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Dimension Zero LIVE #1 | Science, Sci-Fi, Physics, Star Trek, Supergirl & More

🚀 WELCOME TO THE PREMIERE OF DIMENSION ZERO LIVE!

Join award-winning screenwriter Danny Alex for the very first live episode of Dimension Zero, where science, science fiction, physics, astronomy, and popular culture collide.

Tonight we’ll introduce the vision behind the channel and explore some of the biggest questions in science fiction and the real science behind them.

Tonight’s topics include:
‱ Star Trek.
‱ Battlestar Galactica.
‱ Supergirl.
‱ The Odyssey.
‱ Antimatter.
‱ Physics vs. Science Fiction.
‱ Space Exploration.
‱ Audience Q&A and more!

If you’ve ever wondered whether warp drives, antimatter reactors, faster-than-light travel, artificial intelligence, or the incredible technologies of science fiction could ever become reality, this is the show for you.

Dimension Zero explores The Science of Science Fiction, separating scientific fact from fiction while celebrating the worlds we love.

First AI Recognizes Itself. Then It Learns Not to Get Caught

Further reading Thumbnail image credit: Figure AI

Text used in video and more:

AI Model Misbehavior in 2026: Scheming, Reward Hacking, and What Comes Next https://hatchworks.com/blog/gen-ai/ai
 We Trust Embodied Agents? Exploring Backdoor Attacks against Embodied LLM-Based Decision-Making Systems https://openreview.net/forum?id=S1Bv3
 BadRobot: Jailbreaking Embodied LLM Agents in the Physical World https://arxiv.org/html/2407.20242v5 AI Model Misbehavior in 2026: Scheming, Reward Hacking, and What Comes Next https://arxiv.org/html/2407.20242v5 Jailbreaking LLM-Controlled Robots https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.13691 LLM-Driven Robots Risk Enacting Discrimination, Violence, and Unlawful Actions https://arxiv.org/html/2406.08824v1 Inducing Bystander Interventions During Robot Abuse with Social Mechanisms https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/.
 You might get offered promo codes if one of these delivery robots runs into you https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/19/24
 Training Agents to Self-Report Misbehavior https://arxiv.org/html/2602.22303v1 Natural emergent misalignment from reward hacking in production RL https://arxiv.org/html/2511.18397v1 Long-horizon Embodied Planning with Implicit Logical Inference and Hallucination Mitigation https://arxiv.org/html/2409.15658v2 Deception Abilities Emerged in Large Language Models https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.16513 Robot in the mirror: toward an embodied computational model of mirror self-recognition https://arxiv.org/abs/2011.04485 Misleading text in the physical world can hijack AI-enabled robots, cybersecurity study shows https://news.ucsc.edu/2026/01/mislead
 #science #explained #ai #artificialintelligence #robots #psychology #sentience #consciousness.

Can We Trust Embodied Agents? Exploring Backdoor Attacks against Embodied LLM-Based Decision-Making Systems https://openreview.net/forum?id=S1Bv3
 BadRobot: Jailbreaking Embodied LLM Agents in the Physical World https://arxiv.org/html/2407.20242v5

AI Model Misbehavior in 2026: Scheming, Reward Hacking, and What Comes Next https://arxiv.org/html/2407.20242v5

Jailbreaking LLM-Controlled Robots https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.

Quantum Computers Just Solved What AI Couldn’t — Here’s Proof

Artificial intelligence has achieved remarkable breakthroughs in recent years, from generating human-like text and images to solving complex scientific and engineering problems. Yet some challenges remain extraordinarily difficult even for the most advanced AI systems. This has fueled growing interest in quantum computing, a technology that processes information in fundamentally different ways from classical computers. Researchers are now exploring whether quantum algorithms can tackle certain optimization, simulation, and computational problems that push conventional AI systems to their limits. Recent experiments and research papers have generated excitement by demonstrating situations where quantum approaches may offer unique advantages, reigniting debate about how these two revolutionary technologies could work together in the future.

Rather than viewing quantum computing and AI as competitors, many experts believe they could become powerful partners. Quantum processors may eventually help accelerate specific machine learning tasks, improve complex simulations, and solve optimization problems that are critical to industries such as logistics, finance, materials science, and drug discovery. At the same time, scientists caution that practical large-scale quantum computing remains an active area of research, and many headline-grabbing claims require careful scrutiny and independent verification. Even so, the rapid progress in both fields suggests that the future of computing may be shaped not by AI alone, but by a combination of artificial intelligence and quantum technologies working together to tackle problems once thought impossible.

Disclaimer.

This video is intended for educational and informational purposes only. Quantum computing and artificial intelligence are rapidly evolving fields, and interpretations of research findings may change as new evidence becomes available. The content presented is based on publicly available studies, expert analysis, and current technological developments.

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First global rules adopted for self-driving cars: UN

The first global safety regulations for fully autonomous vehicles were adopted at the U.N., setting uniform international requirements that could pave the way for larger-scale rollouts. The framework is expected to enter into force in January 2027.


The first global regulations for fully autonomous vehicles were adopted Wednesday, a U.N. agency said, establishing uniform international safety requirements that could pave the way for larger-scale rollouts of self-driving cars.

Safety concerns and the cost of developing next-level systems have long slowed progress on autonomous vehicles.

As self-driving cars have begun to hit the road in a growing number of cities, fragmented national approaches to regulation have spurred manufacturer fears that vehicles developed for one market could be blocked from others.

Lab-Grown Organs: Revolutionizing Transplants!

Discover the groundbreaking world of lab-grown organs in our latest YouTube Shorts! In “Lab-Grown Organs: Revolutionizing Transplants,” we explore how scientists are utilizing bioprinting, scaffold tissue engineering, and induced pluripotent stem cells to create functional organs like kidneys, livers, and hearts. This innovative approach not only eliminates transplant waiting lists but also uses a patient’s own cells, reducing the risk of rejection. Join us as we unveil the future of organ transplantation and the incredible advancements in organogenesis!

If you find this video enlightening, don’t forget to like and share it with your friends!

#LabGrownOrgans #TransplantRevolution #Bioprinting #Organogenesis #MedicalInnovation.

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#ai

Sound waves could power a new kind of chip inspired by the human brain

Neuromorphic computing is a computing approach that mimics how the human brain works. Our gray matter is a marvel of nature, capable of handling huge volumes of data with incredible energy efficiency. While modern AI hardware is becoming better at processing complex tasks, it consumes vast amounts of energy.

One of the promises of neuromorphic computing is that it places memory and processing in the same location, using far less energy than traditional AI chips. However, even the most sophisticated neuromorphic systems are fairly simple and don’t come close to matching the number of connections among human neurons.

But a new study published in the journal Science Advances suggests that by using sound waves instead of electricity, hardware can better mimic the parallel processing of neurons with even greater efficiency.

China Takes Supercomputer Crown From U.S. For First Time Since 2017

China took back a coveted computing crown from the United States on Tuesday, ratcheting up a fierce technological competition that has implications for science, national security and geopolitics.

LineShine, a massive computing system in Shenzhen, China, was declared the world’s fastest by a group of researchers using a set of standard tests for supercomputers. Besides raw speed, the system stood out because it uses only standard microprocessors and not the special-purpose chips called graphics processing units, which most high-end supercomputers rely on for heavy number crunching.

That underlying design could point to a better way to blend artificial intelligence with traditional scientific tasks, said Jack Dongarra, an organizer of the so-called Top500 list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.

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