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Mar 7, 2024
SpaceX Dragon Endeavour With Crew-8 Aboard Docks to International Space Station
Posted by Natalie Chan in category: space travel
NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, and Jeanette Epps, as well as Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin arrived at the International Space Station, as the SpaceX Dragon, named Endeavour, docked to the complex at 2:28 a.m. EST on March 5 while the station was 260 statute miles over Newfoundland.
Following Dragon’s link up to the Harmony module, the astronauts aboard the Dragon and the space station conducted standard leak checks and pressurization between the spacecraft in preparation for hatch opening.
Mar 7, 2024
Giant leap toward neuromorphic devices: High-performance spin-wave reservoir computing
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: nanotechnology, particle physics, robotics/AI
A group of Tohoku University researchers has developed a theoretical model for a high-performance spin wave reservoir computing (RC) that utilizes spintronics technology. The breakthrough moves scientists closer to realizing energy-efficient, nanoscale computing with unparalleled computational power.
Details of their findings were published in npj Spintronics on March 1, 2024.
The brain is the ultimate computer, and scientists are constantly striving to create neuromorphic devices that mimic the brain’s processing capabilities, low power consumption, and its ability to adapt to neural networks. The development of neuromorphic computing is revolutionary, allowing scientists to explore nanoscale realms, GHz speed, with low energy consumption.
Mar 7, 2024
Scientists Have a Dirty Secret: Nobody Knows How AI Actually Works
Posted by Cecile G. Tamura in category: robotics/AI
ShortGPT
Layers in large language models are more redundant than you expect.
As AI is increasingly integrated into our lives, scientists building the tech are still trying to understand it, the MIT Tech Review reports.
Mar 7, 2024
Built for AI, this chip moves beyond transistors for huge computational gains
Posted by Cecile G. Tamura in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones, robotics/AI
The new hardware reimagines AI chips for modern workloads and can run powerful AI systems using much less energy than today’s most advanced semiconductors, according to Naveen Verma, professor of electrical and computer engineering. Verma, who will lead the project, said the advances break through key barriers that have stymied chips for AI, including size, efficiency and scalability.
Chips that require less energy can be deployed to run AI in more dynamic environments, from laptops and phones to hospitals and highways to low-Earth orbit and beyond. The kinds of chips that power today’s most advanced models are too bulky and inefficient to run on small devices, and are primarily constrained to server racks and large data centers.
Now, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, has announced it will support Verma’s work, based on a suite of key inventions from his lab, with an $18.6 million grant. The DARPA funding will drive an exploration into how fast, compact and power-efficient the new chip can get.
The goal of science is to understand and master the Universe around us, but could our skill grow so great that we could learn to warp reality itself?
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Mar 6, 2024
AI singularity may come in 2027 with artificial ‘super intelligence’ sooner than we think, says top scientist
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, singularity
We could build an AI that demonstrates generalized, human-level intelligence within three to eight years — which may open the door to a “super intelligence” in a very short space of time.
Mar 6, 2024
AIs ranked by IQ; AI passes 100 IQ for first time, with release of Claude-3
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: robotics/AI
When AIs are given “special accommodations” in an IQ test, as if they were blind people, their scores improve.
Mar 6, 2024
How Jennifer Garner’s Once Upon a Farm became a $100 million business
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: business, food, sustainability
Mar 6, 2024
Spatial Protein and RNA Profiling: Seeing the Unseen in the Tumor Microenvironment
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
Our presenter Jonathan Nowak, will discuss representative multiplexed assays for protein and RNA profiling built in the lab and discuss the necessary elements to operationalize this type of testing in a translational research laboratory. He will also explore the advantages of different assays and key considerations for ensuring consistently high data quality spanning hundreds to thousands of specimens.
Learning Objectives