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Jan 15, 2017
Now Quantum Computers Can Send Information Using a Single Particle of Light
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics
Physicists at Princeton University have revealed a device they’ve created that will allow a single electron to transfer its quantum information to a photon. This is a revolutionary breakthrough for the team as it gets them one step closer to producing the ultimate quantum computer. The device is the result of five years worth of research and could accelerate the world of quantum computing no end.
Jan 15, 2017
Engineers Have Released Plans for a 5-Km-High Skyscraper That Eats Smog
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: environmental
2017 only just arrived, but one manufacturing company is already looking 45 years into the future.
Arconic, a materials science company, has envisioned a 3-mile-high (4.8-km) skyscraper built from materials that are either in-development or have already been brought to market, including smog-eating surfaces and retractable balconies.
The tower was concocted as part of the company’s larger campaign known as The Jetsons, an homage to the 1962 cartoon set in 2062. Arconic’s engineers worked alongside futurists to imagine the technologies that will be most useful several decades from now.
Continue reading “Engineers Have Released Plans for a 5-Km-High Skyscraper That Eats Smog” »
Jan 15, 2017
Chinese humanoid robot turns on the charm in Shanghai
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: cyborgs, economics, finance, robotics/AI
“Jia Jia” can hold a simple conversation and make specific facial expressions when asked, and her creator believes the eerily life-like robot heralds a future of cyborg labour in China.
Billed as China’s first human-like robot, Jia Jia was first trotted out last year by a team of engineers at the University of Science and Technology of China.
Team leader Chen Xiaoping sounded like a proud father as he and his prototype appeared Monday at an economic conference organised by banking giant UBS in Shanghai’s futuristic financial centre.
Jan 15, 2017
A type of vampire bat has started feeding on humans in Brazil for the first known time
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, food
For the vampire lovers out there. Very scary situation.
The bats should only consume bird blood, but as humans have started to move into the forests of northeastern Brazil, they’ve turned to new sources of food.
Jan 15, 2017
How Electric Vehicles Could End Car Ownership as We Know It
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: transportation
Christopher Mims looks at the electronic vehicles that could end car ownership as we know it, from Swagtron’s Swagger-1 electric scooter to Mahindra Group’s GenZe 2.0 to the three-wheeled Arcimoto SRK.
Introducing a drone that can take a colossal beating and won’t break. Via our friends at Vocativ Video.
Jan 15, 2017
Can This Rolling Camera Droid Protect Your Home?
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: habitats, robotics/AI
Jan 15, 2017
The Future of Artificial Intelligence
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
In the 1960s, most research on computers centered on how to ease daily tasks, but RAND was also exploring how to develop both hardware and software capable of self-direction and of learning. Today, artificial intelligence (AI) represents an exciting area of technology development that has promise to fundamentally change the way that humans live, work, and interact with one another.
In this Events @ RAND podcast, our panel of experts discuss the role AI is playing in society, including the incredible promise and pressing concerns. Bill Welser and Osonde Osoba talk about the unintentional biases due to data and design practices affecting AI systems in use today and why caution must be used in designing AI systems for the future. Dave Baiocchi moderates.
Jan 15, 2017
Eight Foods of the Future That Could Soon Be Coming Our Way
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: food, futurism
Food trends change all the time, and not just dependent on where you live, but also when. For example, 100 years ago they were not eating most of the stuff we have today. Pop Tarts, Cheetos, and Gatorade would certainly not have existed, and if you were to go back in time now and try and introduce these things, they would probably get thrown at you. But, the point is that sometimes you just can’t help what food is introduced around you and accepted as the norm, and over the next 30 years, we will see odder but edible manifestations are coming our way. Below are eight future foods that are not a million miles away from being introduced into society and are being worked on now: