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Nov 16, 2016
Automatic Charging for E-Mobility
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: energy, transportation
NRG-X is the world’s first fully automatic charging solution, which provides efficient, high power energy transfer, has a great range of parking tolerance and can be simply retrofitted to almost every electric vehicle. Therefore, NRG-X is the ideal solution for convenient every day charging of your electric vehicle primarily at home. The system comprises two basic components:
Nov 16, 2016
CRISPR gene-editing tested in a person for the first time
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, genetics
I said over a year ago that if the US will not do it China will. Whilst there was talk about a moratorium on CRISPR in the US the Chinese were forging ahead and taking steps to become a world leader in biotech. Well here we are, they have deployed CRISPR in humans for cancer and this is only the start. As George Church advocates, we should have appropriate engineering safety measures in place but we should push ahead and do these things.
The move by Chinese scientists could spark a biomedical duel between China and the United States.
Nov 16, 2016
Spermidine found to lengthen lifespan in mice and to promote cardiovascular health
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, health
Fancy a bit of cheese?
(Medical Xpress)—A large team of researchers with members from several Europeans countries and the U.S. has found that mice fed a compound called spermidine lived longer than ordinary mice and also had better cardiovascular heath. In their paper published in the journal Nature Medicine, the researchers describe experiments they carried out with the compound and mice, what they found and why they believe the compound might provide benefits for humans.
Prior research has found that ingestion of spermidine—which was first discovered in semen samples, hence its name—led to longer lifespans in simple organisms such as fruit flies, yeast and roundworms. In this new study, the researchers sought to find out if the same would prove true for more complex creatures.
Nov 16, 2016
Microsoft teams up with Elon Musk’s OpenAI project
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI
OpenAI, the artificial intelligence research non-profit backed by Tesla’s Elon Musk, Y Combinator’s Sam Altman, a Donald Trump fan called Peter Thiel, and numerous other tech luminaries, is partnering with Microsoft to tackle the next set of challenges in the still-nascent field.
OpenAI will also make Microsoft Azure its preferred cloud platform, in part because of its existing support for AI workloads with the help of Azure Batch and Azure Machine Learning, as well as Microsoft’s work on its recently rebranded Cognitive Toolkit. Microsoft also offers developers access to a high-powered GPU-centric virtual machine for these kind of machine learning workloads. These N-Series machines are still in beta, but OpenAI has been an early adopter of them and Microsoft says they will become generally available in December.
Amazon already offers a similar kind of GPU-focused virtual machine, though oddly enough, Google has lagged behind and — at least for the time being — doesn’t offer this kind of machine type yet.
Continue reading “Microsoft teams up with Elon Musk’s OpenAI project” »
Nov 16, 2016
Improving Robot Response to Anticipate Human Actions-IEEE
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
Researchers create a CRF model for generating a correct robot response through anticipating future human actions.
Nov 15, 2016
Chinese Scientists Become First to Use CRISPR Gene-Editing on Humans
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Chinese scientists are attempting to use CRISPR to develop a new treatment for cancer patients, and the U.S. will soon follow their lead.
Nov 15, 2016
India Tried to Bring Brain-Dead People Back to Life
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, government
But the government shot down the effort, which means the brain dead will remain dead — for now.
Nov 15, 2016
This Google-powered AI can identify your terrible doodles
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: robotics/AI
As part of Google’s slew of artificial intelligence announcements today, the company is releasing a number of AI web experiments powered by its cloud services that anyone can go and play with. One — called Quick, Draw! — gives you a prompt to draw an image of a written word or phrase in under 20 seconds with your mouse cursor in such a way that a neural network can identify it. It’s both a hilarious and fascinating exercise with broader implications for how AI can self-learn over time in key AI research areas like image recognition and optical character recognition.
Quick, Draw! is a great way to familiarize yourself with how neural networks work to identify objects and text in photos, which is one of the most common forms of AI-guided software techniques we see daily on platform’s like Facebook and Google Photos. As you start to craft the doodle, Quick, Draw!’s software automaton will start yelling out words and phrases it thinks you’re trying to illustrate. As you get closer to the finished product, the voice starts to become a good indication of how your drawing could be misinterpreted as something else. If you’re on point, however, the neural network will hone in on the object and guess correctly.
Continue reading “This Google-powered AI can identify your terrible doodles” »
Nov 15, 2016
Forever Healthy Foundation Provides a $150,000 Challenge Fund to Match SENS Rejuvenation Research Donations
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
More news about SENS Research Foundation fundraiser and a look back at some of the achievements so far.
#sens #aging
Good news! Thanks to the generous pledges of new SENS Patrons, signing up for monthly donations to the SENS Research Foundation over the past two weeks since the fundraiser started, the $24,000 matching fund put up by Josh Triplett and Fight Aging! is nearly met. Just a little more left to reach the target: if you are the next person to sign up, the next year of your donations to the SENS Research Foundation will be matched dollar for dollar. But if you miss out on that, donations made before the end of the year can still be matched. The Forever Healthy Foundation’s Michael Greve, who earlier this year pledged $10 million to SENS rejuvenation research and startup companies building rejuvenation therapies, has put up a further $150,000 challenge fund. He will match all donations to the SENS Research Foundation made before the end of 2016, and there is still a way to go in order to meet that target. So help us get this done!