Archive for the ‘computing’ category: Page 693
Nov 2, 2016
Yale Engineers Advance Quantum Technology With Photon Control
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, engineering, quantum physics
Engineers from Yale University have developed a new technique to control the frequency of single photons.
The ability to control the frequency of single photons is crucial to realize the potential of quantum communications and quantum computing. The current methods for changing photon frequency, however, bring with them significant drawbacks.
Researchers in the lab of Hong Tang, the Llewellyn West Jones, Jr. Professor of Electrical Engineering & Physics, have developed a technique that avoids these obstacles. The results of their work are published today in Nature Photonics. Linran Fan, a Ph.D. student in Tang’s lab, is the lead author.
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Nov 2, 2016
A technology that can bring dead back to life might be a reality soon
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: computing, nanotechnology, robotics/AI
Researchers plan to bring dead to life by freezing their brains and then resurrecting them with artificial intelligence.
Bringing the dead back to life is futuristic and final frontier of science and Humai is working on just that. Humai is a technology company based in Los Angeles and is working on a project known as “Atom & Eve” that would let human consciousness be transferred to an artificial body after their death.
The artificial intelligence company has said it can resurrect human beings within the next 30 years. The “conversational styles, [behavioural]patterns, thought processes and information about how your body functions from the inside-out” would be stored on a silicon chip through AI and nanotechnology.
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Nov 2, 2016
A Computer Can Now Translate Languages as Well as a Human
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: computing, robotics/AI
Have you ever been in a situation where knowing another language would have come in handy?
I remember standing on the platform at Tokyo Station watching my train to Nagano — the last train of the day — pulling away without me on it. What ensued was a frustrating hour of gestures, confused smiles, and head-shaking as I wandered the station looking for someone who spoke English (my Japanese is unfortunately nonexistent). It would have been really helpful to have a bilingual pal along with me to translate.
Bilingual pals can be hard to find, but Google’s new translation software may be an equally useful alternative. In a paper released last week, the authors noted that Google’s Neural Machine Translation system (GNMT) reduced translation errors by an average of 60% compared to Google’s phrase-based system. GMNT uses deep learning, a technology that aims to ‘think’ in the same way as a human brain.
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Nov 2, 2016
AMA: I’m Zoltan Istvan, a transhumanist US Presidential Candidate. Ask me anything!! : Futurology
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: biotech/medical, computing, cyborgs, economics, geopolitics, life extension, military, robotics/AI, transhumanism
Come “ask me anything” right now!!! I’m trying to answer all questions I get asked:
Hi Reddit,
Thank you for having me here. My name is Zoltan Istvan, and I’m a futurist, journalist, and science fiction writer. I’m also the 2016 Presidential candidate for the Transhumanist Party.
Nov 2, 2016
Aging, Just Another Disease
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, computing, life extension
Aging leads to diseases and ultimately death. Time for people to ditch the semantics and recognise that aging and disease are not two mysterious independent processes but are in fact one and the same.
Aging leads to the diseases of aging and the discussion is largely a matter of semantics.
“The concept of aging is undergoing a rapid transformation in medicine. The question has long been asked: Is aging a natural process that should be accepted as inevitable, or is it pathologic, a disease that should be prevented and treated? For the vast majority of medicine’s history, the former position was considered a self-evident truth. So futile was any attempt to resist the ravages of aging that the matter was relegated to works of fantasy and fiction. But today, the biomedical community is rethinking its answer to this question.
First impressions count, but they’re notoriously subjective. Now computers have learned to make snap judgments just like humans do.
Oct 31, 2016
Would You Like to Be Uploaded to a Computer When You Die?
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, computing, cyborgs, life extension, neuroscience
Rattling around inside a hard drive doesn’t sound like an awful lot of fun — but then, neither does death.
Both eventualities are rather difficult to imagine, but we’ll all have to give them some thought sooner rather than later. Neuroscientist and neuroengineer Randal Koene thinks it’s only going to be another 10 years before we replace parts of the brain with prosthetics.
From there, it’s just a matter of replacing each region systematically, to end up with someone whose brain is immortal and electronic. Could the last person to die have already been born?
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Oct 31, 2016
Edmonton researchers’ tiny discovery may revolutionize computers
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, nanotechnology, particle physics, quantum physics
New method for creating smaller switches for QC identified and making smaller and more efficient QC systems possible.
Edmonton nanotechnology researchers working with atom-sized materials have made a breakthrough that could lead to smaller, ultraefficient computers.
The team, led by Robert Wolkow, together with collaborators at the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg, have developed a way to create atomic switches for electricity nearly 100 times smaller than the smallest switches, or transistors, on the market today. Their findings appeared in the Oct. 26 edition of the scientific publication Nature Communications.
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Oct 31, 2016
Tiny Computer Pushes the Envelope with Micro-Memory
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: computing
Talk about downsizing – researchers at the University of California in Santa Barbara have developed a design for a 50 nanometer square computer, the university announced Oct. 27.
For now, that size is entirely theoretical. It could be managed by a novel kind of logic that enables the computer to process data inside a three-dimensional structure.
“In a regular computer, data processing and memory storage are separated, which slows down computation. Processing data directly inside a three-dimensional memory structure would allow more data to be stored and processed much faster,” said Gina Adam, a postdoctoral researcher and the lead author of the paper.
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