playing trojan for the NES (pt 5) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence – Video


playing trojan for the NES (pt 5) 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...

By: electronicdave2

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playing trojan for the NES (pt 5) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence - Video

Artificial Intelligence Communication Project By Pranav Rao and Saurabh Mishra – Video


Artificial Intelligence Communication Project By Pranav Rao and Saurabh Mishra
This is a project for an Artificial Intelligence class. references: http://cheezburger.com/5538744064 http://kotaku.com/5990307/the-most-hilarious-arma-iii-a...

By: Saurabh Mishra

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Artificial Intelligence Communication Project By Pranav Rao and Saurabh Mishra - Video

Giantfirering27 Music Artificial Intelligence Bomb SPED UP [30 Min Loop] – Video


Giantfirering27 Music Artificial Intelligence Bomb SPED UP [30 Min Loop]
I was messing around in Audacity, and then I got the idea of Speeding up naruto2413 #39;s Artificial Intelligence Bomb Song, and looping for about 30 minutes... ...

By: Giantfirering Cole

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Giantfirering27 Music Artificial Intelligence Bomb SPED UP [30 Min Loop] - Video

Playing rygar fro the NES (pt 1) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence – Video


Playing rygar fro the NES (pt 1) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence
http://www.humanlevelartificialintelligence.com This video shows a robot playing a nintendo game called rygar. There are no sound in parts of the video becau...

By: electronicdave2

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Playing rygar fro the NES (pt 1) using Human Level Artificial Intelligence - Video

CubeSat World – Satlite CubeSat World Observacin Global del Planeta Tierra (JAPON) – Video


CubeSat World - Satlite CubeSat World Observacin Global del Planeta Tierra (JAPON)
SUSCRBETE http://goo.gl/oPUqJp https://www.facebook.com/pages/Comando-bayer/256298267865050 CubeSat World; Proyecto de Exploracin Aeroespacial diseado por...

By: COMANDOBAYER

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CubeSat World - Satlite CubeSat World Observacin Global del Planeta Tierra (JAPON) - Video

PPG Aerospace Coatings Add Character to Cathay Pacific Special Livery

HONG KONG, March 5, 2014 Coatings by PPG Industries (NYSE:PPG) aerospace business create the colorful characters and The Spirit of Hong Kong livery on Cathay Pacific Airways Boeing 777-300ER airplane painted to support the Hong Kong: Our Home campaign of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government.

The livery features a dark green fuselage with silhouettes of the 110 winners in an online contest calling on Hong Kong people to submit creative entries that illustrate the true spirit of the city.

Eight custom colors of DESOTHANE(R) HS/CA 8800 buffable topcoat by PPG Aerospace were applied over DESOPRIME(R) HS/CA 7700 primer and waterborne chromate-free DesoGel EAP-12 conversion coating and adhesion promoter pretreatment. The high-solids formulations of the topcoat and primer result in a lower percentage of volatile organic compounds (VOCs).

With an aircraft as visible as The Spirit of Hong Kong, it was important for Cathay Pacific to have confidence that it would be a showpiece as it flies around the world, said Kent Wong, technical services manager, Cathay Pacific. Having worked closely with PPG Aerospace, we knew we could count on their products to perform and on their people to provide the exceptional service we needed.

PPG Aerospace was honored to help Cathay Pacific create the special livery, said Terence Cheng, PPG coatings segment manager, Hong Kong. Cathay Pacific has long been a PPG Aerospace coatings customer, and PPG supplied coatings for the first and second Spirit of Hong Kong liveries as well.

Cheng said the PPG Aerospace application support center in Suzhou, China, worked closely with Cathay Pacific to produce paint samples for color matching as well as the blended coatings. With eight colors needed in a short time period, the PPG Aerospace team at ASC-Suzhou worked quickly to provide the samples and specific size packages of the blended paints.

The aircraft was painted by Taikoo Aircraft Engineering Co. Ltd. in Xiamen, Fujian, China.

PPG Aerospace is the aerospace products and services business of PPG Industries. PPG Aerospace PRC-DeSoto is the leading global producer of aerospace sealants, coatings, and packaging and application systems. PPG Aerospace Transparencies is the worlds largest supplier of aircraft windshields, windows and canopies.

About Cathay Pacific Airways

American Roy C. Farrell and Australian Sydney H. de Kantzow founded Cathay Pacific Airways in 1946 as a small freight and passenger carrier. As Hong Kongs home airline, today Cathay Pacific ranks as the worlds 19th largest airline by operating revenue, 14th largest in terms of revenue passenger kilometres and seventh largest in freight tonne kilometres. Serving 182 destinations in 42 countries and territories, Cathay Pacific carried nearly 29 million revenue passengers in 2012. One of Hong Kongs largest employers, Cathay Pacific and its subsidiaries employ 31,600 people worldwide. It is a founding member of the oneworld alliance and a partner of Asia Miles. For more information, visit http://www.cathaypacific.com and follow @cathaypacific on Twitter.

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PPG Aerospace Coatings Add Character to Cathay Pacific Special Livery

Humanist, Religious Freedom & Scientology Writers Launch Featured Contributor Program on WorldReligionNews.com

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) March 05, 2014

WorldReligionNews.com officially launched its "Featured Contributor" program today with three articles: the first, written by Babu Gogineni, the International Director of the International Humanist and Ethical Union; the second, written by Stuart A. Wright, Professor of Sociology at Lamar University; and the third, written by Bob Adams, International Spokesperson, Church of Scientology.

WorldReligionNews.com has established its "Featured Contributor" program to offer both writers officially affiliated with all faiths and belief systems, as well as independent writers and authors of note, a public platform from which to publish religion focused articles that will reach not only WRN visitors but also appear via syndication partner Outbrain on sites like CNN, FOX, New York Daily News and others.

If you are an officially affiliated spokesperson/writer who would like to be considered for a "Featured Contributor" article placement on WRN, contact us here: http://www.worldreligionnews.com/contact-us/.

About WorldReligionNews.com WRN exists to cover the news generated by ALL major world religions, A to Z, from Agnosticism to Wicca and all in between, in ways that will inspire, challenge, enlighten, entertain & engage within a framework wired for a connected and distracted world. http://www.WorldReligionNews.com/

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Humanist, Religious Freedom & Scientology Writers Launch Featured Contributor Program on WorldReligionNews.com

Commentary: field of tissue engineering is progressing at remarkable pace

What many didnt realise was that the freaky looking ear was never grown, had nothing to do with genetic engineering and wasnt really a scientific breakthrough at all! Instead, it served as the publics introduction to the new field of tissue engineering, through which researchers attempt to create replacement tissues in the laboratory by combining resorbable materials with stem cells.

Tissue engineers, like those in my laboratory at Kings College London, work to build everything from cartilage to fix creaky arthritic knees to coronary arteries to patch up heart patients. What looked like a human ear grown on a mouse was simply what we call a scaffold, an implantable 3D structure made of a plastic that safely dissolves in the body.

Twenty years later, a UCL-based team led by Dr Patrizia Ferretti is continuing to build on this work to reconstruct ears. Surgeons currently treat microtia, a condition in which children are born with a malformed or missing ear, by taking cartilage from the patients rib and implanting it in the head to form something that looks like an ear.

Dr Ferretti hopes to eliminate the need for this second cartilage-harvesting surgery by growing ear cartilage in the laboratory.

The difference here is that whereas in the 1990s tissue engineers thought that merely forming a scaffold of the correct shape and size would allow us to create a tissue, we now understand that a stem cells perception of its nano-environment plays an important role in determining the tissue it creates.

In short, we can now tailor a scaffold with nano-cues that tell a stem cell to become a liver cell instead of lung.

Dr Ferrettis scaffold does just this. Her team utilises a new nanocaged POSS-PCU scaffold to coax stem cells collected from fat to form cartilage whilst the scaffold slowly melts away.

This exciting material came to light in 2011 when it was used to replace the windpipe of a patient who had to have his own removed because of cancer.

The scaffold here instructed stem cells to create the windpipes lining, essentially using the body as an incubator to help direct their fate. This time, the UCL team utilised a cocktail of chemicals to help push the stem cells to make cartilage, so it remains to be seen if the scaffold will similarly drive ear cartilage formation once placed in the body.

What is clear, however, is that the field of tissue engineering is progressing at a remarkable pace and tailor-made tissues to treat a range of conditions are a real possibility in the near future."

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Commentary: field of tissue engineering is progressing at remarkable pace

NSF Cancels Political Science Funding

The move is said to be an attempt to dodge restrictions set by Congress

Flickr/Talk Radio News Service

Political scientists are usually busy in early August, polishing proposals for grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF). But not this year.

Less than one month before an annual mid-August application deadline, the funding agency has scrapped new political-science funding for the rest of 2013. The NSF declines to explain its reasons for eliminating the grant call, one of two that typically take place each year. But leaders in the field are blaming Congress, which on 21 March passed a bill requiring that NSF-funded political-science research benefit either national security or economic interests.

Its hard to imagine that its not a factor in the decision, says Michael Brintnall, executive director of the American Political Science Association in Washington DC, who describes the funding cut as troubling. Brintnall says that the NSF notified him about the cancelation on 25 July. Other calls for funding in the NSF division of social, behavioral and economic sciences which includes political science are continuing as usual.

The NSFs decision removes one of the main financial lifelines for political-science research. This is somewhere between devastating and crippling, says Henry Farrell, a political scientist at George Washington University in Washington DC and an author of the Monkey Cage, a widely read political-science blog. But Farrell blames the political climate rather than the funding agency for the cut. The NSF is in an extremely awkward situation, he says.

The requirements for NSF political-science spending came during eleventh-hour negotiations for the 2013 omnibus spending bill. Some of the laws language, proposed by Senator Tom Coburn (Republican, Oklahoma), prevents the NSF from wasting federal resources on political science projects, unless the NSF Director certifies projects are vital to national security or the economic interests of the country.

Since then, NSF officials have struggled to translate that language into rules for evaluating grant proposals and spending its roughly $10-million budget for political science. On 7 June, the agency said that peer-review panels would take into account the extra requirements in their evaluation of grant proposals. But the cancelation of the August funding call suggests that the agency buckled under the uncertainty of how to interpret the law's stipulations, says John Aldrich,a political scientist at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.

John Hart, a spokesman for Coburn, says that he is uncertain whether Coburns efforts can be linked to the NSFs decision. But Coburn has vocally supported getting rid of political-science funding altogether. On its website, the NSF cites budget uncertainties as the reason behind its decision. NSF spokeswoman Deborah Wing declined Nature's request to interview Brian Humes, a political-science program director, and she would not answer questions about the cancelled grant cycle.

The agencys website says that it will hold its call for political-science proposals in January as usual. Aldrichsays that this suggests that the funding shutdown is a response to the Congressional requirements, which are set to expire on 30 September the end of the 2013 fiscal year. Avoiding the August funding round may be a strategic move by Humes to see whether the constraints disappear when the next spending bill is passed, says Aldrich. If he can save the money and spend it later when theres more clarity, that would be helpful, Aldrich says.

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NSF Cancels Political Science Funding

Kudos & Kindness: Science club members did a great job

Big thanks to the Science Club of our own Lake Tahoe Community College for sending three of its young, energetic members to my kindergarten classroom! Mike Mancillas, William Chen and John Serenio taught a science lesson on the Water Cycle and states of matter to my kindergarten class at Bijou Community School on Thursday. Not only did they impart their science knowledge to my students well, they did it using very age-appropriate methods. All three young men were wonderful role models for my students by generating excitement about science while setting high academic and behavioral expectations. They are looking forward to presenting in any other classroom in this school district, and if you are a teacher I would highly recommend this experience for your own classroom.

Laura Chappel

Kindergarten teacher

Bijou Community School

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Kudos & Kindness: Science club members did a great job

Ellen Dolgen Shares Video and Sheds Light on Menopause on The Katie Couric Show – Video


Ellen Dolgen Shares Video and Sheds Light on Menopause on The Katie Couric Show
Ellen Dolgen sits down with Katie Couric and discusses her mission to transform the once hushed topic of menopause, into a leading discussion for women. Elle...

By: Ellen Dolgen

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Ellen Dolgen Shares Video and Sheds Light on Menopause on The Katie Couric Show - Video