As an estimated four billion people vote to elect new governments in a historic year for democracy, trade unions are campaigning For Democracy at work, in societies, and in global institutions. The fight for democracy in global institutions Millions of workers have already mobilised for policy chang...
The Palletrone is a robotic hovercart for moving stuff anywhere
Supporting new technologies can be expensive, but deciding when to wean the public off incentives can be a difficult balancing act.
Conversational AI Powered by Large Language Models Amplifies False Memories in Witness InterviewsThis study examines the impact of AI on human false memories--…
To create a novel or a painting, an artist makes choices that are fundamentally alien to artificial intelligence.
Para-athlete Kevin Piette, equipped with a Wandercraft exoskeleton, participates in the Olympic torch relay.
Huge AI investments are costing some workers their jobs as companies change their spending priorities.
Company after company is swallowing the hype, only to be forced into embarrassing walkbacks by anti-AI backlash, writes Ed Newton-Rex, founder of Fairly Trained
AI detects 25% greater accuracy than doctors: UCLA study
Through the Artemis Program, NASA will return astronauts to the lunar surface for the first time since Apollo 17 landed in 1972. Beyond this historic mission, scheduled for September 2026, NASA plans to establish the infrastructure that will enable annual missions to the Moon, eventually leading to ...
Business is unsustainable for the 100+ LLMs competing in China.
Fast fashion creates millions of tonnes of waste each year — could clever chemistry help to tackle the problem?
Here's the paper citied - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.202407892
New approach by USTC research team breaks cost barrier to next-generation rechargeable lithium batteries, according to paper.
Adapted from the new book The Singularity is Nearer: When We Merge With AI by Ray Kurzweil.
Fudan University scientists discover a method to freeze and thaw human brain tissue, retaining its functionality.
During an MIT talk, AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton seemed to endorse the concept of superintelligent AI replacing humanity.
Machine learning and careful observation suggest that some of the animals’ calls are specific to individuals, similar to a person’s name.
Imec’s plan to use superconductors to shrink computers
The problem is feeding them crap will keep them low IQ. Most parents want the highest quality educational content instead.
with the safety flag happily waving...........fled the scene.
Anthropomorphising much? Its like saying a toaster that broke down turned on you in a hissy fit.
This idea seems economically illiterate. In a world where humans don't earn money, how do we have a stock market supporting these valuations?
Maybe I'm paranoid, but why does my mind straight away go to all the nefarious ways this could be used. Creative criminals and intelligence agencies could find many uses for this technology when it matures.
They are made from a biological substrate with metal magnetic components. It means they are highly controllable in water tanks via magnetic fields. They won't be out in the wild.
I think we’re going to have to pit AIs against one another in another web of complexity in order to reach AGI.
I don't know if its going to be the route to AGI, but what you are describing is already happening.
There's Microsoft’s AutoGen framework & OpenAI next month say they too will have AI Agents for Chat-GPT
Just AI. The distinction being that an AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) is a theoretical superintelligence capable of any intellectual task, including coding to improve itself.
Here's a video showing this model of robot in action.
It will be interesting to see what capabilities these have, and how trainable they will be. They look like they can do simple warehouse work, but will they be much more capable than that?
Any human work of art is made by an artist who is synthesizing other's past work they've absorbed. If I write a murder-mystery crime novel set in 1930s England, it would be hard to avoid some influence of Agatha Christie's. Does it mean I'm stealing from her?
There's a separate issue of AI taking jobs, which is very real, but will probably need something like Basic Income to deal with on a society-wide level.
I'm grateful for the EU. They're setting the standards for consumer protection and making things happen.
I'm very excited about kinetic gun type launch tech. Its way to harsh for humans, but it could get cargo to space very cheaply. If that were true the building blocks for a huge space station suddenly become much more economically feasible.