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Feb 13, 2023

5 Ways ChatGPT Will Change Healthcare Forever, For Better

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, military, mobile phones, robotics/AI

Over the past decade, I’ve kept a close eye on the emergence of artificial intelligence in healthcare. Throughout, one truth remained constant: Despite all the hype, AI-focused startups and established tech companies alike have failed to move the needle on the nation’s overall health and medical costs.

Finally, after a decade of underperformance in AI-driven medicine, success is approaching faster than physicians and patients currently recognize.


The next version, ChatGPT4, is scheduled for release later this year, as is Google’s rival AI product. And, last week, Microsoft unveiled an AI-powered search engine and web browser in partnership with OpenAI, with other tech-industry competitors slated to join the fray.

Continue reading “5 Ways ChatGPT Will Change Healthcare Forever, For Better” »

Feb 13, 2023

As ChatGPT hype hits fever pitch, Neeva launches its generative AI search engine internationally

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI, transportation

Challenger search engine Neeva wants to replace the familiar “10 blue links” in search results with something more fitting for the modern AI age.

Back in December, Neeva co-founder and CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy, who previously spearheaded Google’s advertising tech business, teased new “cutting edge AI” and large language models (LLMs), positioning itself against the ChatGPT hype train.

“ChatGPT cannot give you real time data or fact verification,” Ramaswamy wrote at the time. “In our upcoming upgrades, Neeva can.”

Feb 13, 2023

The Generative AI Race Has a Dirty Secret

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Integrating large language models into search engines could mean a fivefold increase in computing power and huge carbon emissions.

IN EARLY FEBRUARY.

But the excitement over these new tools could be concealing a dirty secret.

Feb 13, 2023

High dose intravenous vitamin C treatment in Sepsis: associations with acute kidney injury and mortality

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The effects of vitamin C on clinical outcomes in critically ill patients remain controversial due to inconclusive studies. This retrospective observational cohort study evaluated the effects of vitamin C therapy on acute kidney injury (AKI) and mortality among septic patients.

Electronic medical records of 1,390 patients from an academic hospital who were categorized as Treatment (received at least one dose of 1.5 g IV vitamin C, n = 212) or Comparison (received no, or less than 1.5 g IV vitamin C, n = 1178) were reviewed. Propensity score matching was conducted to balance a number of covariates between groups. Multivariate logistic regressions were conducted predicting AKI and in-hospital mortality among the full sample and a sub-sample of patients seen in the ICU.

Data revealed that vitamin C therapy was associated with increases in AKI (OR = 2.07 95% CI [1.46–2.93]) and in-hospital mortality (OR = 1.67 95% CI [1.003–2.78]) after adjusting for demographic and clinical covariates. When stratified to examine ICU patients, vitamin C therapy remained a significant risk factor of AKI (OR = 1.61 95% CI [1.09–2.39]) and provided no protective benefit against mortality (OR = 0.79 95% CI [0.48–1.31]).

Feb 13, 2023

The Singularity (Extended) | Big Game Commercial 2023 | Squarespace

Posted by in categories: engineering, singularity

Watch the extended cut of the Singularity, starring Adam Driver in a journey for truth and a website that makes websites.

Visit thesingularity.squarespace.com to Enter the Singularity.

Continue reading “The Singularity (Extended) | Big Game Commercial 2023 | Squarespace” »

Feb 13, 2023

The A.I. Supremacy Wars for the Future ‘Interface of Search’ and Advertising Dominance

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Search is the brain computer interface of today, and how we access A.I. as a civilization. Let’s 🥳 democratize it.

Feb 13, 2023

Mechanical engineering meets electromagnetics to enable future technology

Posted by in categories: engineering, internet

Reconfigurable antennas—those that can tune properties like frequency or radiation beams in real time, from afar—are integral to future communication network systems, like 6G. But many current reconfigurable antenna designs can fall short: they dysfunction in high or low temperatures, have power limitations or require regular servicing.

To address these limitations, in the Penn State College of Engineering combined electromagnets with a compliant mechanism, which is the same mechanical engineering concept behind binder clips or a bow and arrow. They published their proof-of-concept reconfigurable compliant mechanism-enabled patch antenna today (Feb. 13) in Nature Communications.

“Compliant mechanisms are engineering designs that incorporate elements of the materials themselves to create motion when force is applied, instead of traditional rigid body mechanisms that require hinges for motion,” said corresponding author Galestan Mackertich-Sengerdy, who is both a doctoral student and a full-time researcher in the college’s School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS). “Compliant mechanism-enabled objects are engineered to bend repeatedly in a certain direction and to withstand .”

Feb 13, 2023

Signals from outer space: The FOUR times scientists have believed we were contacted by aliens… as ‘impossible’ spinning object 4,000 light years away sends repeated radio bleeps to earth

Posted by in category: alien life

Science_Hightech — operanewsapp.

Feb 13, 2023

Scientists ‘genetically edit’ bread to cut cancer-causing chemical

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, genetics

Amount of toxin present in wheat, which is carcinogenic when heated, can be reduced and grown, new field study confirms Toast could soon be healthier after scientists grew a field of wheat genetically-edited to remove a cancer-causing chemical. Bread, when baked, produces a dangerous toxin called acrylamide, which is believed to be carcinogenic and when toasted is even more lethal.

Feb 13, 2023

CRISPR for the Masses is Coming — Genetic Vaccines Are In Our Very Near Future

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

CRISPR has started moving out of university research laboratories and into the world of human clinical trials.


We are about to see the emergence of a new medical technology, genetic vaccines.