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Apr 14, 2016

Ghost In The Shell Begins Production

Posted by in category: entertainment

While she’s still in the thick of her publicity tour for Captain America: Winter Soldier, Scarlett Johansson’s next big genre project is getting underway.

Today, Paramount Pictures announced that The Ghost in the Shell has started filming, providing fans with their first look at the anticipated adaptation.

The film is based onShirowMasamune’s cyberpunkmanga of the same name.

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Apr 14, 2016

Presenting Oscar

Posted by in category: futurism

Hello world, here is Oscar! #projectoscar

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Apr 14, 2016

Researchers at New York University are looking 25 years ahead to predict the role artificial intelligence will play in living, learning and research

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

“Advanced cyber-learning environments that involve virtual reality and artificial intelligence innovations are becoming powerful tools that can facilitate the explorations and conversations needed to solve society’s challenges,” said NYU engineer Dr Winslow Burleson. “Cyber-learning is an essential tool for envisioning, refining, and creating a utopian world in which we are actively ‘elearning to be’ — deeply engaged in intrinsically motivating experiences that empower each of us to reach our full potential.”

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Apr 14, 2016

The question of how exactly we experience the world through our perception of consciousness is one that’s long intrigued scientists and philosophers

Posted by in categories: entertainment, neuroscience

And at its core are two divergent hypotheses.

On the one hand, it could be that consciousness exists as a constant, uninterrupted stream of perception, like how it feels to watch a movie. You sit down with your popcorn and experience a film from beginning to end in one continuous flow, unaware of any segmentation or breakup as you go.

But another hypothesis of consciousness reflects what a film technically is: a series of individual frames of time stitched together into a reel that – when played back – appear seamless. So which is it? Is consciousness a seamless film, or is it a reel composed of discrete moments?

Continue reading “The question of how exactly we experience the world through our perception of consciousness is one that’s long intrigued scientists and philosophers” »

Apr 14, 2016

A quadriplegic man is now able to play Guitar Hero, swipe a credit card and pour liquid into a glass with his own hand

Posted by in category: futurism

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Apr 14, 2016

The stealth ship is so hard to see that it needs a way to turn it off

Posted by in category: futurism

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Apr 14, 2016

Now that drones have become a standard tool in our military arsenal, the next job is to make them more efficient and capable than ever before

Posted by in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI

DARPA’s newest invention is the Gremlin: a drone that be deployed from a bomber while in flight, execute its mission, and then return to an extraction point where a cargo plane yanks it out of the sky and brings it safely home.

The drones are capable of flying unmanned, but being able to retrieve them makes them reusable, which is both cost-effective and convenient. But drone retrieval also protects U.S. military technology and secrets. Sending fleets of tiny Gremlins on intelligence-gathering missions is one thing, but being able to recapture them instead of leaving them in the hands of hostiles is a huge boon to the military. Gremlin drones have up to three hours to accomplish reconnaissance missions, at which time they automatically fly back to a retrieval area to be collected by a C-130 cargo plane.

Related: DARPA’s 130-foot submarine-hunting drone will take to the sea in April.

Continue reading “Now that drones have become a standard tool in our military arsenal, the next job is to make them more efficient and capable than ever before” »

Apr 14, 2016

All you need is $100,000 and 22 hours to get your own robotic hexapod

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

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Apr 14, 2016

Our conscious perception of the world feels like a continuous and uninterrupted flow

Posted by in category: neuroscience

But a new study suggests that it’s actually more like the frames of a movie reel running through a projector.

There’s still a lot we don’t know about consciousness and how it arises in the brain. Even though perception—such as vision and hearing—feels smooth and uninterrupted, neuroscientists aren’t entirely sure if it flows continuously like water through a tap or if it’s more like the aforementioned 24-frame-per-second movie reel.

http://io9.gizmodo.com/8-things-we-simply-dont-understand-ab…-949442979

Continue reading “Our conscious perception of the world feels like a continuous and uninterrupted flow” »

Apr 14, 2016

One of the greatest things about science is that it can change its mind

Posted by in categories: cosmology, science

Our understanding of cosmology might need a little tweaking.

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