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Sep 6, 2017
U.S. to unveil revised self-driving car guidelines: sources
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: government, law, robotics/AI, transportation
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — President Donald Trump’s administration is set to unveil revised self-driving vehicle guidelines next week in Michigan, responding to automakers’ calls for elimination of legal barriers to putting autonomous vehicles on the road, sources briefed on the matter said on Tuesday.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao was expected to unveil the revised guidelines next Tuesday at a self-driving vehicle testing facility in Ann Arbor, Michigan, four people briefed on the matter said.
A spokesman for Chao did not immediately comment. The White House Office of Management and Budget approved the undisclosed Transportation Department changes to the guidelines on Aug. 31, according a posting on a government website.
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Sep 6, 2017
Australia researchers say find new way to build quantum computers
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics
SINGAPORE (Reuters) — Researchers in Australia have found a new way to build quantum computers which they say would make them dramatically easier and cheaper to produce at scale.
Quantum computers promise to harness the strange ability of subatomic particles to exist in more than one state at a time to solve problems that are too complex or time-consuming for existing computers.
Google, IBM and other technology companies are all developing quantum computers, using a range of approaches.
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Sep 6, 2017
These weapons can find a target all by themselves — and researchers are terrified
Posted by Mark Larkento in category: robotics/AI
On the road to killer robots: the samsung SGR-1.
The Samsung SGR-1 patrols the border between North and South Korea, called the Demilitarized Zone. South Korea installed the stationary robots, developed by Samsung Techwin and Korea University.
The SGR-1 was initially built with the capability to detect, target, shoot intruders from two miles away.
Sep 5, 2017
Particle physicists on a quest for ‘new physics’
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: computing, particle physics
Using scintillating fiber to detect particles
After five years of work, EPFL’s physicists, together with some 800 international researchers involved in the LHCb project, have just taken an important preliminary step towards significantly enhancing their experimental equipment. They have decided to build a new detector — a scintillating fiber tracker dubbed SciFi.
Construction of the tracker, which incorporates 10,000 kilometers of scintillating fibers each with a diameter of 0.25mm, has already begun. When particles travel through them, the fibers will give off light signals that will be picked up by light-amplifying diodes. The scintillating fibers will be arranged in three panels measuring five by six meters, installed behind a magnet, where the particles exit the LHC accelerator collision point. The particles will pass through several of these fiber ‘mats’ and deposit part of their energy along the way, producing some photons of light that will then be turned into an electric signal.
Sep 5, 2017
Realive: Marc is diagnosed with a disease and is given a short time to live
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, life extension
Unable to accept his own end, he decides to freeze his body. Sixty years later, in the year 2084, he becomes the first cryogenically frozen man to be revived in history. Marc discovers a startling future, but the biggest surprise is that his past has accompanied him in unexpected ways.
Sep 5, 2017
The 7 Steps of Machine Learning
Posted by Müslüm Yildiz in categories: biotech/medical, food, media & arts, robotics/AI
How can we tell if a drink is beer or wine? Machine learning, of course! In this episode of Cloud AI Adventures, Yufeng walks through the 7 steps involved in applied machine learning…
The world is filled with data. Lots and lots of data. Everything from pictures, music, words, spreadsheets, videos and more. It doesn’t look like it’s going to to slow down anytime soon. Machine learning brings the promise of deriving meaning from all of that data.
Sep 5, 2017
A futuristic 3-story house was designed and built entirely by robots
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: habitats, robotics/AI
Sep 5, 2017
Facial Recognition Is Learned, Not Innate, New Study Shows
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI
It has long been accepted that people and other primates are born with the ability to recognize faces; however, a new study at Harvard Medical School has brought that into question.
The study findings suggest that facial recognition is not innate but is learned
The new study published in Nature Neuroscience worked with macaques that had been temporarily prevented from seeing faces while growing up[1]. The researchers discovered that areas of the brain involved in facial recognition form due to experience and are not present in primates who do not see faces while they grow up. This brings into question the long-held idea that we are simply born with the ability to recognize faces.
Sep 5, 2017
Shenzhen: City of the Future. The high-tech life of China’s Silicon Valley
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: government, habitats, robotics/AI, solar power, sustainability
More films about China: https://rtd.rt.com/tags/china/
- Technology and innovation hub, Shenzhen is known as China’s “silicon valley” and “the city of the future”.
- Once a fishing village, in just 50 years it grew into a megacity packed with skyscrapers.
- It hosts international technology exhibitions and forums and attracts creators and investors from around the world, contributing to its population boom.
- Inventors and engineers working here, create helpful robots, hybrid cars and smart car parks.
China has a saying; to see the past, visit Beijing, to see the present, go to Shanghai but for the future, it’s Shenzhen. Shenzhen has transformed itself from a tiny fishing village to a megacity in just 50 years, its population tripling since the 1990s. The city is a magnet for tech-savvy and inventive dreamers from all across China and the world, because of them Shenzhen has become the “silicon valley” of China, a true technology and innovation hub.
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