Via Walter Roberson.
Of course law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear.
Originally shared by Pappi Hex
Via Walter Roberson.
Of course law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear.
Originally shared by Pappi Hex
Cameras with superpowers.
Which, with the addition of brain-computer interfaces, could result in people with superpowers.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
The Next Generation of Cameras Might See Behind Walls http://suhub.co/2EaTUqa
Your capabilities will be added to our own.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
How Swarm Intelligence Is Making Simple Tech Much Smarter http://suhub.co/2FX4QYm
I’ve just made a post on the five most common errors I see in books I review (both indie and trad-pub). A good 70% of the books that are appealing enough for me to actually pick up make at least one of these errors, presumably because the authors don’t know that they’re errors.
Are you making one or more of them in your work?
The real-life positronic brain?
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
Brain-Like Chips Now Beat the Human Brain in Speed and Efficiency http://suhub.co/2FTnOPq
You could base a whole short story collection on these.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
The 10 Grand Challenges Facing Robotics in the Next Decade http://suhub.co/2E8OUWc
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
The Biggest Tech Takeaways From the 2018 World Economic Forum http://suhub.co/2Efchg0
Via private share. There’s no fashion so deadly that people won’t wear it, seemingly.
Via Sarah Rios.
It’s surprising how many problems don’t get solved because of who has them.
Originally shared by Cindy Brown
Men have dominated the entrepreneurial field since, well, basically forever. And that means many of the problems that their companies try to solve are focused on straight, cisgender men, or at best they’re gender-neutral. It makes sense; you can only solve a problem that you know exists. But because other groups, including women, have largely been excluded from those conversations, issues that affect non-dudes have gone ignored.
Even today, women who pitch male-dominated venture capital funds have a hard time being taken seriously. When Janica Alvarez invented a far superior breast pump, she had to bring her husband to pitch meetings because she otherwise faced questions about how she could possibly run a business while raising a family, or got VCs literally telling her the pump was gross. It didn’t seem to matter that this was a solution to a problem that millions of new parents have: breast pumps are terrible. They’ve always been terrible. The technology that Alvarez’s version uses isn’t even all that advanced—the innovation is in bothering to make a female-centric product better.
Scientific progress goes boink.
I don’t understand enough quantum physics to make out what the implications are of these discoveries, but hardly anyone does, so I’m sure you could mine them for handwavium.
It might end up resembling the work of Rudy Rucker if you’re not careful, though.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
You Thought Quantum Mechanics Was Weird: Check out Entangled Time http://suhub.co/2GGndlf