
Our brains could be connected directly to the Internet in a few years!
Yay?
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
How Will Merging Minds and Machines Change Our Conscious Experience? https://suhub.co/2GSo2v3
Our brains could be connected directly to the Internet in a few years!
Yay?
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
How Will Merging Minds and Machines Change Our Conscious Experience? https://suhub.co/2GSo2v3
Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh
Interesting to see what happens in two years time. “On Monday, the XPrize organization announced that it had selected 10 finalists for its NRG COSIA Carbon Competition. These finalists will be given space near a power plant and pipes that will deliver some of the plant’s carbon-dioxide-rich exhaust. It’s up to the competitors to turn that carbon dioxide into marketable products.
[…]
The projects will be judged based on three sets of criteria. One is related to the goal’s primary task: what percentage of the carbon dioxide that’s sent through the system ends up in some form of product. Related to that, the processes should use more carbon than ends up released from powering them, resulting in a net reduction in emissions. Another set of criteria focus on energy and material efficiency. “How expensive are your catalysts? How much electricity does it cost? How much heat do you need?” Extavour asked. “The teams are competing to minimize the cost and use of materials and energy.”
Also in this category are any land use and resource issues, like water. Both of these, Extavour suggested, may be why there’s only one team that is focused on feeding the carbon dioxide to an organism that would incorporate it into useful molecules. While things like that can be done with photosynthetic algae, it requires a lot of space for growth ponds, as well as significant amounts of water.
The final set of criteria are economic. “It’s about transforming the carbon molecule into something useful,” Extavour told Ars. “Another way of describing useful is valuable or revenue generating.”
But there’s not one path to success on economic terms. One of the teams hopes to produce carbon nanotubes; although their market is small, they command a high price premium. At the other end, a couple of teams are focusing on concrete, where low prices are traded off against an enormous market.
[…]
Beyond those practical concerns, Extavour sounded a bit like the Solar Impulse team in talking about their round-the-world trip in a solar-powered aircraft—terms like “moonshot” and “inspirational” peppered the conversation. Rather than having people listen to news about carbon capture plans that never get off the ground, “we’re trying to orient people’s minds to think ‘hey, this is possible,'” he told Ars. Two years from now, when the data is collected and analyzed, we’ll have a much better sense of what’s possible.”
https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/04/putting-co₂-to-use-10-finalists-named-for-carbon-xprize/
It’s 92% accurate!
…when tested with a vocabulary of 20 words.
A long way to go yet, but it is starting to bring into reality something that’s been a minor SF trope for years: reading subvocalizations.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
MIT’s New Voiceless Interface Can Read the Words in Your Head https://suhub.co/2v5n1ui
Whatever you may think of the movie, this is an interesting summary of the different tech that’s currently in development to increase the realism of VR.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
How Big Is the Gap Between ‘Ready Player One’ and Current VR Tech? https://suhub.co/2GKhcYx
Via Samuel Smith.
Originally shared by Anthony Loera
Wow, Just Released! Open Source plans to build your own 3D organ bio printer for about $500!
Carnegie Melon University turns its back on private patents and big pharma bucks for the good of the world!
https://engineering.cmu.edu/news-events/news/2018/03/23-bioprinter-feinberg.html
https://engineering.cmu.edu/news-events/news/2018/03/23-bioprinter-feinberg.html
How far along is AI creativity?
Like the rest of the AI sphere, it’s patchy.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
Can We Make a Musical Turing Test? https://suhub.co/2H8yqhM
This is clever. I’m sure someone can think of a science-fictional application.
Originally shared by HACKADAY
Here’s how to use the Moiré effect to create patterns which change depending on how they’re viewed.
[Tom Scott] ran across an interesting visual effect created with Moiré patterns and used for guiding ships but we’re sure it can be adapted for hacks somewhere. Without the aid of any motors or LED animation, the image changes as the user views it from…
http://hackaday.com/2018/04/07/using-moire-patterns-to-guide-ships/
This is huge news. They’re getting significant memory enhancement by using already-in-place neural prostheses (in epilepsy patients) to electrically stimulate the hippocampus.
For me, this sparks the story idea of a professional AI trainer who’s the DM for a party of trainee intelligences.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
Dungeons and Dragons, Not Chess and Go: Why AI Needs Roleplay https://suhub.co/2GZxzzR
An unexpectedly effective hack using an oddity of human perception to create the sense of kinaesthesia.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
New Bionic Arm Blurs Line Between Self and Machine for Wearers https://suhub.co/2H9y0W1