IKEA looks to space travel for new micro-living furniture collection – Dezeen

IKEA is set to produce a collection ofspace-saving furniturethat draws on the logistics of space travelto find innovativesolutions for shrinking living spaces.

The new collection was announced today at the furniture company's annual Democratic Design Day, which is taking place in lmhult, Sweden. While it hasn't been revealed whatproducts will be included in the collection, IKEA says it will launch in 2019.

IKEA's Democratic Design Day aims to make the company's plans more transparent by sharing some of its behind-the-scenes research and processes. It takes place each yearin lmhult, the home of the first IKEA store.

Working alongside NASA and Lund University School of Industrial Design, the space collection will "tap into what scientists and engineers learn from spaceflight" particularly the way they deal with restricted living areas.

As part of theproject, IKEA also revealed that it is working alongside NASA to figure out howinterior spaces might be designed for life on Mars, andhowthey could make the planet feel like home tothose who would live there.

"This collaboration is not about IKEA going to Mars, but we are curious about life in space, the challenges and needs, and what we can make out of that experience for the many people," Michael Nikolic, creative leader at IKEA Range and Supply.

"When you design for life in a spacecraft or planetary surface habitat on Mars, you need to be creative yet precise, find ways to repurpose things and think carefully about sustainability aspects," he added. "With urbanisation and environmental challenges on earth, we need to do the same."

The company attributes the idea for this new collection to a change in our living conditions, citing shrinking homes and a 70 per cent increase in city living as the main drivers.

"Urban challenges such as small living spaces will lead to changes in the home," said IKEA. "Already today downsizing and micro-living is a reality in big cities."

"In spaceflights, small space living has always been a reality. IKEA will, therefore, tap into what scientists and engineers learn from spaceflight to Mars, and apply these discoveries to products and methods for everyday life at home, here on earth."

The Swedish furniture giant joins a number of designers who are already responding to smaller, more flexible spaces with furniture that makes the most of every inch of the floors, walls and even the ceiling.

Recent solutions include a hanging storage system byJordi Iranzo, aspace-efficient "living cube" by Till Knneker and a shelving system that comprises three interchangeable desktops by Matej Chabera.

Last year, IKEA announced its collaborations with Hay and Tom Dixon during its Democratic Design Dayevent.

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‘Blast Camp’ gives students lessons on space travel – Fremont News Messenger

Adriana Lape, 10, of Lutz Elementary, builds her model rocket during Blast Camp at Vanguard Career Center in Fremont.(Photo: Craig Shoup/The News-Messenger)Buy Photo

FREMONT - Local students had a blast this week learning about space travel at a summer camp at Vanguard Career Center in Fremont.

The theme for the four-day "Blast Camp," according to Vanguard AssistantPrincipal Clay Frye, was space.

Frye said 95 students, entering grades five through eight from local schools, were able to attend free of charge, thanks to a $20,000 grant obtained bythe United Way of Sandusky County.

The camp was broken into seven mini camps offering students an opportunity to learn about NASA and what it takes to travel in space.

"The first thing we asked the kids is what they think it takes to send a rocket into space," Frye said. "Most said fuel, or a rocket. It's not just a countdown and a push of a button,but some didn't realize it takes engineers, welders and mechanics to launch a rocket."

Many of the jobs needed to build, send and maintain rockets in space are skilled trades that can be learned at schools like Vanguard, whichspecialize in skilled trade programs such as engineering, robotics and mechanical skills that it takes to build rockets.

Brooklyn Holland, 11, from Stamm Elementary, works on calculating her body weight in zero gravity.(Photo: Craig Shoup/The News-Messenger)

In one group, students were given the controls to fly a drone through a course and landon a pad, to would simulate what NASA is using to send drones into spacerather than more dangerous and expensive manned space flight.

Austin Dix, a 17-year-old Gibsonburg High School student, showed campers how to operate the drone, and thenhow to navigate through obstacles before landing the craft.

"NASA is using drones a lot on Mars, and here we are teaching them the basics of how to fly drones," Dix said.

JennieMcCoy, a medical career teacher at Vanguard, taught students about zero gravityand the effects it has on astronauts.

"When there is no gravity, all the liquids move up from your feet to your head," McCoy said. "Your head swells, your tongue swells and youlose your taste buds."

Students Parker Zelns, 11, Natalie Frye, 11 and Virginia DaBrunz, 11, are blindfolded and pinch their nose to simulate the lack of taste buds in zero gravity. Vanguard teacher Jenny McCoy administers the test with salty, sweet and sour tastes.(Photo: Craig Shoup/The News-Messenger)

McCoy had the students blindfolded, their noses pinched and drop different tastes like salty, sweet and sour on the students' tongues to see if students could taste what they were swallowing.

The summer camp is the first at Vanguard, something Frye said he would like to continue in the future.

"We've hosted winter camps for the last three years and we really want to do a summer camp each year," Frye said.

The camp would continue educating students in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, orSTEM courses,and coincide with programs offered to students at Vanguard.

"A lot of these aren't aware of what we offer, so we are trying to expose them to these careers and the education that they can get at Vanguard," Frye said.

cshoup@gannett.com

419-334-1035

Twitter: @CraigShoupNH

Grace Waltermier, 11, is assisted by drone instructor Austin Dix on how to fly and land a drone. Dix said NASA is using drones more than ever to save money on exploring space by using unmanned aircraft.(Photo: Craig Shoup/The News-Messenger)

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How SpaceX Launched a Chinese Experiment Into Space, Despite US Ban – Foreign Policy (blog)


Foreign Policy (blog)
How SpaceX Launched a Chinese Experiment Into Space, Despite US Ban
Foreign Policy (blog)
The Chinese experiment carried aloft by SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket will test how space radiation effects gene mutation, with potential ramifications for extended human space travel. It was designed by the Beijing Institute of Technology, who partnered ...
Commercial space travel: A peek into its near futureGood Herald

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Mars rover scientist, SpaceX engineer join NASA astronaut corps – Reuters

By Irene Klotz | CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. NASA named 12 astronauts on Wednesday to the U.S. space agency's first new class of space fliers in five years, chosen from a record 18,300 applicants, for a new era of space travel.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence welcomed the five women and seven men, aged 28 to 42, during their introduction at the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Pence said the White House planned to form a council to advise President Donald Trump on space policy and strategy, relaunching a body that has been inactive for more than 25 years.

Trump is "firmly committed to NASA's noble mission leading America in space," Pence said, noting that only 338 Americans have served as NASA astronauts.

The trainees include a scientist working with the Mars robotic rover Curiosity, a SpaceX engineer, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor and an Army surgeon.

NASA is developing a heavy-lift rocket and Orion capsule for travel to the moon and eventually Mars. It is also working with Elon Musk's Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, and Boeing Co to develop commercial space taxis that can ferry crews to and from the International Space Station, a $100 billion research lab that flies about 240 miles (400 km) above Earth.

"Hopefully one day I'll get to fly on a vehicle that has components I've actually designed," said Robb Kulin, 33, a doctor of engineering and Fulbright Fellow who is joining the astronaut corps from SpaceX in Hawthorne, California.

Since the shuttle program ended in 2011, NASA has been dependent on Russia for rides to the station, a 15-nation project.

Jessica Watkins, 28, a post-doctoral fellow at the California Institute of Technology, joins the class after serving on the science team operating the car-sized Curiosity rover which has been exploring Gale Crater on Mars since August 2012.

"We intend to send her to Mars one day," said acting NASA Administrator Robert Lightfoot.

The astronauts have two years of training before they are eligible for flight assignments. They are scheduled to report for duty at the Johnson Space Center in August.

(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Letitia Stein and Richard Chang)

BEIJING China is making "preliminary" preparations to send a man to the moon, state media cited a senior space official as saying, the latest goal in China's ambitious lunar exploration program.

CHIRPAN, Bulgaria A team of excavators in Bulgaria has resumed a search for fossils of an ape-like creature which may be the oldest-known direct ancestor of man and whose discovery has challenged the central hypothesis that humankind originated in Africa.

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Singularity | Mass Effect Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Mass Effect Edit This gravitational power sucks multiple enemies within a radius to a single area, leaving them floating helplessly and vulnerable to attack. It can also attract objects from the environment, such as crates or pieces of furniture; enemies will take damage if they collide with other solid objects in the Singularity field. Talent Ranks Edit

These classes have access to the Singularity talent:

Note: This power travels in the direction of the cross-hair, arcing towards the target. Upon impact, it will create the Singularity. Liara's Singularity travels in a straight line, instantly creating a singularity at the targeted location.

Rank 4

Choose to evolve the power into one of the following,

Create a sphere of dark energy that traps and dangles enemies caught in its field.

Increase recharge speed by 25%.

Increase Singularity's hold duration by 20%. Increase impact radius by 20%.

Duration

Increase Singularity's hold duration by 30%. Additional enemies can be lifted before Singularity fades.

Radius

Increase impact radius by 25%.

Lift Damage

Inflict 20 damage per second to lifted targets.

Recharge Speed

Increase recharge speed by 30%.

Expand

Expand the Singularity field by 35% for 10 seconds.

Detonate

Detonate Singularity when the field dies to inflict 300 damage across 5 meters.

Create a sphere of dark energy that traps and dangles enemies caught in its field.

Increase recharge speed by 25%.

Increase damage by 20%.

Duration

Increase Singularity's hold duration by 150%.

Radius

Increase impact radius by 35%.

Lift Damage

Inflict 50 damage per second to lifted targets.

Recharge Speed

Increase recharge speed by 35%.

Damage

Increase damage by 50%.

Detonate

Detonate Singularity when the field dies to inflict 500 damage across 7 meters.

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Singularity | Mass Effect Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Experts Weigh in on AI and the Singularity – Futurism

In BriefNine experts weighed in on the future of artificialintelligence and machine learning recently for IEEE Spectrum. Theiranswers provide a glimpse into what's coming in the world of AI andwhat to expect from the Singularity. AI Visionaries

Artificial intelligence (AI) is progressing so fast that there are new developments in the field almost every week. The tendrils of AI grow further into human life and continue to rapidly intertwine with our reality, and this process will only accelerate. Some worry about the consequences of a future in which AIs have more capabilities than humans, while some relish this prospect. IEEE Spectrum has just published a special issue for June 2017, which reports on the views of nine visionaries, technologists, and futurists on whats coming in AI.

Each expert was asked, When will we have computers as capable as the brain? Ray Kurzweil thinks this will happen in 2029, while Jrgen Schmidhuber simply agrees that it will be soon, and Gary Marcus estimates that it will happen 20 to 50 years from now. Nick Bostrom predicts within a small number of decades. Rodney Brooks is a little more conservative, estimating 50 to 100 years, while both Robin Hanson and Martine Rothblatt think that it will happen within the 21st century.

Ruchir Puris answer to this question was perhaps the most interesting: A human brain is fundamentally different than being a champion chess, Jeopardy!, or Go player. It is something that entails essential traits like caring, empathy, sharing, ingenuity, and innovation. These human brain traits might prove to be elusive to machines for a long time. . .. Although AIs impact on society will accelerate further. . .it will be a while before we will be able to holistically answer [that] question.

So, How will brainlike computers change the world? Robin Hanson thinks that humans will get rich from robot labor, while Gary Marcus anticipates major advancements in science and medicine and Martine Rothblatt agrees with Kurzweil that we will essentially eventually become downloadable and therefore immortal. Ray Kurzweil sees AI as a massive brain extender, and therefore a problem solver, making every aspect of our lives better. Rodney Brooks thinks making realistic predictions about this isnt possible since its too far off, and instead posits that in 20 years, baby boomers including Kurzweil will be assisted by in-home computers, but wont be immortal. Jrgen Schmidhuber thinks that AIs will be fascinated by the possibilities of space as they become self-motivated and pursue their own goals.

Finally, Do you have any qualms about a future in which computers have human-level (or greater) intelligence? Carver Mead points out that people always fear new technologies, even though history shows that we have continually benefitted from them. Robin Hanson thinks anyone who doesnt have qualms about a change this momentous isnt paying attention, but Martine Rothblatt doesnt have qualms, because she thinks human needs will shape a Darwinian market for robots. Ray Kurzweil thinks we will avoid peril and gain optimally by merging with AI. Nick Bostrom is concerned by the problem of scalable control of AI, while Rodney Brooks says he has no qualms at all, and that qualming is not useful, even for Nick Bostrom. Gary Marcus doesnt see clear solutions to potential problems yet, but thinks that future technologies will provide them.

The experts had different ideas about many things, but there was no dispute about the most important point: the singularity is coming, and its closer than we think.

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Tune Into the Future of Fintech at Exponential Finance This Week – Singularity Hub

Singularity Universitys Exponential Finance Summit begins today and runs through June 9 in New York, the finance industrys bustling capital. You can tune into the summit as it happens from anywhere with this livestream.

Singularity Hub is also covering the event as it brings together financial and technology leaders from across the industry. From exciting startups like Lemonade and HyperScience to established financial institutions such as BlackRock and Bank of America, well be learning about how emerging technologies are changing the workings of the finance industry and how financial services companies do business.

At the summit, experts will dive into:

Ric Edelman, founder of Edelman Financial Services, and Sharon Sputz, director of Columbia Universitys Data Science Institute, will discuss the future of financial advice and investing. Angela Strange, partner at Andreesen Horowitz, will break down exponential technology and insurance, and BlackRocks chief talent officer, Matthew Breitfelder, will take a look at the future of work.

Of course, as usual, well also keep an eye on talks and question-and-answer sessions with Ray Kurzweil, Singularity University cofounder and chancellor, and Peter Diamandis, Singularity University cofounder and chairman.

Be sure to join the conversation on the future of finance in real-time on Twitter with@SingularityHuband@xfinanceor using the hashtag#xfin.

Much of the latest technology driving fintech is still new, and its impact has yet to be fully fleshed outwhich should make for an interesting summit.

Image Credit: Pond5

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Tune Into the Future of Fintech at Exponential Finance This Week - Singularity Hub

Beyond Politics: Innovating for a Sustainable Future – Singularity Hub

Singularity University is dismayed by the Trump administrations choice to withdraw from the Paris Accord. Climate change is one of the greatest risks to humankind, and the decisions we make over the next few decades will impact life on earth for thousands of years.

At SU were proud to support the responsible development of exponential technologies, such as AI, robotics, nanotechnology, and digital biology, that may provide solutions to climate change. These exponential technologies should be nurtured in enabling policy environments, but independent of the decisions made by politicians, SU will move forward with our plans to address climate change.

Were proud to see an increase in breakthroughs that greatly improve our stewardship of the planet and global abundance such as in vitro meat production, carbon capture techniques, genetic engineering of climate resilient crops, advances in atmospheric water extraction, and countless others.

While this is a disappointing decision, there are more powerful forces at work. The global response to the federal governments decision has renewed our faith in the common goodness of humankind. Innovation will continue. We will move forward.

We at SU provide access to a deep and broad innovation ecosystem that includes forward thinking corporations (e.g., Deloitte, Google, Lowes), development organizations (e.g., Stockholm Resilience Center, Unicef, World Wide Fund for Nature), and governments around the world. We will continue to work across industries and disciplines to bring abundance to all.

We welcome you to join our bold march into the future.

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Berkeley Lab’s Open-Source Spinoff Serves Science | Berkeley Lab – Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Greg Kurtzer invented software called Singularity to enable the use of containers in high-performance computing (Credit: Marillyn Chung/Berkeley Lab)

Scientists used to come to Gregory Kurtzer of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratorys (Berkeley Labs) IT department a lot, asking for a better way to use software containers in a high-performance computing (HPC) environment. After a while he got tired of saying, Sorry, not possible. So he invented a solution and named it Singularity.

Within a few months of its release last year, Singularity took off. Computing-heavy scientific institutions worldwidefrom Stanford University to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to various sites on the European Grid e-Infrastructureflocked to the software. Singularity was also recently recognized by HPCwire editors as one of five new technologies to watch.

Singularity has been making huge strides in the computing community, Kurtzer said, with some surprise, adding that Open Science Grid, a consortium that provides distributed computing resources for scientific research, has served over 20 million containers with Singularity.

Its now on its seventh release (version 2.2.1) and has caught on so quickly that Kurtzer has launched SingularityWare LLC to further develop and support the open-source software. The company is being funded by RStor Inc., a startup based in Saratoga, California. Kurtzer, the long-time technical lead and architect for the HPC Services group at Berkeley Lab with a joint appointment at UC Berkeley, will shift to an advisory role at the Lab in order to focus on Singularity.

Berkeley Lab makes some Lab-developed software available at no cost to maximize its impact and to participate in the open-source software community, said ElsieQuaite-Randall, Berkeley Labs Chief Technology Transfer Officer. Singularity fosters innovation as open-source software, and now SingularityWare LLClike other Berkeley Lab startupswill set out to expand the reach and adoption of an important technology.

A typical case where users might need Singularity is if they want to run an application such as Googles TensorFlow. They may need a very specific version of Tensor Flow installed, Kurtzer said. They can create a container to do that in about five minutes. Then they can take that container, bring it to our environment and run it, even if we dont have that version of Tensor Flow installed.

Software containers make it possible to take your entire computing environment, including your files and all the applications you want to run, and encapsulate it so it can be easily replicated on another machine without worrying whether the new machine has a compatible operating system, libraries, applications, and so forth.

Containers share some of the use cases of virtual machines but without the code redundancy and performance hit associated with virtualization, Kurtzer said. Singularity containers allow a user to encapsulate an entire OS (operating system) environment and use it on a shared HPC system like any other program, without an admin doing anything.

Another example where Singularity would be useful would be allowing other scientists to reproduce experiments. Say you just published an article. Wouldnt it be nice to have a location you can cite where someone can download the Singularity container and replicate all the experiments? Kurtzer asked. Someone can enter the container, and now theyre sitting in the exact same environment as you were.

Containerization was developed for enterprise environments, where it has become very popular, especially with the rise of Dockers container technology. Dockers container solution is for the enterprise. But the scientific use case is quite different, Kurtzer said. Our goal isnt to run as many containers as we can on a single host, with each having the illusion of sole occupancy and isolation, but to run maybe one, and enable it to utilize all the resources on that host. Its kind of the opposite of isolation!

So Kurtzer started working on his own solution, and four months later, the first version was released last spring. When I started working on it, I asked, what do scientists really need from containers? They need reproducibility, mobility, and also freedomthe ability to install their own applications and run in their own environment, and store it just like any other data file, Kurtzer said. Thats what Singularity solves for scientific computing.

Kurtzer chose the name Singularity for its meaning in astronomy. As I understand it, its the culmination of a whole bunch of matter in the universe forming a single infinitely dense point, he said. Thats what I was thinking when I was creating Singularitytaking everything necessary to create a reproducible scientific environment and putting it in one file.

Singularity also enables users to run legacy workflows easily. Kurtzer cites one example of how his group saved an 18-year-old workflow from failing hardware and was able to convert it to a Singularity container that is still being used in production today.

Kurtzer believes Singularity will benefit scientists who may not even know they need it. Were trying to reach out to more scientists and engage with additional groups, especially those who are not traditional HPC users, also known as the computational long tail of science, Kurtzer said. We have a lot of users that are running computationally intensive jobs on their laptops and workstations and not making use of the dedicated computational cycles that are designed specifically for computing and available to them. With Singularity we can easily make these large computing resources tangible.

# # #

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory addresses the worlds most urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable energy, protecting human health, creating new materials, and revealing the origin and fate of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Labs scientific expertise has been recognized with 13 Nobel Prizes. The University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energys Office of Science. For more, visit http://www.lbl.gov.

DOEs Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.

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Ascension Athletics for June 8, 2017 – The Advocate

Four Bulldog players land make Class 1A All-State baseball and softball

The Ascension Catholic Bulldogs earned their way to the Division IV semifinals in baseball this season with a 9-3 district mark and a 19-13 overall record. That performance helped two players earn Louisiana Sports Writers Associations All-State berths and an honorable mention for another.

The two Bulldogs selected to the first team were senior standouts and also happened to become LSU-Eunice signees. The first was pitcher Landon Clifton, who had an outstanding 10-4 record and a 1.95 ERA on the mound. The other was infielder Nick Bellina, who sported a whopping .420 batting average and 39 RBIs in his senior year. Junior Mason Zeringue earned an honorable mention.

The Lady Bulldogs made it to the quarterfinals in softball this season and put a pair of players on the Louisiana Sports Writers Associations softball squads. Infielder Ceily Grisaffe hit for an impressive .417 batting average and added 19 RBIs for her hitting totals. Utility player Isabelle Abadie hit for a .373 batting average and added 20 RBIs to make the softball squad.

In District 5-5A, first-team selections were pitchers Austin Bankert of Dutchtown and Blayne Enlow of St. Amant; catcher Jacob Thompson of East Ascension; infielders Larson Fontenot of St. Amant, Cameron Sibley of Dutchtown, Joseph Stephens of East Ascension and Jack Merrifield of Dutchtown; outfielders Zach Johnson of Dutchtown and Zane Zeppuhar of St. Amant; and utility players Noah Fontenot of East Ascension and Cameron Crawford of Dutchtown.

Second-team selections included pitchers Cade Blanchard of Dutchtown and Colin Schutz of St. Amant; catcher Reid Bouchereau of Dutchtown; infielders Kolby Blanchard and Ivan Prejean, both of St. Amant, and Preston Thrash of East Ascension; outfielders Sammy Waguespack of Dutchtown, Pat Wolfe of St. Amant and Ryan Williams of East Ascension; and utility players Brayden Caskey of Dutchtown, Tory Louis of McKinley and Reese Hebert of East Ascension. The Most Valuable Player was pitcher and LSU signee Blayne Enlow of St. Amant.

District 6-1A first-team selections included senior Dylan Hurst of Ascension Catholic and sophomore Nic Montalbano of Ascension Christian as pitchers; senior Nick Bellina and senior Ross Ponville, both of Ascension Catholic, and junior Mason Braud of Ascension Christian as infielders; Mason Zeringue of Ascension Catholic and sophomore Tyler Cambre of Ascension Christian as outfielders; and senior Payton Bahlinger of Ascension Christian, senior William Dunn of Ascension Catholic and junior Landon Ortego of Ascension Christian as utility players.

Second-team selections were junior Josh Diez of Ascension Christian and senior D.J. Giroir of Ascension Catholic as pitchers; junior Charlie Gianelloni of Ascension Catholic as an infielder; sophomore Rodney Blanchard of Ascension Catholic as an outfielder; and senior Dylan Vice of Ascension Catholic and senior Jacob Antie and sophomore Sal Montalbano, both of Ascension Christian, as utility players.

Selected to the District 5-5A first team were freshman Carly Turner of Dutchtown and freshman Alyssa Romano of St. Amant as pitchers; freshman Paige Patterson of Dutchtown as a catcher; senior McKenzie King, junior Taylor Tidwell and senior Pamela Carbo, all of St. Amant, junior Hannah Martin of Dutchtown and sophomore Rachel Ducote of East Ascension as infielders; senior Abby McKey and junior Jadyn Rumfellow, both of St. Amant, and senior Blayne Pence of Dutchtown as outfielders; junior Baylee Bourgeois of Dutchtown, junior Grace Bagwell of East Ascension and juniors Madison Hurt and Brooke Romano, both of St. Amant, as utility players; and junior Dena Lowe of Dutchtown as designated hitter.

Selected on the second team were freshman Erin Hardy of Dutchtown and sophomore Erin Nicol of East Ascension as pitchers; sophomore Chandler Guedry of St. Amant and sophomore Brynnen Gautreau of East Ascension as catchers; junior Meagan Ross of East Ascension as an infielder; sophomores Skylar Boyd and Kaylee Sharpe, both of Dutchtown, as outfielders; freshman Camille Dawsey of Dutchtown as a utility player; and freshman Jesse Allison of St. Amant as designated player.

Senior Abby McKey of the St. Amant Gators was selected Most Valuable Player while Amy Pitre of St. Amant was chosen as Coach of the Year.

District 6-1A first-team selections were eighth-grader Madison Gautreau of Ascension Christian and freshman Emily Beck of Ascension Christian as pitchers; eighth-grader Hallie Dupree of Ascension Christian and sophomore Ceiley Grisaffe of Ascension Catholic as catchers; eighth-grader Layla Thompson of Ascension Christian and juniors Alicia Canatella and Lauren Landry and sophomore Isabella Abadie, all of Ascension Catholic, as infielders; and junior Bailey Acosta and senior Carson Dunn, both of Ascension Catholic, as outfielders.

Second-team selections were freshman Angelle Theriot of Ascension Catholic as a pitcher; senior Kaley Ryan and junior Lauren Thompson, both of Ascension Christian, and junior Abagail Landry and eighth-grader Mackenzie Marroy, both of Ascension Catholic, as infielders; and senior Emily Millet of Ascension Christian and sophomore Emme Medine of Ascension Catholic as outfielders.

Most Valuable Player was sophomore Ceily Grisaffe of Ascension Catholic. Don Henry of Ascension Catholic was named Coach of the Year.

Ascension Parish has lost one of its great role models, mentors, teachers, principals and, most of all, coaches. W.J. "Butch" Little passed away on May 26.

His teaching, coaching and administrative positions spanned nearly half a century and included stints as a boys basketball coach at East Ascension and a girls basketball coach at Donaldsonville and Lutcher high schools. Coach Little had more than 750 wins during his career that spanned parts of five decades. He also was a vice principal and principal at East Ascension and served on the LHSAA's executive committee.

Little played high school basketball at French Settlement and earned a scholarship to Southeastern Louisiana University, where he had a memorable basketball career.

After college, Little accepted his first coaching and teaching role at St. Theresa of Avila in 1967. Thats where our paths crossed for the first of many times in my life, and its one Ill never forget.

Little had high expectations in the classroom and on the basketball court that some might interpret as stern at first glance. But that character trait was inspired by his love for his kids. Along with those expectations was plenty of humor and friendship highlighted by an infectious smile I can see every time I think of him.

But basketball was in his blood as a player and even more as a coach. In our ninth-grade year, the Warrior basketball team was probably a little better than average. Our starting five consisted of Kent Schexnaydre, Edgar Amedee, Jeff Lanoux, A.P. Marchand and Dennis Haydel.

The Warriors had tough opposition. The Gonzales Bulldogs probably had the best talent with Sidney Lambert, Glen Decoteau and Jerry Babin. The other team was the St. Amant Wildcats, led by Kent Melancon and Gabe Mayers. Back in the day, Gabe stood a towering 6 feet, 3 inches tall and we might as well have been playing against Shaquille ONeal.

Little had a strategy for each game and player when we played those better teams. It was awesome to see him get 110 percent out of each player because of the respect he earned from each one of us by his leadership. The St. Theresa Warriors went on to claim the junior high parish championship that season.

Coach Little went on from that first opportunity to influence generations of kids, whether a student or an athlete. Our paths crossed many more times in my life. I have a little hole in my heart right now that might ache for a little while, but its a good hurt. Butch Little, you may be gone from here, but your influence will be passed on for generations to come.

Jambalaya lunches are on sale starting at 10 a.m. Saturday at Delaunes Hardware on La. 44 to raise money for the four Ascension Parish fishing teams that qualified for the National High School Fishing Championship in Paris, Tennessee, later this summer.

Jambalaya is $7 a plate and tickets are available for a $300 gift basket.

Lyle Johnson, a writer and host of the Ascension Outdoors cable TV show, covers sports and the outdoors for The Ascension Advocate. He can be contacted at reelman@eatel.net or ascension@theadvocate.com.

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Ascension Public Schools announces three new assistant principals – The Advocate

Ascension Parish Public Schools has hired three assistant principals who will assume their duties on July 1.

"These new administrators bring with them a wealth of knowledge and depth of experience in our school district," schools Superintendent David Alexander said.

Hope Gautreau will replace Tennille Lange at Donaldsonville Primary School as Lange becomes principal. The lifelong Ascension Parish resident has a bachelors degree with dual certification in general elementary education and special education and a masters degree in special education from Southeastern Louisiana University. Additionally, she completed educational leadership courses with Southeastern, receiving certification in 2008.

Gautreaus previous experience includes two years as a special education teacher at Gonzales Middle, 10 years as a special education and general education teacher at Gonzales Primary and School Building Level Committee facilitator at Gonzales Primary and Oak Grove Primary.

Courtney Mancuso, of Prairieville, becomes Dutchtown High Schools new assistant principal, providing additional leadership support as the size of incoming freshman classes increases. Originally from Sorrento, she holds a bachelors degree in secondary social studies and a masters degree in education from Southeastern.

Mancuso has taught sixth-grade world history at Lowery Intermediate/Middle, sixth- and eighth-grade world history and Louisiana history at Central Middle and, most recently, was an instructional coach at Dutchtown High.

East Ascension High School also created a new assistant principal role to deal with larger incoming freshman classes. Allison Brignac, originally of Bogalusa, will step into the position. She is a national board certified teacher with a bachelors degree in mathematics education from Louisiana Tech University and a masters degree in educational leadership from Southeastern.

Brignacs experience includes work as a teacher at Welsh High School in Jefferson Davis Parish and St. Amant High School, teacher and mentor teacher at Donaldsonville High, mentor teacher at Lowery Middle, teacher coach at East Ascension High and master teacher at Donaldsonville High.

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Ascension Public Schools announces three new assistant principals - The Advocate

Ascension economic development group hopes to move forward on MegaPark site – The Advocate

DONALDSONVILLE Ascension Economic Development Corp. officials said Wednesday they hope an upcoming meeting with the landowners of 17,000 acres on the west bank of the parish will lead to a mixed-use development there one day.

Over the last two years, 75 percent of the more than 100 landowners have signed letters of intent indicating their interest in working with any future developers of what would be called the Riverplex MegaPark, the potential home of heavy, medium and light industrial uses, as well as limited commercial and residential uses.

The property is 17,000 acres of contiguous, undeveloped land, with more than 9 miles of Mississippi River frontage.

A dock and rail feasibility study funded by the AEDC, the Baton Rouge Area Chamber and the Louisiana Economic Development Department also has been completed.

The next step would be a massive marketing campaign, but it's time to regroup with landowners, AEDC officials said at their second-quarter board meeting Wednesday.

The letters of intent a majority of the landowners signed earlier "wasn't a stringent document, but indicated their interest in working with us," said Dwight Poirrier, the chairman of the AEDC board.

Most of those documents have expired, he said.

"You don't have anything unless you get the land locked down," Poirrier said.

"Hopefully, we'll be able to get a more binding agreement" from landowners, with more information on per-acre prices they'd consider, said Kate MacArthur, president and CEO of the AEDC.

Poirrier said after the meeting with landowners, scheduled for July 10, the AEDC will have a better idea of whether the pursuit of a Riverplex Mega-Park on the west bank of the parish "is a viable use of our resources and our partners' resources."

Also at the board meeting Wednesday, MacArthur said the AEDC, which works to promote and assist business development in the parish, is working with several active projects looking to come to Ascension Parish.

They include an approximately $500 million phase III of a production facility in Geismar; a new $1 million project by an existing major employer in Geismar and a potential $100 million additional unit for a current Geismar manufacturer.

Follow Ellyn Couvillion on Twitter, @EllynCouvillion.

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Ascension economic development group hopes to move forward on MegaPark site - The Advocate

Ascension Parish School Board approves tax exemption for business – The Advocate

DONALDSONVILLE The Ascension Parish School Board has given its approval for property tax exemptions for a manufacturer looking to build in Geismar.

Under an executive order issued by Gov. John Bel Edwards last summer, a manufacturer seeking an industrial tax exemption in the state must first get the approval of the School Board, sheriff and parish government in the area where the company hopes to build, before taking its request for a tax exemption to the state Board of Commerce and Industry.

DONALDSONVILLE The Ascension Parish School Board, Sheriff's Office and Parish Council will

The resolution the School Board approved Tuesday would provide an exemption from property tax at 100 percent for five years and at 80 percent for three years for the container manufacturer whose name hasn't been announced yet, at the request of the company.

Because of a request made last month by School Board member Robyn Penn Delaney, the resolution presented by board attorney Jeff Diez says the board "encourages that at least 50 percent" of the permanent employees of the company be residents of the parish.

Before the vote, Delaney asked Diez to change the wording to "strongly encourages."

Also on Tuesday, the School Board recognized the school district's 2017 School Nurse of the Year, Jodi Sheets.

Sheets has been a school nurse in Ascension Parish public schools for 16 years and is at St. Amant High.

The board also approved a resolution declaring a former Donaldsonville elementary school, West Ascension, which was closed in 2005, as surplus property. The board will be advertising for bids and a public sale of the school building on St. Patrick Street.

The minimum bid price for the property is $212,500, which is 85 percent of its appraised value as required by law, the resolution says.

Follow Ellyn Couvillion on Twitter, @EllynCouvillion.

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Ascension Parish School Board approves tax exemption for business - The Advocate

Around Ascension for June 8, 2017 – The Advocate

Brand it Blue Day

Saturday is Brand it Blue Day, a day of volunteerism sponsored by Express Employment Professionals of Gonzales. The company is hosting a nonperishable food drive through Friday at its office, 915 S. Nickens Ave., in Gonzales.

Volunteers will host a final collection day Saturday, then gather the donations for distribution to food pantries serving the River Parishes. Monetary donations from local businesses also will be accepted.

The summertime is an especially difficult season for children who depend on the meals they receive at school, Express owner Amy Velez said. The donations we receive will help provide meals for children and their families in our community.

Repticon Baton Rouge, a reptile and exotic animal show, returns to the Lamar-Dixon Expo Center from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. VIP entry is at 9 a.m. Saturday.

The event includes vendors offering reptile pets, supplies, feeders, cages and merchandise, live animal seminars and free prize raffles.

Cost is $10 for adults, $5 for ages 5-12 and free for children younger than 5. Tickets, as well as special offers on two-day and VIP tickets, are available at repticon.com/louisiana/baton-rouge.

Ashleigh Fuller will lead Not a #Number for ages 13-17 in St. Elizabeth Hospitals Sister Linda conference room from 10:30 a.m. to noon Monday through Wednesday.

The curriculum uses information, critical thinking and skill development to teach youth how to protect themselves from human trafficking and exploitation.

The program is free, but registration is required; call (225) 621-2906.

A vegetable garden workshop with LSU Agricultural Center and Ascension Master Gardeners is slated for 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Lamar-Dixon Expo Center.

The workshop features discussions on vegetable varieties planted in the demonstration gardens, insect and disease issues and controls, announcement of the 2017 4-H Youth and Adult Garden Contest winners and a biggest tomato contest.

Those wishing to enter the biggest tomato contest should bring their biggest tomato to the workshop for a weigh-in, with a winner being announced during the workshop.

Call (225) 621-5799 by Friday so organizers can get a head count.

Hopeful Baptist Church, 39067 La. 22,in Darrow is planning its first men's conference, Building Spiritual Men, from 7:30 p.m. June 16 to 9:30 a.m. June 17.

Bishop Xavier D. Madison Sr. will lead the conference.

For registration, which is $20, call (225) 247-4661 or (225) 473-3300.

Contact Darlene Denstorff by phone, (225) 388-0215 or (225) 603-1996; or email, ascension@theadvocate.com or ddenstorff@theadvocate.com. Deadline: noon Monday.

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Around Ascension for June 8, 2017 - The Advocate

Families rally for leukemia survivor – The Advocate

A Facebook group for Ascension Parish mothers rallied together to provide their children an evening of fun while helping a7-year-old leukemia survivor, Paislee Townley.

Lil Bambinos Playtorium, in Gonzales, hosted children of all ages May 30. The event, which allowed children to play games and explore the center's equipment, raised about $1,000 to help pay for some of Paislees medical expenses.

Weve had an idea for a while now to have an event like this, said Lindsey Del Bosque, who helped organize Play for Paislee. We can make new friends, meet each others kids and help Paislee all at the same time.

(Play for Paislee) has been a great opportunity for the community to come together, said Derrick Taylor, Paislee'sstepfather. This community is a close-knit group that has been helping us out.

Paisleewas diagnosed in May 2016 on her sixth birthday with B-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Since then, Paisleehas received chemotherapy treatments at St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, as well as its Baton Rouge affiliate.

Taylor believes Paislees diagnosis has brought their family closer. The family also includes children Alyssa, 18, and Blaize, 12.

There have been lots of tears shed through all this, but its helped us grow stronger as a family, Taylor said. Each one of us has to be strong for Paislee. We have to put aside our needs and pick up each other.

Paislee, currently in remission, still has a long journey of tests and treatments, including daily oral chemotherapy. Her mother, Courtney Taylor, said Paislee is in the final phase of her treatment plan. She added she hopes Paislee will be well enough to return to school this fall.

This is the maintenance phase of the plan, she said. But, its 120 weeks of treatment. Her last treatment is scheduled for November of 2018.

The idea for the event came from Del Bosque, according to Lil Bambinos owner Ashlee Lambeth.

I love to do this, Lambeth said. There are lots of people in this parish who want to help. Everybody is close, and we just love it.

The money raised at Lil Bambinos came from a $10 admission fee and raffles for a summer-themed basket and an LSU quilt, made by Virginia Austin and Mary Patricia Brashier.

People have been enthusiastic about helping out, especially in our moms group, Del Bosque said. "If you say somebody needs help, we jump in and are there to do whatever we can.

Donations to help defray Paislees medical expenses are being accepted at gofundme.com/22vk5pas.

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Families rally for leukemia survivor - The Advocate

Are You Ready for the AI Revolution and the Rise of Superintelligence? – TrendinTech

Weve come a long way as a whole over the past few centuries. Take a time machine back to 1750 and life would be very different indeed. There was no power outage, to communicate with someone long distance was virtually impossible, and there were no gas stations or supermarkets anywhere. Bring someone from that era to todays world, and they would almost certainly have some form of breakdown. I mean how would they cope seeing capsules with wheels whizz around the roads, electrical devices everywhere you look, and even just talking to someone on the other side of the world in real time. These are all simple things that we take for granted. But someone from a few centuries ago would probably think it was all witchcraft, and could even possibly die.

But then imagine that person went back to 1750 and suddenly became jealous that we saw their reaction of awe and amazement. They may want to re-create that feeling themselves in someone else. So, what would they do? They would take the time machine and go back to say 1500 or so and get someone from that era to take to their own. Although the difference from being in 1500 to then being in 1750 would, of course, be different, it wouldnt be anything as extreme as the difference between 1750 and today. So the 1500 person would still almost certainly be shocked by a few things, its highly unlikely they would die. So, in order for the 1750 person to see the same kind of reaction that we would have, they would need to travel back much, much, farther to say 24,000 BC.

For someone to actually die from the shock of being transported into the future, theyd need to go that far ahead that a Die Progress Unit (DPU) is achieved. In hunter-gatherer times, a DPU took over 100,000 years, and thanks to the Agricultural Revolution rate it took around 12,000 years during that period. Nowadays, because of the rate of advancement following the Industrial Revolution a DPU would happen after being transported just a couple hundred years forward. Futurist Ray Kurzweil calls this pattern of human progression moving quicker as time goes on, the Law of Accelerating Returns and is all down to technology.

This theory also works on smaller scales too. Cast your mind back to that great 1985 movie, Back to the Future. In the movie, the past era they went back to was 1955, where there were various differences of course. But if we were to remake the same movie today, but use the past era as 1985, there would be more dramatic differences. Again, this all comes down to the Law of Accelerating Returns. Between 1985 and 2015 the average rate of advancement was much higher than between 1955 and 1985. Kurzweil suggests that by 2000 the rate of progress was five times faster that the average rate during the 20th century. He also suggests that between 2000 and 2014 another 20th centurys worth of progress happened, and by 2021 another will happen, taking just seven years to get there. This means that keeping with the same pattern, in a couple of decades, a 20th centurys worth of progress will happen multiple times in one year, and eventually, in one month.

If Kurzweil is right then by the time 2030 gets here, we may all be blown away with the technology all around us and by 2050 we may not even recognize anything. But many people are skeptical of this for three main reasons:

1. Our own experiences make us stubborn about the future. Our imagination takes our experiences and uses it to predict future outcomes. The problem is that were limited in what we know and when we hear a prediction that goes against what weve been led to believe we often have trouble accepting it as the truth. For example, if someone was to tell you that youd live to be 200, you would think that was ridiculous because of what youve been taught. But at the end of the day, there has to be a first time for everything, and no one knew airplanes would fly until they gave it a go one day.

2. We think in straight lines when we think about history. When trying to project what will happen in the next 30 years we tend to look back at the past 30 years and use that as some sort of guideline as to whats to come. But, in doing that we arent considering the Law of Accelerating Returns. Instead of thinking linearly, we need to be thinking exponentially. In order to predict anything about the future, we need to picture things advancing at a much faster rate than they are today.

3. The trajectory of recent history tells a distorted story. Exponential growth isnt smooth and progress in this area happens in S-curves. An S curve is created when the wave of the progress of a new paradigm sweeps the world and happens in three phases: slow growth, rapid growth, and a leveling off as the paradigm matures. If you view only a small section of the S-curve youll get a distorted version of how fast things are progressing.

What do we mean by AI?

Artificial intelligence (AI) is big right now; bigger than it ever has been. But, there are still many people out there that get confused by the term for various reasons. One is that in the past weve associated AI with movies like Star Wars, Terminator, and even the Jetsons. Because these are all fictional characters, it makes AI still seem like a sci-fi concept. Also, AI is such a broad topic that ranges from self-driving cars to your phones calculator, so getting to grips with all it entails is not easy. Another reason its confusing is that we often dont even realize when were using AI.

So, to try and clear things up and give yourself a better idea of what AI is, first stop thinking about robots. Robots are simply shells that can encompass AI. Secondly, consider the term singularity. Vernor Vinge wrote an essay in 1993 where this term was applied to the moment in future when the intelligence of our technology exceeds that of ourselves. However, that idea was later confused by Kurzweil defining the singularity as the time when the Law of Accelerating Returns gets so fast that well find ourselves living in a whole new world.

To try and narrow AI down a bit, try to think of it as being separated into three major categories:

1. Artificial Narrow Intelligence (ANI): This is sometimes referred to as Weak AI and is a type if AI that specializes in one particular area. An example of ANI is a chess playing AI. It may be great at winning chess, but that is literally all it can do.

2. Artificial General Intelligence (AGI): Often known as Strong AI or Human-Level AI, AGI refers to a computer that has the intelligence of a human across the board and is much harder to create than ANI.

3. Artificial Superintelligence (ASI): ASI ranges from a computer thats just a little smarter than a human to one thats billions of time smarter in every way. This is the type of AI that is most feared and will often be associated with the words immortality and extinction.

Right now, were progressing steadily through the AI revolution and are currently running in a world of ANI. Cars are full of ANI systems that range from the computer that tells the car when the ABS should kick into the various self-driving cars that are about. Phones are another product thats bursting with ANI. Whenever youre receiving music recommendations from Pandora or using your map app to navigate, or various other activities youre utilizing ANI. An email spam filter is another form of ANI because it learns whats spam and whats not. Google Translate and voice recognition systems are also examples of ANI. And, some of the best Checkers and Chess players of the world are also ANI systems.

So, as you can see, ANI systems are all around us already, but luckily these types of systems dont have the capability to cause any real threat to humanity. But, each new ANI system that is created is simply another step towards AGI and ASI. However, trying to create a computer that is at least, if not more intelligent than ourselves, is no easy feat. But, the hard parts are probably not what you were imagining. To build a computer that can calculate sums quickly is simple, but to build a computer than can tell the difference between a cat and a dog is much harder. As summed up by computer scientist, Donald Knuth, AI has by now succeeded in doing essentially everything that requires thinking but has failed to do most of what people and animals do without thinking.'

The next move in which to make AGI a possibility and to compete with the human brain is to increase the power of computers hardware. One way to demonstrate this capacity is by expressing it in calculations per second (cps) that the brain can handle. Kurzweil created a shortcut for calculating this by taking an estimate for the caps of one structure and its weight, comparing it to that of the whole brain, the multiplying it proportionally until an estimate for the total has been reached. After carrying out this calculation several times, Kurzweil always got the same answer of around 1016, or 10 quadrillion cps.

The worlds fastest supercomputer is currently Chinas Tianhe-2 and has clocked in at around 34 quadrillion cps. But, thats hardly a surprise when it uses 24 megawatts of power, takes up 720 square meters of space, and cost $390 million to build. Perhaps if we were to scale that down slightly to 10 quadrillion cps (the human-level) we may be able to achieve a more workable model and AGI would then become a part of everyday life. Currently, the worlds $1,000 computers are about a thousandth of the human level and while that may not sound like much its actually a huge leap forward. In 1985 we were only about a trillionth of human level. If we keep progressing in the same manner then by 2025 we should have an affordable computer that can rival the power of the human brain. Then its just a case of merging all that power with human-level intelligence.

However, thats so much easier said than done. No one really knows how to make computers smart, but here are the most popular strategies weve come across so far:

1. Make everything the computers problem. This is usually a scientists last resort and involves building a computer whose main skill would be to carry out research on AI and coding them changes into itself.

2. Plagiarize the brain. It makes sense to copy the best of whats already available and currently, scientists are working hard to uncover all we can about the mighty organ. As soon as we know how a human brain can run so efficiently we can begin to replicate it in the form of AI. Artificial neural networks do this already, where they mimic the human brain. But there is still a long way to go before they are anywhere near as sophisticated or effective as the human brain. A more extreme example of plagiarism involves whats known as whole brain emulation. Here the aim is to slice a brain into layers, scan each one, create an accurate 3D model then implement that model on a computer. Wed then have a fully working computer that has a brain as capable as our own.

3. Try to make history and evolution repeat itself in our favor. If building a computer just as powerful as the human brain is too hard to mimic, we could instead try to mimic the evolution of it instead. This is a method called genetic algorithms. They would work by taking part in a performance-and-evaluation process that would happen over and over. When a task is completed successfully the computer would be bred with another just as capable in an attempt to merge them and recreate a better computer. This natural selection process would be done several times until we finally have the result we wanted. The downside is that this process could take billions of years.

Various advancements in technology are happening so quickly that AGI could be here before we know it for two main reasons:

1. Exponential growth is very intense and so much can happen in such a short space of time.

2. Even minute software changes can make a big difference. Just one tweak could have the potential to make it 1,000 times more effective.

Once AGI has been achieved and people are happy living alongside human-level AGI, well then move on to ASI. But, just to clarify, even though AGI has the same level of intelligence (theoretically) as a human, they would still have several advantages over us, including:

Speed: Todays microprocessors can run at speeds 10 million times faster than our own neurons and they can also communicate optically at the speed of light.

Size and storage: Unlike our brains, computers can expand to any size, allowing for a larger working memory and long-term memory that will outperform us any day.

Reliability and durability: Computer transistors are far more accurate than biological neurons and are easily repaired too.

Editability: Computer software can be easily tweaked to allow for updates and fixes.

Collective capability: Humans are great at building a huge amount of collective intelligence and is one of the main reasons why weve survived so long as a species and are far more advanced. A computer that is designed to essentially mimic the human brain, will be even better at it as it could regularly sync with itself so that anything another computer learned could be instantly uploaded to the whole network of them.

Most current models that focus on reaching AGI concentrate on AI achieving these goals via self-improvement. Once everything is able to self-improve, another concept to consider is recursive self-improvement. This is where something has already self-improved and so if therefore considerably smarter than it was original. Now, to improve itself further, will be much easier as it is smarter and not so much to learn and therefore takes bigger leaps. Soon the AGIs intelligence levels will exceed that of a human and thats when you get a superintelligent ASI system. This process is called an Intelligence Explosion and is a prime example of The Law of Accelerating Returns. How soon we will reach this level is still very much in debate.

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Are You Ready for the AI Revolution and the Rise of Superintelligence? - TrendinTech

The Origami of Space Exploration – Scientific American (blog)

According to Robert Salazar, If you study nature from an artistic and scientific perspective while gaining proficiency in your medium, you can allow your artistic pursuits to give rise to engineering applications, and your engineering pursuits to give rise to works of art.

Salazar is an expert of striking the perfect balance between art and science. A master of origami and an environmental studies student, hes able to apply both his art and science skills to build solar reflectors for a project at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Salazars had to work incredibly hard: after attending five different high schools and losing his home, hes managed to follow his dreams by finding ways to allow his artistic endeavors to apply to impressive engineering pursuits. He documents all of his explorations on his website, and we were lucky enough to also chat with him about his story here. Check out the conversation below, which has been edited for clarity.

TERRI BURNS: Tell me about your background, what you're studying in school, and some of your interests.

ROBERT SALAZAR: I earned my associates degree before transferring to UCSB as a physics major, where I transitioned to a major in environmental studies with a minor in philosophy.

In school, I take the opportunity to familiarize myself with what is happening to our environment and to each other around the world, and how our understanding of the world coupled with our behavior leads to freedom from environmental degradation and involuntary suffering or otherwise. I take great interest in further developing the framework I use to approach these problems and identifying relevant theorems in a network context.

Additionally, I strive to further develop the ancient Japanese art of origami into a powerful expressive medium that can inspire social change toward environmental sustainability and peace. Ive spent 17 years folding origami, and 8 years designing them rigorously. Everything I fold is an original design from a single uncut sheet. My courses of study are well suited to origami design, where the objective is to establish harmony among many folded features that are intimately and geometrically related to each other, and take up a finite sheet of paper. In origami, these relationships can be transformed, but they can never be cut by scissors, nor can paper be added.

TB: Tell me about the work you're doing now as a JPL intern.

RS: At JPL I'm currently developing large origami deployable solar reflectors for the Trans-Formers for Lunar Extreme Environments project. The project mission is to illuminate permanently shaded regions in the interior of Shackleton Crater at south pole of the Moon. Though the rim of Shackleton Crater receives constant sunlight nearly all year long, its interior has remained in darkness for billions of years, allowing its temperature to cool to ~90K (~ -300F), a temperature well suited to the capture of icy debris from nearby comet impacts over the eons. The solar reflectors would be mounted in pairs on a support structure on the crater rim, and would track the sun to illuminate and power robotic explorers in regions of interest ~10km below.

On the project, I design the solar reflectors and their deployment mechanisms. I use finite element analyses and simulations to determine what materials would allow a reflector to deploy very flat under tension, within 1mm/m deviation, and operate under constant solar radiation and temperature extremes for years on end, while maintaining >95 percent directional reflectivity. Then I write algorithms to design origami crease patterns that would allow a solar reflector to deploy to the size of the Statue of Liberty from a package ~1 cubic meter in volume and ~100kg.

TB: What's your backstory? How did you get where you are today?

RS: I faced difficulties graduating high school. I had attended five high schools, and lost my house twice during that time. Later, my first summer of research was at UCSB, where I discovered the photoacoustic effect in nanostructured thin metal films. This discovery ultimately led to a photoacoustic phased array, and a much cheaper alternative to the production of ultra-high frequency ultrasound. I spent the next summer at JPL developing thermoelectric materials for cooling X-ray detectors aboard space telescopes.

In the summer of 2015 I returned to JPL as an intern to work on the Starshade project [a free-flying spacecraft that would block the glare of a distant star so a separate space telescope could see its much fainter planets]. My task was to develop a crease pattern that would allow the slightly conical optical shield of the Starshade to stow to a well-defined volume and create a perfect light seal with its mechanical truss throughout deployment. The challenge required me to write an algorithm that could design a crease pattern to fit its given stow requirements, boundary conditions, and material thickness. My success on Starshade led me to the Transformers project the following summer.

TB: How did you get interested in solar reflectors specifically, and why are they important?

RS: The advantages of renewable energy and the mission of the transformers project got me interested in developing solar reflectors. Their ability to generate and redirect energy, catalyze chemical reactions, propel spacecraft, and be deployed from small lightweight packages to large surface areas further solidified my interest. Their traditionally low cost, simplicity, and reliance on an abundant, though diffuse, energy source, makes them an attractive technology.

TB: What do you want to do in your career? Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

RS: I plan to continue at JPL to meet the origami challenges of the future and to continue building my company, Orisun into one that can deliver portable origami deployable solar concentrators for desalination, water purification, rain capture, energy generation, atmospheric water generation, and solar cooking to people who have been displaced by war, climate change, and natural disasters. I will also continue to develop origami into a powerful medium that is well-acquainted with a grand diversity of interactive materials for artistic expression and engineering.

TB: What is something that you would love to see happen someday in your field of study?

RS: Just as every unit of surface in a sheet of paper gives rise to all of an origamis folded features, so too does energy and matter give rise to the systems we take part in.

I would love to see the rise of technology that has been designed with its downstream life cycle in mind. I would love to see an end to the labeling of materials and energy as waste, when each has its own unique potential to be something new or to do useful work. In any finite system where energy and matter are conserved, you can almost be certain that energy is flowing and materials are changing. Everything that ends is giving rise to something else. If we can develop a world where we find utility in everything we make throughout its life cycle, we can achieve sustainability, as nature has shown us we can.

TB: What advice do you have for other students who may be interested in doing the kind of work you do?

RS: Well acquaint yourself with the problems of the world. You never know how valuable something you made or discovered will be for many other purposes.

If you study nature from an artistic and scientific perspective while gaining proficiency in your medium, you can allow your artistic pursuits to give rise to engineering applications, and your engineering pursuits to give rise to works of art. Pursuing them together, can take your designs and your medium to very interesting places.

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The Origami of Space Exploration - Scientific American (blog)

Will Space Exploration lead us to a Global Space Agency – Space Daily

The Global Space Exploration Conference (GLEX 2017) has officially opened its doors on Monday 6 June 2017 with a welcome address by Li Yuanchao, Vice-President of People's Republic of China who also read a participative letter from Xi Jinping, President of People's Republic of China stating that "China is ready to strengthen cooperation with the international community for a better future to humankind".

Lei Fanpei, President of the Chinese Society of Astronautics (CSA) and Jean-Yves Le Gall, President of the International Astronautical Federation (IAF), welcomed over a thousand delegates from 51 countries.

This Chinese call to cooperation has been the main focus of the Heads of Agency Plenary where the idea of a global space agency has been analysed; Roberto Battiston, President of the Italian Space Agency (ASI) praised this dream of a global space agency and the great impact it would have on mankind; he also added that this could be achieved by "the ultimate endeavor in front of us: sending men to Mars".

However, Pascale Ehrenfreund, Chair of the Executive Board of German Aerospace Center (DLR), defended "the role that national space agencies have in fostering national businesses".

Afterwards, delegates attended the International Platform for Diversity and Equality in Astronautics (IDEA) Diversity luncheon, moderated by IAF President, Jean-Yves Le Gall. Yang Baohua, Vice President of the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), presented the impressive results of China's space development contribution to 3G (Gender - Geography - Generation).

The audience discussed, among many other topics, the role of female space leaders, the characteristics of the first astronauts' crew landing on Mars, the work of space nations and emerging space countries to foster diversity.

Delegates then attended a Plenary organised by the Chinese Host focusing on the key role played by China in space cooperation with Cheng'E-4 mission and ESA, DLR and NSO have been awarded by CNSA for their commitment and support to the mission which was a great success.

Finally, Jan Woerner, Director General of the European Space Agency (ESA) expressed the wish to invite the global space community to join a cooperative Moon Village concept.

Both Global Networking Forum (GNF) and Technical Sessions received a huge interest from the delegates and left us with the reassuring conviction that global partnerships is vital in order to ensure the successful inclusion of all countries in space exploration.

Follow the conversation online #GLEX2017.

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Will Space Exploration lead us to a Global Space Agency - Space Daily

Space Exploration: Can Private Companies Operate in Space? – Law Street Media (blog)

Space: the final frontier. Outer space has been in the news a lot recently. The recent discovery of seven Earth-sized planets orbiting TRAPPIST-1in February excited many people at the possibility to explore further into space. Whats more, different companies have been conducting successful experiments tolaunch commercial flights tospace. Richard Bransons Virgin Galactic and Elon Musks SpaceX have both been conducting successful tests of their burgeoning passenger spaceships.

The allure of space goes beyond the human need to explore new places and see new sights. The financial gain could be huge as well. There are asteroids full of valuable elements, such as platinum. According to a 98-page client memo, Goldman Sachs said that a craft could be built for $2.6 billion and could extract anywhere from $25 to $50 billion worth of platinum from an asteroid.

Of course this raises many issues, one of which is the risk of inundating the market with platinum and tanking its value.

via GIPHY

Another potential issueis the Outer Space Treaty,drafted in 1967 by the U.S. and the USSR. The countries main fear was nuclear weapons being put in space, but the treaty laid the groundwork for space exploration. Essentially what the treaty established was that the act of space exploration should be used to benefit humankind. In fact, one line of the treaty explicitly says:

Believing that the exploration and use of outer space should be carried on for the benefit of all peoples irrespective of the degree of their economic or scientific development

When the treaty was signed, national governments, and not private companies,had the capital available to venture into space exploration. In 2017, the economic landscape is a bit different. If Goldman Sachs wants to send itsown personal spaceship to an asteroid to mine it for platinum, will theprofits be used for the benefit of all peoples as the treaty would require?

Article VI of the treaty, the only article that addresses non-governmental entities, says that the nation the private entity is located in would have to police its actions. It states:

States Parties to the Treaty shall bear international responsibility for national activities in outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies, whether such activities are carried on by governmental agencies or by non-governmental entities, and for assuring that national activities are carried out in conformity with the provisions set forth in the present Treaty. The activities of non-governmental entities in outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies, shall require authorization and continuing supervision by the appropriate State Party to the Treaty

The U.S. would have to ensure that Goldman Sachs use the profits of itsmining to benefit all peoples.

Space, as of right now, is technically res communis, or common territory, like a park or the high sea. Unfortunately, what you can and cannot do there is not as clearly defined as it is in these territories. The treaty prohibits national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, so does that mean that no one can build a hotel on Mars? And what about that gold mine (well, platinum mine) in the asteroid? Does Goldman Sachs even have the right to mine it, even if itcan get there?

For now, space is a legal gray area. We have a long way to go before we become like The Jetsons or Zenon. But its still fun to think that one day we could get there.

via GIPHY

Anne Grae Martin is a member of the class of 2017 University of Delaware. She is majoring in English Professional Writing and minoring in French and Spanish. When shes not writing for Law Street, Anne Grae loves doing yoga, cooking, and correcting her friends grammar mistakes. Contact Anne Grae at staff@LawStreetMedia.com.

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Space Exploration: Can Private Companies Operate in Space? - Law Street Media (blog)

Space Exploration Game ‘Outreach’ Receives First Gameplay Trailer … – Hardcore Gamer

A new trailer for the upcoming indie game Outreach, where you explore an abandoned Russian space station during the cold war, received its first gameplay trailer on Tuesday, giving us a look at what to expect from the graphics and some of the things youll be doing in the game.

Playing as a Russian astronaut named Alexy, youll explore a secret space station built by the Russians in the 1980s to try to discover what happened to the crew. Youll be working on computers trying to get them back online, and talking with ground control back home.

Check out the Initial Gameplay Trailer below:

Outreach was announced back in 2015, and has slowly made its way onto the scene using some high quality, live action trailers meant to portray the tone that they are going for. You can check them all out at developer Pixel Spills YouTube channel. Outreach is to be released sometime later this year on Steam.

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Space Exploration Game 'Outreach' Receives First Gameplay Trailer ... - Hardcore Gamer