Necessity is the mother of invention. Tanzanian researcher creates a water filter that turns polluted water into drinking water.
Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 202
Feb 17, 2016
The Good News From Google: A Conversation With Ruth Porat | Foreign Affairs
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: business, innovation, internet
“Ruth Porat has taken an unusual path to the tech world. Before becoming the chief financial officer at Google in May 2015 (and then at Alphabet, Google’s new parent company, a few months later), she held the same post at Morgan Stanley, where among other roles she worked closely with the U.S. government to sort out the troubles at the insurance corporation AIG and the mortgage-financing agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac during the 2008 financial crisis.”
Feb 15, 2016
The Many Uses of Multi-Agent Intelligent Systems
Posted by Dan Faggella in categories: complex systems, disruptive technology, driverless cars, energy, innovation, robotics/AI, software
In professional cycling, it’s well known that a pack of 40 or 50 riders can ride faster and more efficiently than a single rider or small group. As such, you’ll often see cycling teams with different goals in a race work together to chase down a breakaway before the finish line.
This analogy is one way to think about collaborative multi-agent intelligent systems, which are poised to change the technology landscape for individuals, businesses, and governments, says Dr. Mehdi Dastani, a computer scientist at Utrecht University. The proliferation of these multi-agent systems could lead to significant systemic changes across society in the next decade.
“Multi-agent systems are basically a kind of distributed system with sets of software. A set can be very large. They are autonomous, they make their own decisions, they can perceive their environment, “Dastani said. “They can perceive other agents and they can communicate, collaborate or compete to get certain resources. A multi-agent system can be conceived as a set of individual softwares that interact.”
Continue reading “The Many Uses of Multi-Agent Intelligent Systems” »
Feb 15, 2016
Now you can learn to fly a plane from expert-pilot brainwave patterns | KurzweilAI
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: education, innovation, science
“You can learn how to improve your novice pilot skills by having your brain zapped with recorded brain patterns of experienced pilots via transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), according to researchers at HRL Laboratories.”
Tags: Brain, intelligence
Feb 4, 2016
BREAKING: An Injectable HIV Treatment Could Be Ready By 2017
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
CytoDyn Inc. announced in a news release last week that its ongoing extension study of PRO 140 monotherapy has shown “complete viral-load suppression” for well over a year, with some patients approaching 17 months. The phase I trial included 23 patients.
“The company believes that complete virologic suppression through treatment with a single agent, PRO 140, a safe and efficacious antibody, rather than through the widely used HAART combination therapy, could present a significant opportunity to treat HIV patients. Based on these monotherapy results, the company plans to file a second Phase 3 protocol for PRO 140 monotherapy with the FDA. CytoDyn is currently conducting a pivotal phase 3 trial for PRO 140 as an adjunct therapy with expected commercialization in 2017.”
On Jan 22, the company filed a request for Breakthrough Therapy Designation with the FDA for PRO 140 as a treatment for HIV-1 infection in treatment experienced patients with virologic failure, meaning other medications alone no longer work for them.
Feb 1, 2016
The Coming Era of Virtual Reality
Posted by Philip Raymond in categories: augmented reality, disruptive technology, entertainment, innovation, thought controlled, virtual reality
A Lifeboat guest editorial
Richelle Ross is a sophomore at the University of Florida, focusing on statistics and data science. As a crypto consultant, she educates far beyond the campus. Her insight on the evolution and future of Bitcoin has been featured in national publications. Richelle writes for CoinDesk, LinkedIn, and Quora, providing analysis on Bitcoin’s evolving economy.
In 2003, I remember going to see my first IMAX 3D film, Space Station . My family was touring NASA at Cape Canaveral Florida. The film was an inside view into life as an astronaut enters space. As the astronauts tossed M&Ms to each other in their new gravity-free domain, the other children and I gleefully reached our hands out to try and touch the candy as it floated towards us. I had never experienced anything so mind-blowing in my 7 year life. The first 3D film was released in 1922. Yet, surprisingly, flat entertainment has dominated screens for in the 9½ decades that followed. Only a handful of films have been released in 3D—most of them are animated. But now, we are gradually seeing a shift in how people experience entertainment. As methods evolve and as market momentum builds, it promises to be one of the most groundbreaking technologies of the decade. I foresee Virtual Reality reaching a point where our perception of virtual and real-life experiences becomes blurred—and eventually—the two become integrated.
Ever since pen was put to paper, and camera to screen, audiences have enjoyed being swept into other worlds. For those of us “dreamers” being able to escape into these stories is one way we live through and expand our understanding of other times and places—even places that may not be accessible in our lifetimes. Virtual reality is the logical progression and natural evolution of these experiences.
Jan 31, 2016
South Summit | Spain Start Up. OCT 5–7, 2016
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: innovation, transportation
Hyperloop Technologie
South Summit is one of the leading startup conferences in Europe aimed to prove to the world the talent, the innovation and the opportunities from the South.
Jan 28, 2016
Why the Internet is the Greatest Invention in a Very Long Time
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: innovation, internet
The greatest invention of our era? The internet.
Jan 27, 2016
Breakthrough Diabetes Cell Therapy Could Be A Game Changer
Posted by Robert James Powles in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
Research is edging us closer to a cure for type 1 diabetes, with encapsulated insulin producing cells that could last for years — ending daily injections
Over 400,000 in the UK alone live with type 1 diabetes, and daily injections are far from a ‘cure’ for the condition. Although these have saved millions worldwide, they’re inaccurate in comparison to the body’s own finely tuned insulin producing cells. This leads to progressive damage and complications.
The wonders of cell therapy
Continue reading “Breakthrough Diabetes Cell Therapy Could Be A Game Changer” »
Jan 20, 2016
A social media war just erupted over the biotech innovation of the century
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
This CRISPR ownership dispute being played out in front of the public is truly concerning. My question is how much time are these researchers/ scientists spending locked in this battle v. focusing on research, testing and clinical trials, etc. to help the public? If their energy was focused on helping the public; it would be better for them and their image to the public.
A history of CRISPR ignites a furious tweetstorm.