Page 2837
May 23, 2023
The End of Screens?
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: augmented reality, economics, robotics/AI
Believe it or not, one of the most important technology announcements of the past few months had nothing to do with artificial intelligence. While critics and boosters continue to stir and fret over the latest capabilities of ChatGPT, a largely unknown 60-person start-up, based out of Tel Aviv, quietly began demoing a product that might foretell an equally impactful economic disruption.
The company is named Sightful and their new offering is Spacetop: “the world’s first augmented reality laptop.” Spacetop consists of a standard computer keyboard tethered to pair of goggles, styled like an unusually chunky pair of sport sunglasses. When you put on the goggles, the Spacetop technology inserts multiple large virtual computer screens into your visual field, floating above the keyboard as if you were using a computer connected to large external monitors.
May 23, 2023
Jupiter’s lightning is strikingly similar to Earth’s
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: climatology, space
Cool photo 📸 📷 🖼 🤳 😎
NASA’s Juno spacecraft has spotted short bursts that make up lightning bolts on Jupiter, showing that Jovian lightning works in much the same way as it does on Earth.
May 23, 2023
Nanoscale 3D Printing Allows Scientists To Print Materials on Atomic Level and Provides Numerous Applications in Electrochemistry
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: 3D printing, chemistry, nanotechnology
A nanoprinting technique developed by a chemist allows 3D printing of materials atom by atom and opens up various opportunities in electrochemistry. Read the article to find out more.
May 23, 2023
Japan drugmaker tests medicine vending machine in train station
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biotech/medical
Year 2022 😗😁
A Japanese pharmaceutical company has started a trial sale of cold medicine, painkillers and other drugs via a vending machine it installed at JR Shinjuku Station in Tokyo, a project that would better serve commuters who suddenly come down with illness.
May 23, 2023
ChatGPT is giving therapy. A mental health revolution may be next
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, employment, health, neuroscience, robotics/AI
face_with_colon_three This new gold rush with AI will bring new jobs for even Psychiatry and Therapists which is already leading to new bots with human like therapists in texts. This could lead to even better mental health for the global population.
“Psychotherapy is very expensive and even in places like Canada, where I’m from, and other countries, it’s super expensive, the waiting lists are really long,” Ashley Andreou, a medical student focusing on psychiatry at Georgetown University, told Al Jazeera.
“People don’t have access to something that augments medication and is evidence-based treatment for mental health issues, and so I think that we need to increase access, and I do think that generative AI with a certified health professional will increase efficiency.”
Continue reading “ChatGPT is giving therapy. A mental health revolution may be next” »
May 23, 2023
Tesla gigafactory in UK ‘being strongly considered’ says Elon Musk
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability, transportation
Elon Musk informed the audience via video link at the Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council event in London: “I will strongly consider England for a future location of a gigafactory.”
May 23, 2023
Study reveals unique molecular machinery of woman who can’t feel pain
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, nanotechnology
The biology underpinning a rare genetic mutation that allows its carrier to live virtually pain-free, heal more rapidly and experience reduced anxiety and fear, has been uncovered by new research from UCL.
The study, published in Brain, follows up the team’s discovery in 2019 of the FAAH-OUT gene and the rare mutations that cause Jo Cameron to feel virtually no pain and never feel anxious or afraid. The new research describes how the mutation in FAAH-OUT “turns down” FAAH gene expression, as well as the knock-on effects on other molecular pathways linked to wound healing and mood. It is hoped the findings will lead to new drug targets and open up new avenues of research in these areas.
Jo, who lives in Scotland, was first referred to pain geneticists at UCL in 2013, after her doctor noticed that she experienced no pain after major surgeries on her hip and hand. After six years of searching, they identified a new gene that they named FAAH-OUT, which contained a rare genetic mutation. In combination with another, more common mutation in FAAH, it was found to be the cause of Jo’s unique characteristics.
May 23, 2023
Strange star system may hold first evidence of an ultra-rare ‘dark matter star’
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, particle physics
In a distant star system, a sunlike star orbits an invisible object that may be the first example of a ‘boson star’ made of dark matter, new research suggests.
May 23, 2023
Mount Etna has its first major eruption in 30 years, and footage is spectacular (video)
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: transportation
Mount Etna enjoyed its first major eruption in 30 years on Sunday, and footage of the busy volcano’s spewing and flowing orange lava against the black and white billowing smoke is stunning. (See video caught by Massimiliano Salfi, posted by Earth42morrow, below).
Europe’s most active volcano caused Sicily’s Catania airport to shut down yesterday after ash covered its runways, according to CNN, but has mostly reopened as of Monday.
People in nearby towns reportedly heard loud booming sounds at the time of the eruption, but no injuries have been reported. Mount Etna’s last eruption of this size was in 1992.