Cool idea! About time someone made anatomy more fun. More details here: http://goo.gl/uqFvHF
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This Butterfly Dress will change the way people approach fashion. The butterflies can release en masse to react to external stimuli. #Intel
Mar 1, 2016
Tiny Radar Camera Microchip Packs A Big Punch
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, electronics, satellites
This tiny microchip effectively allows for palm-sized radar cameras.
In the future, radar cameras for use in satellites could be made a hundred times smaller with this millimeter-long chip, without compromising on image quality.
Mar 1, 2016
Quarks To Quasars Photo 2
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: particle physics, space
Mar 1, 2016
The Navy’s New AI Missile Sinks Ships the Smart Way
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: military, robotics/AI
https://youtube.com/watch?v=LvHlW1h_0XQ
Artificial intelligence helps the LRASM evade defenses, home on its prey.
Mar 1, 2016
This artificial kidney is part human organ, part microchip
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: biotech/medical
Mar 1, 2016
Watch Google’s robot ‘Spot’ play with Andy Rubin’s real dog
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: military, robotics/AI
The US military recently decided that Google’s Alpha Dog and Spot robots weren’t ready for active duty, leaving the four legged robots with nothing to do. In the meantime, Google is doing with its battery-powered Spot robot what we probably would — using it as a dog toy. The company recently unleashed it on Alex, the terrier that reportedly belongs to Android co-founder and Playground Global boss Andy Rubin. The adorable result is that Alex, clearly the boss of this arrangement, sees the hapless robot as an existential threat that must be barked at and harangued (no butt-sniffing, luckily).
The model is reportedly the only one that’s not in military hands, and there’s no word on what Google’s Boston Dynamics plans to do with it now. The military thought Spot could be a potential ground reconnaissance asset, but “the problem is, Spot in its current configuration doesn’t have the autonomy to do that,” says James Peneiro, the Ground Combat head of the Warfighting Lab. It would be shortsighted, of course, to think the robots need to be put to work right away. A lot of the self-balancing tech in Spot (and its ability to take a kick) can already be found in the next-generation humanoid Atlas Robot.
Continue reading “Watch Google’s robot ‘Spot’ play with Andy Rubin’s real dog” »
Mar 1, 2016
Google says it bears ‘some responsibility’ after self-driving car hit bus
Posted by Amnon H. Eden in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
First ever crash reported with a self-driving car at (some) fault.
Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) Google said on Monday it bears “some responsibility” after one of its self-driving cars struck a municipal bus in a minor crash earlier this month.
Mar 1, 2016
Peter Wittek, a roving adventurer between machine intelligence and quantum physics
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: quantum physics, robotics/AI, supercomputing
I must admit, when people see that you work with Quantum Computing and/ or networking; they have no idea how to classify you because you’re working on Nextgen “disruptive” technology that most of mainstream has not been exposed to.
Peter Wittek and I met more than a decade ago while he was an exchange student in Singapore. I consider him one of the most interesting people I’ve met and an inspiration to us all.
Currently, he is a research scientist working on quantum machine learning, an emergent field halfway between data science and quantum information processing. Peter also has a long history in machine learning on supercomputers and large-scale simulations of quantum systems. As a former digital nomad, Peter has been to over a hundred countries, he is currently based in Barcelona where, outside work hours, he focuses on dancing salsa, running long distances, and advising startups.
Mar 1, 2016
Could protein-powered ‘biocomputers’ be the future of IT?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, materials, singularity
This does make it easier for the whole concept of Singularity to exist.
Scientists prove we are tantalisingly close to creating the next generation of computer components made of organic living materials, as we move beyond Moore’s Law and into exotic new devices.
Continue reading “Could protein-powered ‘biocomputers’ be the future of IT?” »