The Evening Read: Heavens above! Enjoy the wonders of the night sky at 'star party'

Since Prof Brian Cox swapped the pop stardom of D:Ream for promoting the joys of stargazing to the nations TV viewers it seems we havent been able to get enough of staring at the night sky.

But here in Merseyside there have been keen star spotters since the Victorian days, when the Liverpool Astronomical Society was set up.

Its still going strong today, and this weekend well all have the chance to join them in their scouring of the heavens when they hold a star party as part of National Astronomy Week.

Held in Wirral Country Park, the free event will include talks, advice on telescopes and, most importantly, views of the night sky.

At the moment the sighting to get most excited about is the planet Jupiter, which is now at its clearest. Miss it this time around and youll have to wait another 11 years for a good look.

Jupiter is at its highest point in the sky for many years and it wont be this high again until 2025, says Gerard Gilligan, Liverpool Astronomical Societys honorary secretary.

Its a very dynamic planet, the biggest in the Solar System. It rotates once every 10 hours or so and its cloud systems are always changing. Its also got the big red spot, which is a tremendous storm, much bigger than the Earth, which has been raging for 600 years.

If you look carefully, with binoculars or a telescope, you can see Jupiters four bright moons (it has 63 in total), which rotate and cast shadows on the planets surface.

Whether you join the star party or watch from the comfort of your own back garden, its also worth looking out for Orion the constellation named after the hunter of Greek mythology who Zeus placed among the stars after he was killed by a giant scorpion.

It is most easily spotted by the three stars in a row that make up the hunters belt.

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The Evening Read: Heavens above! Enjoy the wonders of the night sky at 'star party'

playing trojan for the NES (pt 3) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence – Video


playing trojan for the NES (pt 3) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence
http://www.humanlevelartificialintelligence.com This video shows a robot playing a nintendo game called trojan. There are no sound in parts of the video beca...

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playing trojan for the NES (pt 3) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence - Video

Can a Computer Fall in Love if It Doesn't Have a Body?

Much has been written about Spike Jonzes Her, the Oscar-nominated tale of love between man and operating system. Its an allegory about relationships in a digital age, a Rorschach test for technology. Its also premised on a particular vision of artificial intelligence as capable of experiencing love.

Poetic license aside, is that really possible?

Not anytime soon, though not for lack of processing speed or algorithmic finesse. What computers lack are bodies. The thoughts and feelings and emotions we call love are not abstract experiences; theyre intertwined with senses and hormones. An AI a computer hooked to video cameras, a microphone and a screen would not experience flesh-and-blood love.

You cant make a computer without a body feel love, said David Havas, director of the Laboratory for Language and Emotion at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Though trying to replicate it may produce wonderful gadgets, and potentially life-saving achievements, it can never achieve the same result.

In a sense, the body is the computational engine that makes emotion out of emotionless parts.

Havas isnt simply skeptical because modern AIs are unsophisticated. The opposite is true: AIs sort our mail, defeat our Jeopardy! champions and recommend medical treatments. From behind a screen, it can be difficult to distinguish chatbots from people.

Indeed, with some clever coding and a sufficiently nuanced grasp of human experience, it might be possible to build an AI that gives the appearance of loving. This wouldnt be easy: as philosopher and cognitive scientist Daniel Dennett wrote in Why You Cant Make a Computer That Feels Pain, some states of being are simply too messy to code. When Siri says, I did have strong feelings for a cloud-based app once, shes probably faking it.

Hers Samantha is different, though. Shes not going through the motions or running predetermined subroutines. Her love wasnt programmed; it grows. She falls in love. She experiences infatuation and fascination, passion and care, a sense of giving and taking and sharing. The breadth and depth of her feelings evolve.

That capacity for growth is difficult to program, said cognitive scientist Benjamin Bergen of the University of California, San Diego. Many mid-20th century AI researchers thought it could be replicated in code alone, imagining human faculties as a mental software suite that would work the same in silicon as in a body. That paradigm underlies Hers essential premise, and it no longer holds.

Instead, researchers in the field of embodied cognition have found close links between body and thought. In experiments, this has been demonstrated in fairly simple ways the effects of postures and facial expression on emotion, how different textures influence perception but they suggest a basic principle.

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Can a Computer Fall in Love if It Doesn't Have a Body?

Danbury Aerospace Announces New Business Unit

Fri, Feb 28, 2014

Danbury Aerospace says that their completed engine business has been spun off into a new and separate company. Titan Aircraft Engines based in San Antonio, TX. is presently moving into its own facility and staffing up quickly to meet current and expected demand.

Its time that we facilitate the recent demand we have seen in our completed engine business with adequate facilities and staffing to meet that demand, said Ty Stoller, President at Danbury Aerospace.

Over 1600 customers have already benefited from Danburys engine kit program launched several years ago through ECi, the distribution arm of Danbury Aerospace. In early 2013 ECi started offering to assemble and do run-in testing for their kit customers. This business has taken off with the recent agreements with Cub Crafters, Vertical Aviation and 5 other OEM manufactures. The real demand prompting this business decision is coming directly from the aircraft owner-builders themselves. It seems buying a complete engine solution directly from the actual manufacturer is appealing both from service and warrantee point of view.

As part of this strategic move, Danbury Aerospace has hired Kevin Eldredge to lead the new business to focus on customer service, branding of Titan, and expanding the product offering for the home-built and LSA marketplace. It is very exciting to join the Danbury Team and be given such a great opportunity to use my experience building businesses as well as serving the aircraft industry that I am so passionate about. I know that my love for flying and building so many of the aircraft Titan serves will quickly reveal itself in the engine and services we will offer , Eldredge said.

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Danbury Aerospace Announces New Business Unit