacency but to question whether ‘existential risk’ is really the high concept that it is cracked up to be. I don’t believe it is.
Mar 17, 2016
CNET On Cars — Road to the Future- Airless tires
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: innovation, transportation
Mar 17, 2016
Michelin’s Newest Airless Tires Are A Breakthrough Innovation
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: innovation
F you haven’t experienced a flat tire then you are lucky, but for those of us who have we understand all too well the hassle of changing a flat tire and airing one back up. In this video we get introduced to the new innovative Michelin Airless Tires that are able to drive on every possible terrain!