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Dec 27, 2016
This truck is the size of a house and doesn’t have a driver
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Mining companies are rolling out autonomous trucks, drills, and trains, which will boost efficiency but also reduce the need for human employees.
Dec 27, 2016
This Mobile Ultrasound Startup Is Reshaping A $6 Billion Healthcare Market
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, health
(Photo courtesy of Clarius Mobile Health)
The ultrasound market currently stands as a $6 billion global industry.
Contrary to popular perception, the use of ultrasounds for women’s health and pregnancy follow-ups only represents less than 20% of the overall use for healthcare. For example, a diagnostic ultrasound is routinely used to diagnose an assortment of healthcare conditions such as cancer, gall stones, and cardiovascular diseases.
Continue reading “This Mobile Ultrasound Startup Is Reshaping A $6 Billion Healthcare Market” »
Dec 27, 2016
Artificial Intelligence Replacing Management at World’s Largest Hedge Fund
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: employment, finance, robotics/AI, transhumanism
New story by The Anti-Media on #AI via Jake Anderson: http://theantimedia.org/artificial-intelligence-management-hedge-fund/ #transhumanism
Humans should get used to jobs disappearing.
Dec 27, 2016
So About That Physics-Defying NASA Thruster That Supposedly Works
Posted by Jeremy Lichtman in categories: physics, space travel
When NASA scientists think they’ve built something that breaks the laws of physics, do you take them at their word?
Dec 27, 2016
Tesla Autopilot’s new radar technology predicts an accident caught on dashcam;
Posted by Amnon H. Eden in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation
The video of an accident on the Autobahn in the Netherlands caught on the dashcam of a Tesla Model X shows the Autopilot’s forward collision warning predicting an accident before it could be detected by the driver.
With the release of Tesla’s version 8.0 software update in September, the automaker announced a new radar processing technology that was directly pushed over-the-air to all its vehicles equipped with the first generation Autopilot hardware.
Dec 27, 2016
This New Self-Healing, Stretchable Material Is Perfect for Wolverine
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: entertainment, materials
Inspired by the comic book character Wolverine, scientists have developed a self-healing, highly stretchable, transparent material that can be used to power artificial muscles.
The end product is a soft, rubber-like material that’s easy to produce at low cost. It can stretch to 50 times its original length, and can heal itself from a scissor cut in the space of 24 hours at room temperature.
Continue reading “This New Self-Healing, Stretchable Material Is Perfect for Wolverine” »
Dec 27, 2016
College Students Show How Easy It Is to Use Terrifying Genetic Engineering Technology
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics, habitats
The gene drive is quickly becoming one of the most controversial technologies of our time. Its possibilities are at once spectacular and alarming: by using genetic engineering to override natural selection during reproduction, a gene drive could allow scientists to alter the genetic makeup of an entire species. This could be used to eliminate diseases and protect natural habitats —but could also go horribly wrong in the wrong hands.
Dec 27, 2016
Human Head Transplant Patient to Use VR to Prep for New Body
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biotech/medical, virtual reality
Valery Spiridonov will use a virtual reality system to prepare for the shock of looking down and seeing someone else’s body.
Dec 27, 2016
Does the Unabomber Have a More Realistic Sense of Today’s Existential Risks?
Posted by Steve Fuller in categories: existential risks, security, terrorism
A version of this piece appears on the Sociological Imagination website
Twenty years ago Theodore Kaczynski, a Harvard-trained maths prodigy obsessed with technology’s destruction of nature, was given eight consecutive life sentences for sending letter bombs in the US post which killed three people and injured 23 others. Generally known as the ‘Unabomber’, he remains in a supermax prison in Colorado to this day.
It is perhaps easy to forget the sway that the Unabomber held on American society in the mid-1990s. Kaczynski managed to get a 35,000 word manifesto called ‘Industrial Society and Its Future’ published in both The New York Times and The Washington Post. It is arguably the most famous and influential statement of neo-Luddite philosophy and politics to this day. Now he is back with a new book, Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How.
Continue reading “Does the Unabomber Have a More Realistic Sense of Today's Existential Risks?” »