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Sep 22, 2016
How Science Can Inform Good Leadership — By Richard J. Davidson | Huffington Post
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: business, health
“As a neuroscientist who studies people of all ages and walks of life, I’ve gathered insights over the decades that can alleviate distraction, dissatisfaction and suffering, especially for people at work, including executives and leaders.”
Tag: leadership
Sep 22, 2016
Interview: Education Minister Hekia Parata on Preparing New Zealand’s Future Generations to Take on the World — By Michelle FlorCruz | Asia Society Asia Blog
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: education, futurism
“Asia Blog spoke to Parata ahead of the launch of the Center for Global Education at Asia Society to discuss the importance of globally-minded future generations.”
Tag: Asia
Sep 22, 2016
Controversial ‘Head Transplant’ Doctor Claims Success in Animal Experiments
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: biotech/medical
An Italian neuroscientist who wants to perform the world’s first human head transplant next year is claiming to have conducted radical spinal cord experiments on mice, rats, and a dog. Experts say the results are vague and incomplete, and that talk of human head transplants are grossly premature.
Sep 22, 2016
Electrostatic Glider Could Maneuver Around Asteroids Without Expending Fuel
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
The charged dust around airless bodies provides a surfable environment for tiny electric spacecraft.
Sep 22, 2016
Femtotechnology: A technology that is Beyond Nanotechnology
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: evolution, nanotechnology, particle physics, robotics/AI
Nanotechnology has reshaped the technological discoveries in the recent times. Nanotechnology has enabled the creation and invention of numerous things with wide potentialities. Every field is subject to constant evolution, nanotechnology is no exception. Researchers and scientists who are engaged with nanotechnology have now come up with femtotechnology.
Femtotechnology is widely defined as, “Hypothetical term used in reference to structuring of matter on the scale of a femtometer, which is 10^−15m. This is a smaller scale in comparison to nanotechnology and picotechnology which refer to 10^−9m and 10^−12m respectively.”
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Sep 22, 2016
Ray Kurzweil: We Can Control AI Before It Controls Us
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI, singularity
Over time, technology offers solutions to old problems while creating new issues in the process. The more powerful the technology, the greater its potential to do good and harm. Artificial intelligence is no exception, and as AI has advanced, worry about its risks has grown too.
Technology’s dual identity isn’t new, Ray Kurzweil said in a Q&A at Singularity University.
Continue reading “Ray Kurzweil: We Can Control AI Before It Controls Us” »
Sep 22, 2016
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative announces $3 billion investment to cure disease
Posted by Elmar Arunov in category: biotech/medical
The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative just announced a new program informally called Chan Zuckerberg Science to invest $3 billion over the next decade to help cure, prevent, or manage all disease. The money comes from the $45 billion organization Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan started last year to advance human potential and equality. The project will bring together teams of scientists and engineers “to build new tools for the scientific community” Priscilla Chan said on stage at an event in San Francisco.
You can watch the announcement here:
Part of the $3 billion will go to a $600 million investment in Biohub, a new physical location that will unite researchers from Stanford, Berkeley, and UCSF with elite engineers to find new ways to treat disease.
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Sep 22, 2016
Scientist Claims to be On the Verge of Making An AI That ‘Feels’ True Emotions
Posted by Elmar Arunov in category: robotics/AI
Professor Alexi Samsonovich, a Russian AI expert has revealed that Russia is “on the verge” of creating thinking and feeling robots.
AI has been making great strides in the past few years, beating humans at our own game, as well as augmenting and even replacing human controlled systems. However, some are still not impressed with these developments and feel more should be done.
Such is the view of Professor Alexi Samsonovich, who announced that Russia “is on the verge” of a major AI milestone —robots that can feel human emotion!
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Sep 22, 2016
Generation Cryo: Fighting Death in the Frozen Unknown
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: cryonics, law, life extension
Fascinating article, and a mostly fair one at that!
“Cryonicists are often dismissed as wasteful, selfish, and narcissistic, and the practice itself is often viewed as an eccentric indulgence for wealthy people with a profound fear of death. And genuine concern exists about the feasibility and viability of cryonics. But as more and more families take the leap into the frozen unknown, there are practical concerns—legal rights, money, consent. And lurking beneath the surface, there is a different fear—that cryonics might just actually work and that signing up for cryonics might be the most insanely rational decision you will ever make.”
In a vat of liquid nitrogen on storage platform 17, the youngest person ever to be put into cryogenic storage has been waiting for the future for one year and eight months.
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