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Aug 6, 2024

Riverlane Locks Up $75M As Quantum Funding Continues Strong Year

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics, security

Startup Riverlane helped continue what has been a strong year for venture funding in the quantum computing industry.

The U.K.-based firm — which specializes in quantum error correction technology — raised a $75 million Series C led by Planet First Partners. The round also includes participation from ETF Partners, EDBI, Cambridge Innovation Capital, Amadeus Capital Partners, the National Security Strategic Investment Fund and Altair

The company’s tech helps quantum computers perform without succumbing to eventual errors. Such computers typically can only perform a few hundred quantum operations before failure.

Aug 6, 2024

SpaceX’s new direct-to-cell Starlink satellites are way brighter than the originals

Posted by in categories: chemistry, internet, policy, space, sustainability

Even if we can dodge a disaster in orbit by responsibly de-orbiting derelict satellites, many scientists are concerned that the number of objects circling our planet could still do harm: When they deorbit, they could deposit a significant flux of metals that could alter the chemical makeup of Earth’s atmosphere.

“Effects on astronomy are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Barentine, who says we may be fast approaching a turning point where tragedy becomes imminent, either in space due to a collision or on the ground from falling debris. “Space policy-making moves far too slowly to effectively deal with all of this.”

“Right now, there’s not a lot to look forward to that is positive,” he added. “If the New Space Age goes badly in the end, history will not look favorably on it.”

Aug 6, 2024

New X-ray world record: Looking inside a microchip with 4 nanometer precision

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, computing

In a collaboration with EPFL Lausanne, ETH Zurich and the University of Southern California researchers at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI have used X-rays to look inside a microchip with higher precision than ever before. The image resolution of 4 nanometers marks a new world record. The high-resolution three-dimensional images of the type they produced will enable advances in both information technology and the life sciences.

The researchers are reporting their findings in the current issue of the journal Nature (“High-performance 4 nm resolution X-ray tomography using burst ptychography”).

View inside a state-of-the-art computer chip. Their newly developed ptychographic technique allowed the researchers to map the three-dimensional structure of this engineering marvel. The picture shows the different layers that make up the microchip. The coarser structures can be seen at the top. The microchip becomes increasingly complex as you move down through the layers – making the connections there visible requires a resolution of just a few nanometers. (Image: Tomas Aidukas, Paul Scherrer Institute)

Aug 6, 2024

Our Cyborg Future: Brain-computer interfaces and their privacy challenges

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, cyborgs, neuroscience

Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) can translate a person’s brainwaves into action, but these devices are vulnerable to hacking.

Aug 6, 2024

Kalmogorov-Arnold Neural Networks Shake Up How AI Is Done

Posted by in categories: biological, information science, physics, robotics/AI

Artificial neural networks—algorithms inspired by biological brains—are at the center of modern artificial intelligence, behind both chatbots and image generators. But with their many neurons, they can be black boxes, their inner workings uninterpretable to users.

Researchers have now created a fundamentally new way to make neural networks that in some ways surpasses traditional systems. These new networks are more interpretable and also more accurate, proponents say, even when they’re smaller. Their developers say the way they learn to represent physics data concisely could help scientists uncover new laws of nature.

Aug 6, 2024

China develops robot with human-like, highly expressive facial features

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Now, scientists in China have developed robots that give human-like realistic expressions.

The humanoid robot with highly expressive facial features is developed by Liu Xiaofeng, a professor at Hohai University in east China’s Jiangsu Province, and his research team.

For the development of this robot, the research team developed a new algorithm for generating facial expressions on humanoid robots.

Aug 6, 2024

Nanotechnology in Electronics

Posted by in categories: electronics, nanotechnology

Nanoelectronics.


This new feature in Nano TV will present the best of science and technology in a short format, which is easy to understand and also appreciate the beauty of scientific knowledge. Catering to all, these shorts will be informative and educative. Explore science, explore Nanotechnology through our latest series called Nano Shorts.

Continue reading “Nanotechnology in Electronics” »

Aug 6, 2024

The human mind and AI are now closer than ever — and will soon surpass us in nearly every way

Posted by in categories: Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI

He writes that AI is now exceeding the human brain at several cognitive tasks and that it will eventually do all things far better than even the most expert humans.

These new machines can learn, reason, plan and act with intention, and they are becoming far smarter far faster than most people, save Kurzweil, could have predicted.

Soon, he forecasts, they will be indistinguishable from human brains, before accelerating past them in nearly every way.

Aug 6, 2024

Record Quantum Computation at D-Wave: Millions of Years Down To Seconds

Posted by in category: quantum physics

283,119 views • Mar 13, 2024 • ✪ Members first on March 12, 2024 • #sciencenews #technology #science

Aug 6, 2024

The next generation of genome editing is making big changes to DNA

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

But the technology for using bridge RNA in genome editing is still in the early stages. Hsu’s team has demonstrated this system only in bacteria, though Hsu says he is optimistic that efforts to adapt the approach to work in mammalian cells will succeed. Chen says this system’s efficiency may not be as good as CRISPR’s is now but that improvements will come with time.

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