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Sep 3, 2024

A sensory pen that can read Braille could improve literacy among the visually impaired

Posted by in category: electronics

A pen that can transform Braille into English text has been developed by experts at the University of Bristol.

Braille literacy is frequently reported as being in decline. This is despite visually impaired people often expressing a desire to learn it, and Braille literacy being a highly valued skill by those who are capable. This is often attributed to the lack of available learning resources, particularly away from large urban centers.

The handheld device, which includes a one-centimeter sensor with 19 channels programmed to read Braille, has demonstrated high accuracy in early trials.

Sep 3, 2024

MIT’s new drone with flying claws grabs objects mid-air at high speed

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, drones

MIT’s soft drone flies and grasps, swiftly picking up a bottle in a demo video:


Interestingly, the drone’s new capabilities allow it to catch objects that are moving at speeds of up to 0.3 meters per second.

Continue reading “MIT’s new drone with flying claws grabs objects mid-air at high speed” »

Sep 3, 2024

In Israel first, robot is used by doctors to completely remove patient’s pancreas

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

The use of the robot allows surgeries to be performed without opening the abdomen.


Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya says that a robot has been used for the first time in Israel to completely remove a patient’s pancreas.

The 78-year-old patient was diagnosed with multiple cystic tumors of the pancreas. Although this type of tumor is not considered cancerous, doctors say that left untreated, it could develop into a malignant pancreatic tumor in the future.

Continue reading “In Israel first, robot is used by doctors to completely remove patient’s pancreas” »

Sep 3, 2024

Amtrak gets $64M for high speed rail connecting Dallas and Houston

Posted by in category: futurism

The work on the planned Dallas and Houston high-speed rail continues to advance slowly, despite years of pushback.

Sep 3, 2024

SparkLabs closes $50M fund to back AI startups

Posted by in categories: finance, robotics/AI

SparkLabs — an early-stage venture capital firm that has made a name for itself for backing OpenAI as well as a host of other AI startups such as Vectara, Allganize, Kneron, Anthropic, xAI, Glade (YC S23) and Lucidya AI — is gearing up to double down on more startups in the space. The VC firm announced Tuesday that it has closed a new $50 million fund, AIM AI Fund, which will back AI startups out of its own AIM-X accelerator in Saudi Arabia as well as other AI startups across the globe.

SparkLabs’ new fund and its wider investment aims underscore the bigger trends that have swirled around artificial intelligence for the last few years. The explosion of interest in generative AI in particular has led to a surge of startups in the space, as well as a rush of investors looking for the next Open AI — or at the very least, a startup that a bigger company might snap up as it looks to sharpen its own AI edge.

It also points to how the AI opportunity continues to widen beyond Silicon Valley. AIM-X is an AI-focused startup accelerator that SparkLabs launched earlier this year in the kingdom as part of its AI Mission, a national initiative to bolster AI technology over the next five years.

Sep 3, 2024

TSMC aims to ready next-gen silicon photonics for AI in 5 years

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Chip sector driving to develop tech to boost speeds, cut power usage.

Sep 3, 2024

50,000 ‘knots’ scattered throughout our DNA control gene activity

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The mapping of 50,000 mysterious “knots” in the human genome may someday lead to the development of new cancer drugs, researchers say.

Sep 3, 2024

Network mechanisms of ongoing brain activity’s influence on conscious visual perception

Posted by in category: neuroscience

When sensory input meets spontaneous brain activity’

https://cell.com/trends/neurosciences/fulltext/S0166-2236(24)00153-X

https://nature.com/articles/s41467-024-50102-9

Continue reading “Network mechanisms of ongoing brain activity’s influence on conscious visual perception” »

Sep 3, 2024

Why Transhumanism Is Unrealistic and Immoral

Posted by in categories: geopolitics, life extension, transhumanism

Here the notorious but eloquent transhumanism critic Wesley J. Smith takes a swipe at the quickly growing movement to overcome death with science. New story in Merion West!


“Utopians often produce evil because their movement’s aspirations become paramount —that is, more important than avoiding acts ‘traditionally perceived as immoral.’ If enough people follow Istvan on the transhuman roller coaster, people could eventually get hurt.”

“I’m not afraid of dying. I just don’t want to be there when it happens.” – Woody Allen.

Continue reading “Why Transhumanism Is Unrealistic and Immoral” »

Sep 3, 2024

Government Test Finds That AI Wildly Underperforms Compared to Human Employees

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

A real stinker.


The trial, conducted by Amazon Web Services, was commissioned by the government regulator as a proof of concept for generative AI’s capabilities, and in particular its potential to be used in business settings.

That potential, the trial found, is not looking promising.

Continue reading “Government Test Finds That AI Wildly Underperforms Compared to Human Employees” »

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