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Daily Archives: March 27, 2017
Google to bring artificial intelligence into daily life – The Hindu – The Hindu
Posted: March 27, 2017 at 4:53 am
The Hindu | Google to bring artificial intelligence into daily life - The Hindu The Hindu Tech to aid video search, detection of disease and of fraud. |
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It’s time for Canada to invest in developing artificial intelligence – The Globe and Mail
Posted: at 4:53 am
Dr. Alan Bernstein is president and chief executive of CIFAR. Pierre Boivin is president and CEO of Claridge Inc. David McKay is president and CEO of Royal Bank of Canada.
Its not often a new technology comes along with the potential to transform society. Think the steam engine, electricity or silicon chip. Today, the most transformative technology may be artificial intelligence, in particular the branches of deep learning and reinforcement learning, that are not only positioned to change the way we work and live; theyre a made-in-Canada success.
Like all disruptive technologies, AI is creating entirely new ways of doing things, from diagnosing disease to driving cars. With a strong research base already built, Canadas goal should now be nothing less than becoming a world leader in AI science and its applications in the marketplace.
The federal government set that stage this week, with an AI initiative that will lay the foundation for a Pan-Canadian Artificial Intelligence Strategy. Through the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), the $125-million commitment will help develop three AI institutes in Canadian centres that are already among the best in the world, help our universities recruit and retain scientific talent and train hundreds of graduate students. It will also fund research into the social, legal and ethical implications of deep AI, to build a Canadian brand of technology that serves human needs, concerns and ambitions, not the other way around.
How did we get here? Deep learning and related AI techniques were developed by Geoff Hinton at the University of Toronto, Yoshua Bengio at the University of Montreal, and Yann LeCun at New York University, along with Richard Sutton at the University of Alberta and a host of other researchers supported by CIFAR and its program in Learning, Machines and Brains.
The science makes computers better at seeing patterns and making accurate predictions based on those patterns, using so-called artificial neural networks, in a way analogous to how we think humans learn. If a ball rolls onto the road in front of a car, a good driver would put on the brakes because there is a chance a child will run out onto the road to get it. A smart car, controlled by AI, would come to the same conclusion, only faster.
Or consider this example: As profiled in Nature magazine, a deep AI-based computer program can now recognize skin cancer from images with the same accuracy of a dermatologist. The deep AI algorithm wont put dermatologists out of business. But it will accelerate and improve diagnosis, cut costs and allow doctors more time to spend with patients talking about treatments and cures.
Across many sectors, were starting to see how AI can change the nature of work itself, away from routine repetitive tasks to more interesting, varied and valuable work, the kind that can make Canadian jobs more secure in a global economy. Used wisely, these tools can also make Canadian companies more competitive, governments more efficient, and social and health services more effective.
But despite our early scientific lead, were losing ground to the AI superpowers. One indicator of that: Canadian companies last year acquired only 18 AI startups, out of 658 that were acquired globally.
So while our goal should be to ensure that Canada is a global centre for AI science, we also need to push Canadian companies, entrepreneurs and investors to seize the moment. The opportunities go hand in hand.
Here are three immediate priorities to help get us there:
First, we have to expand Canadas pipeline of talent. We have to keep existing academic talent in Canada, strengthen our academic and skills-training programs in AI and expand our reach with the next generation of AI entrepreneurs. We have to streamline our immigration process for highly skilled individuals and market Canada internationally as a source and destination for AI.
Second, we must build the conditions for entrepreneurs to succeed. Young AI companies need investment capital, computing resources, data, and a community of mentors and fellow entrepreneurs.
Innovative programs like Element AI in Montreal, the Creative Destruction Lab in Toronto, Amii in Edmonton, and NextAI across the country are showing how Canada can be a startup country and a scale-up country. These programs should be expanded, and new ones added, to seed ideas and ensure the best ones stay and flourish in Canada.
Finally, we need to help established businesses take advantage of AI. Research centres in Edmonton, Montreal and Toronto-Waterloo provide an opportunity for Canadian companies to work closely with academics. Government can help build those bridges, not only within Canada but with the world.
Canada has a history of pioneering great science and then allowing that science to be snapped up by others. The investment in AI announced in Budget 2017 opens a new chapter in Canadian technology.
Its now up to the private sector, working with the research community and government, to develop our made-in-Canada success story.
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Blake Dowling: Legal artificial intelligence – SaintPetersBlog (blog)
Posted: at 4:53 am
I was meeting with the Tallahassee Chamber of Commerces Communications Committee; there was some brainstorming about session ideas for the upcoming Chamber Conference.
There were some thoughts thrown out, and quite a few comments were made. Then someone said, how about automation and artificial intelligence.
Suddenly, a surge of ideas and thoughts hit the room like a vicious uppercut from Mike Tyson circa 1999. All industries went into the mix: retail, auto, construction, medical and legal.
We are on the crest of a mighty wave of disruption, the likes of which the world has never seen.
That wave, my friends, is called artificial intelligence.
We must approach this wave head on like the wise one Jeff Spicoli(of 1982s Fast Times at Ridgemont High played by Sean Penn)once said, Well Stu, Ill tell you, surfings not a sport, its a way of life, its no hobby. Its a way of looking at that wave and saying, Hey bud, lets party! Indeed.
I was the first (the opening act and least knowledgeable HA!) of three speakers for a luncheon last month hosted by the Leon County Research and Development Authority; the topic was artificial intelligence.
The most interesting part of the discussion was about the legal world. The speaker dove into AI platforms that actually answer legal questions. The conversation quickly escalated to why not have AI judges, lawmakers and police?
Think about an AI cop pulling someone over. There would be no concern for their own safety, no bias. Same with a judge, no agenda, no individual interpretation of the law. Only the facts. That is unless it was an AI judge from Iran?
Hmmmm.
Lots to ponder here. Let us move into legal AI.
Each day, our world creates about 2,500,000,000,000,000 quintillion bytes of data. This data needs review and analysis. What better way to review data, than have a supercomputer like IBMs Watson jump on it?
For example, Watson please review every piece of legal information on the web about police use of excessive force (only cases where the suspect was perceived to have a weapon) in the United States to assist with county of Los Angeles v. Mendez. This is happening.
AI research tools like ROSS are changing the game. Firms like Salazar Jackson and Latham & Watkins are on board with ROSS.
Check out their video online, it is very cool, (and see Todds tiny shoes)
LawGeex is another AI platform specializing in contract law. According to a CNBC piece earlier this year, CEO Noory Bechor called it like the beginning of the beginning of the beginning,
The LawGeex platform, Bechor said, it can take a new contract, one that its never seen before, read it and then compare it to a database of every similar contract that its seen in the past.
Legal Robot is also a very cool company, promising to ensure fairness, improve transparency and allow signups with confidence. Sounds fantabulous to me.
If you are strolling down Market Street in San Francisco, stop in and say hello to their team.
There is really no way of knowing how far this will go, what massive legislative hurdles await I am hopeful it will lead an enhancement of the legal community, but who knows.
As Hunter S. Thompson once muttered: If its worth doing, its worth doing right. This is the American Dream in action. Wed be fools not to ride this strange torpedo all the way to the end.
___
Blake Dowling is CEO of Aegis Business Technologies and writes for several organizations. He is available at dowlingb@aegisbiztech.com.
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9 Ways Your Business Can Plan For Artificial Intelligence – Forbes
Posted: at 4:53 am
Forbes | 9 Ways Your Business Can Plan For Artificial Intelligence Forbes Artificial intelligence (AI) is seemingly everywhere today. Whether it's using a virtual assistant like Siri or Alexa, improving sales insights through analytics, or hiring the best talent with AI-based recruiting software, many businesses have already ... |
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‘Your animal life is over. Machine life has begun.’ The road to immortality – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:52 am
Head in the cloud: could our neutral networks soon be running via a computer program? Photograph: Alamy
Heres what happens. You are lying on an operating table, fully conscious, but rendered otherwise insensible, otherwise incapable of movement. A humanoid machine appears at your side, bowing to its task with ceremonial formality. With a brisk sequence of motions, the machine removes a large panel of bone from the rear of your cranium, before carefully laying its fingers, fine and delicate as a spiders legs, on the viscid surface of your brain. You may be experiencing some misgivings about the procedure at this point. Put them aside, if you can.
Youre in pretty deep with this thing; theres no backing out now. With their high-resolution microscopic receptors, the machine fingers scan the chemical structure of your brain, transferring the data to a powerful computer on the other side of the operating table. They are sinking further into your cerebral matter now, these fingers, scanning deeper and deeper layers of neurons, building a three-dimensional map of their endlessly complex interrelations, all the while creating code to model this activity in the computers hardware. As the work proceeds, another mechanical appendage less delicate, less careful removes the scanned material to a biological waste container for later disposal. This is material you will no longer be needing.
At some point, you become aware that you are no longer present in your body. You observe with sadness, or horror, or detached curiosity the diminishing spasms of that body on the operating table, the last useless convulsions of a discontinued meat.
The animal life is over now. The machine life has begun.
This, more or less, is the scenario outlined by Hans Moravec, a professor of cognitive robotics at Carnegie Mellon, in his 1988 book Mind Children: The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence. It is Moravecs conviction that the future of the human species will involve a mass-scale desertion of our biological bodies, effected by procedures of this kind. Its a belief shared by many transhumanists, a movement whose aim is to improve our bodies and minds to the point where we become something other and better than the animals we are. Ray Kurzweil, for one, is a prominent advocate of the idea of mind-uploading. An emulation of the human brain running on an electronic system, he writes in The Singularity Is Near, would run much faster than our biological brains. Although human brains benefit from massive parallelism (on the order of 100 trillion interneuronal connections, all potentially operating simultaneously), the rest time of the connections is extremely slow compared to contemporary electronics. The technologies required for such an emulation sufficiently powerful and capacious computers and sufficiently advanced brainscanning techniques will be available, he announces, by the early 2030s.
And this, obviously, is no small claim. We are talking about not just radically extended life spans, but also radically expanded cognitive abilities. We are talking about endless copies and iterations of the self. Having undergone a procedure like this, you would exist to the extent you could meaningfully be said to exist at all as an entity of unbounded possibilities.
I was introduced to Randal Koene at a Bay Area transhumanist conference. He wasnt speaking at the conference, but had come along out of personal interest. A cheerfully reserved man in his early 40s, he spoke in the punctilious staccato of a non-native English speaker who had long mastered the language. As we parted, he handed me his business card and much later that evening Iremoved it from my wallet and had a proper look at it. The card was illustrated with a picture of a laptop, on whose screen was displayed a stylised image of a brain. Underneath was printed what seemed to me an attractively mysterious message: Carboncopies: Realistic Routes to Substrate Independent Minds. Randal A Koene, founder.
I took out my laptop and went to the website of Carboncopies, which I learned was a nonprofit organisation with a goal of advancing the reverse engineering of neural tissue and complete brains, Whole Brain Emulation and development of neuroprostheses that reproduce functions of mind, creating what we call Substrate Independent Minds. This latter term, I read, was the objective to be able to sustain person-specific functions of mind and experience in many different operational substrates besides the biological brain. And this, I further learned, was a process analogous to that by which platform independent code can be compiled and run on many different computing platforms.
It seemed that I had met, without realising it, a person who was actively working toward the kind of brain-uploading scenario that Kurzweil had outlined in The Singularity Is Near. And this was a person I needed to get to know.
Koene was an affable and precisely eloquent man and his conversation was unusually engaging for someone so forbiddingly intelligent and who worked in so rarefied a field as computational neuroscience; so, in his company, I often found myself momentarily forgetting about the nearly unthinkable implications of the work he was doing, the profound metaphysical weirdness of the things he was explaining to me. Hed be talking about some tangential topic his happily cordial relationship with his ex-wife, say, or the cultural differences between European and American scientific communities and Id remember with a slow, uncanny suffusion of unease that his work, were it to yield the kind of results he is aiming for, would amount to the most significant event since the evolution of Homo sapiens. The odds seemed pretty long from where I was standing, but then again, I reminded myself, the history of science was in many ways an almanac of highly unlikely victories.
One evening in early spring, Koene drove down to San Francisco from the North Bay, where he lived and worked in a rented ranch house surrounded by rabbits, to meet me for dinner in a small Argentinian restaurant on Columbus Avenue. The faint trace of an accent turned out to be Dutch. Koene was born in Groningen and had spent most of his early childhood in Haarlem. His father was a particle physicist and there were frequent moves, including a two-year stint in Winnipeg, as he followed his work from one experimental nuclear facility to the next.
Now a boyish 43, he had lived in California only for the past five years, but had come to think of it as home, or the closest thing to home hed encountered in the course of a nomadic life. And much of this had to do with the culture of techno-progressivism that had spread outward from its concentrated origins in Silicon Valley and come to encompass the entire Bay Area, with its historically high turnover of radical ideas. It had been a while now, he said, since hed described his work to someone, only for them to react as though he were making a misjudged joke or simply to walk off mid-conversation.
In his early teens, Koene began to conceive of the major problem with the human brain in computational terms: it was not, like a computer, readable and rewritable. You couldnt get in there and enhance it, make it run more efficiently, like you could with lines of code. You couldnt just speed up a neuron like you could with a computer processor.
Around this time, he read Arthur C Clarkes The City and the Stars, a novel set a billion years from now, in which the enclosed city of Diaspar is ruled by a superintelligent Central Computer, which creates bodies for the citys posthuman citizens and stores their minds in its memory banks at the end of their lives, for purposes of reincarnation. Koene saw nothing in this idea of reducing human beings to data that seemed to him implausible and felt nothing in himself that prevented him from working to bring it about. His parents encouraged him in this peculiar interest and the scientific prospect of preserving human minds in hardware became a regular topic of dinnertime conversation.
Computational neuroscience, which drew its practitioners not from biology but from the fields of mathematics and physics, seemed to offer the most promising approach to the problem of mapping and uploading the mind. It wasnt until he began using the internet in the mid-1990s, though, that he discovered a loose community of people with an interest in the same area.
As a PhD student in computational neuroscience at Montreals McGill University, Koene was initially cautious about revealing the underlying motivation for his studies, for fear of being taken for a fantasist or an eccentric.
I didnt hide it, as such, he said, but it wasnt like I was walking into labs, telling people I wanted to upload human minds to computers either. Id work with people on some related area, like the encoding of memory, with a view to figuring out how that might fit into an overall road map for whole brain emulation.
Having worked for a while at Halcyon Molecular, a Silicon Valley gene-sequencing and nanotechnology startup funded by Peter Thiel, he decided to stay in the Bay Area and start his own nonprofit company aimed at advancing the cause to which hed long been dedicated: carboncopies
Koenes decision was rooted in the very reason he began pursuing that work in the first place: an anxious awareness of the small and diminishing store of days that remained to him. If hed gone the university route, hed have had to devote most of his time, at least until securing tenure, to projects that were at best tangentially relevant to his central enterprise. The path he had chosen was a difficult one for a scientist and he lived and worked from one small infusion of private funding to the next.
But Silicon Valleys culture of radical techno-optimism had been its own sustaining force for him, and a source of financial backing for a project that took its place within the wildly aspirational ethic of that cultural context. There were people there or thereabouts, wealthy and influential, for whom a future in which human minds might be uploaded to computers was one to be actively sought, a problem to be solved, disruptively innovated, by the application of money.
One such person was Dmitry Itskov, a 36-year-old Russian tech multimillionaire and founder of the 2045 Initiative, an organisationwhose stated aim was to create technologies enabling the transfer of an individuals personality to a more advanced nonbiological carrier, and extending life, including to the point of immortality. One of Itskovs projects was the creation of avatars artificial humanoid bodies that would be controlled through brain-computer interface, technologies that would be complementary with uploaded minds. He had funded Koenes work with Carboncopies and in 2013 they organised a conference in New York called Global Futures 2045, aimed, according to its promotional blurb, at the discussion of a new evolutionary strategy for humanity.
When we spoke, Koene was working with another tech entrepreneur named Bryan Johnson, who had sold his automated payment company to PayPal a couple of years back for $800m and who now controlled a venture capital concern called the OS Fund, which, I learned from its website, invests in entrepreneurs working towards quantum leap discoveries that promise to rewrite the operating systems of life. This language struck me as strange and unsettling in a way that revealed something crucial about the attitude toward human experience that was spreading outward from its Bay Area centre a cluster of software metaphors that had metastasised into a way of thinking about what it meant to be a human being.
And it was the sameessential metaphor that lay at the heart of Koenes project: the mind as a piece of software, an application running on the platform of flesh. When he used the term emulation, he was using it explicitly to evoke the sense in which a PCs operating system could be emulated on a Mac, as what he called platform independent code.
The relevant science for whole brain emulation is, as youd expect, hideously complicated, and its interpretation deeply ambiguous, but if I can risk a gross oversimplification here, I will say that it is possible to conceive of the idea as something like this: first, you scan the pertinent information in a persons brain the neurons, the endlessly ramifying connections between them, the information-processing activity of which consciousness is seen as a byproduct through whatever technology, or combination of technologies, becomes feasible first (nanobots, electron microscopy, etc). That scan then becomes a blueprint for the reconstruction of the subject brains neural networks, which is then converted into a computational model. Finally, you emulate all of this on a third-party non-flesh-based substrate: some kind of supercomputer or a humanoid machine designed to reproduce and extend the experience of embodiment something, perhaps, like Natasha Vita-Mores Primo Posthuman.
The whole point of substrate independence, as Koene pointed out to me whenever I asked him what it would be like to exist outside of a human body, and I asked him many times, in various ways was that it would be like no one thing, because there would be no one substrate, no one medium of being. This was the concept transhumanists referred to as morphological freedom the liberty to take any bodily form technology permits.
You can be anything you like, as an article about uploading in Extropy magazine put it in the mid-90s. You can be big or small; you can be lighter than air and fly; you can teleport and walk through walls. You can be a lion or an antelope, a frog or a fly, a tree, a pool, the coat of paint on a ceiling.
What really interested me about this idea was not how strange and far-fetched it seemed (though it ticked those boxes resolutely enough), but rather how fundamentally identifiable it was, how universal. When talking to Koene, I was mostly trying to get to grips with the feasibility of the project and with what it was he envisioned as a desirable outcome. But then we would part company I would hang up the call, or I would take my leave and start walking toward the nearest station and I would find myself feeling strangely affected by the whole project, strangely moved.
Because there was something, in the end, paradoxically and definitively human in this desire for liberation from human form. I found myself thinking often of WB Yeatss Sailing to Byzantium, in which the ageing poet writes of his burning to be free of the weakening body, the sickening heart to abandon the dying animal for the manmade and immortal form of a mechanical bird. Once out of nature, he writes, I shall never take/ My bodily form from any natural thing/ But such a form as Grecian goldsmiths make.
One evening, we were sitting outside a combination bar/laundromat/standup comedy venue in Folsom Street a place with the fortuitous name of BrainWash when I confessed that the idea of having my mind uploaded to some technological substrate was deeply unappealing to me, horrifying even. The effects of technology on my life, even now, were something about which I was profoundly ambivalent; for all I had gained in convenience and connectedness, I was increasingly aware of the extent to which my movements in the world were mediated and circumscribed by corporations whose only real interest was in reducing the lives of human beings to data, as a means to further reducing us to profit.
The content we consumed, the people with whom we had romantic encounters, the news we read about the outside world: all these movements were coming increasingly under the influence of unseen algorithms, the creations of these corporations, whose complicity with government, moreover, had come to seem like the great submerged narrative of our time. Given the world we were living in, where the fragile liberal ideal of the autonomous self was already receding like a half-remembered dream into the doubtful haze of history, wouldnt a radical fusion of ourselves with technology amount, in the end, to a final capitulation of the very idea of personhood?
Koene nodded again and took a sip of his beer.
Hearing you say that, he said, makes it clear that theres a major hurdle there for people. Im more comfortable than you are with the idea, but thats because Ive been exposed to it for so long that Ive just got used to it.
In the weeks and months after I returned from San Francisco, I thought obsessively about the idea of whole brain emulation. One morning, I was at home in Dublin, suffering from both a head cold and a hangover. I lay there, idly considering hauling myself out of bed to join my wife and my son, who were in his bedroom next door enjoying a raucous game of Buckaroo. I realised that these conditions (head cold, hangover) had imposed upon me a regime of mild bodily estrangement. As often happens when Im feeling under the weather, I had a sense of myself as an irreducibly biological thing, an assemblage of flesh and blood and gristle. I felt myself to be an organism with blocked nasal passages, a bacteria-ravaged throat, a sorrowful ache deep within its skull, its cephalon. I was aware of my substrate, in short, because my substrate felt like shit.
And I was gripped by a sudden curiosity as to what, precisely, that substrate consisted of, as to what I myself happened, technically speaking, to be. I reached across for the phone on my nightstand and entered into Google the words What is the human... The first three autocomplete suggestions offered What is The Human Centipede about, and then: What is the human body made of, and then: What is the human condition.
It was the second question I wanted answered at this particular time, as perhaps a back door into the third. It turned out that I was 65% oxygen, which is to say that I was mostly air, mostly nothing. After that, I was composed of diminishing quantities of carbon and hydrogen, of calcium and sulphur and chlorine, and so on down the elemental table. I was also mildly surprised to learn that, like the iPhone I was extracting this information from, I also contained trace elements of copper and iron and silicon.
What a piece of work is a man, I thought, what a quintessence of dust.
Some minutes later, my wife entered the bedroom on her hands and knees, our son on her back, gripping the collar of her shirt tight in his little fists. She was making clip-clop noises as she crawled forward, he was laughing giddily and shouting: Dont buck! Dont buck!
With a loud neighing sound, she arched her back and sent him tumbling gently into a row of shoes by the wall and he screamed in delighted outrage, before climbing up again. None of this, I felt, could be rendered in code. None of this, I felt, could be run on any other substrate. Their beauty was bodily, in the most profound sense, in the saddest and most wonderful sense.
I never loved my wife and our little boy more, I realised, than when I thought of them as mammals. I dragged myself, my animal body, out of bed to join them.
To Be a Machine by Mark OConnell is published by Granta (12.99). To order a copy for 11.04 go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of 1.99
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Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert chasing 1000 / 1000 / 200, immortality in NBA History books – SLC Dunk
Posted: at 4:52 am
First off, Rudy Gobert can say whatever the hell he wants to the press, to his teammates, and to the universe itself. With what hes doing out there on the court he has the right to be as loud as he wants. And damnit, this Utah Jazz team does need a firey vocal leader out there suiting up every night. But beyond the Jazz - a franchise with its own Pantheon of Greatness in John Stockton, Pistol Pete Maravich, Adrian Dantley, Karl Malone, and Mark Eaton - we see an angry star emerging in Gobert. A star whose accomplishments in this 2016-2017 season appear to truly epic.
I wrote about it earlier this month in a better researched, longer, piece that no one seems to have read.
But what is real is that Gobert is approaching 1000 points, 1000 rebounds, and 200 blocks on the season. No one in franchise history has done that. Not Karl. Not Mark. The only Jazzman who even came close was Rich Kelley (who played for both the Jazz in New Orleans and Utah and deserves more recognition in franchise history). Kelley had 1253 points, 1026 rebounds, and 166 blocks back in 1978-79. And I guess thats the story for a lot of players out there. Getting to 200 blocks truly means you were a menace.
So where is Rudy at this season? The Gobzilla is at 987 points, 980 rebounds, and 188 blocks. Hes 13 points, 20 rebounds, and 12 blocks away with nine games left on the season. (If he plays all nine games hell need to average 1.44 ppg, 2.22 rpg, and 1.33 bpg to get there.)
Why is 1000 / 1000 / 200 such a big deal? Well, its one of the most exclusive clubs EVER for bigmen in the era where blocks were recorded. (They werent back when Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain played.) As a result, there have only ever been 11 instances where someone made it there (according to the data from Basketball-Reference.com that you can check here).
If Rudy Gobert does it this year, and climbs that 1000 / 1000 / 200 mountain of the Gods, he will have done it one time, needing just four seasons to scale that peak. The 11 players who did it before him (for a grand total of 22 times for all time in the history of all centers in the NBA ever) had long careers, and were legends. And even these legends only managed to do it (usually) once or twice ever in their careers. The only guys who have done it more than twice are first-namers like Kareem, Shaq, and Hakeem.
I dont know what Rudys career is going to end up being like. And I dont know if hes going to play in each of these remaining nine games. But if he does suit up and plays normal minutes its very likely that hes going to reach this elite level that only 11 other players have EVER reached before.
And with how hes playing right now, who knows what he can achieve?
Over the last 10 games the Utah Jazz are 6-4. Thats not great - losing three in a row to questionable Eastern conference talent, and dropping one to the Clippers sucks. But what doesnt suck has been Rudys efforts on both ends of the court.
Over the last 10 games Gobert has averaged 18.70 ppg, 14.10 rpg, 3.20 bpg, 2.30 apg, 0.70 spg, and is shooting a very tidy 73.08% from the floor and 60.34% from the stripe. He has a positive +/- (duh), and is way ahead in steals and blocks against fouls, and in assists over turn overs.
With his average efforts over the last little while he could surpass 1000 points and rebounds in one game from now. (Seriously, a 13 point, 20 rebound effort isnt out of the picture.) Hes blocking enough right now to get it done as well, but the 12 blocks in 9 games thing could be jobbed by the refs a little. I hope they know not to get in his way.
Rudy Gobert is playing better than every center in the NBA right now. He should be the Defensive Player of the Year this year. He should be an All-NBA player. And he should reach immortality in the NBA History books this year with a 1000 / 1000 / 200 year.
#TakeFNNote
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Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert chasing 1000 / 1000 / 200, immortality in NBA History books - SLC Dunk
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Who benefits from probiotic supplements? – Timesonline.com
Posted: at 4:50 am
Here, I said, while underhand pitching a bottle of probiotics at a friend sitting across the room, I think you may find these helpful.
You dont need them? she asked.
Apparently not. After doing some general research about probiotic supplements, I felt they would prove more a benefit to her than me.
What is a probiotic?
A probiotic is a live microorganism found in foods (yogurt and sauerkraut, for example) and supplements. The words bacteria and microorganism may make us shiver, conjuring thoughts of germs, but many actually assist the body with normal bodily functions. Inside our intestines live a world of live bacteria that help digest food along with destroying bad microorganisms that can cause illness and disease.
Probiotic supplements are often promoted as a means of triggering the growth of good bacteria in the gut.
But do they?
Here is where the jury is still out.
Before we jump into how probiotics may show evidence of reducing symptoms of infections, lets address their use by healthy individuals. A recent review of gathered data does not bode promising for healthy individuals and even suggests that the data found no concrete evidence that probiotics improve the balance of gut bacteria in healthy adults. (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/behindtheheadlines/news/2016-05-12-no-evidence-probiotics-are-beneficial-for-healthy-adults/)
Trust me when I share that this conclusion shocked me, for I was one of those healthy individuals taking a probiotic supplement every morning.
Though, after some assessment as to how I felt before adopting a daily probiotic compared to the weeks during which I took them, I could honestly report no difference. Of course, how I feel is not necessarily a substitution for a formal study, but the lack of any noticeable change had me questioning the effectiveness of probiotics for me personally. As someone who eats a nutrient dense diet consisting of fruits, vegetables, fermented foods and those high in fiber, did I even need a probiotic supplement?
Ive now been off probiotic supplements for a few weeks, (having gifted my bottle to that friend who I think will benefit), and again, I cannot report a difference. I dont feel better. I dont feel worse. I just . . . am. Thus, Ive decided to skip the added supplement and stick to a nutritious, balanced diet.
Does this mean probiotic supplements are a waste of money? Not entirely.
While there is still need for formal trials on the effectiveness of probiotics, there is promise that they may:
However, these benefits have not shown to be definitively validated and not all probiotics will have the same effects.
Studies on probiotics have been limited, and while it is not possible to be certain of their absolute effectiveness, the opposite is also true. Quality evidence based research does not reveal probiotics to be completely ineffective either.
Lets hope that better designed studies will continue to reveal more and give us direction.
Until then, load those plates with fruits and vegetables, choose foods high in fiber and give fermented foods such tempeh, sauerkraut, kimchi, kefir, kombucha, miso soup and yogurt a try.
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Rowan: Go with your gut understanding probiotics – ReporterNews.com
Posted: at 4:50 am
By Jane Rowan, Special to the Reporter-News 6:05 p.m. CT March 26, 2017
Jane Rowan(Photo: Contributed photo)
As we close out National Nutrition Month, we are going to address a topic that I have heard many people express confusion over: probiotics.
Nutrition research has pinpointed specific functional components of foods that may improve health, and prebiotics and probiotics are two such substances.
Although they are available as dietary supplements, it is not necessary to use special pills, potions, cleanses or other concoctions to incorporate prebiotics and probiotics into your diet. These "nutrition boosters" are natural ingredients in everyday food. In fact, Kristi King, spokeswomanfor the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, suggests focusing on food sources first as they are more readily available for absorption and digestion.
Prebiotics are natural, nondigestible food components that are linked to promoting the growth of helpful bacteria in your gut. Simply said, they are promoters of "good" bacteria. That's right, not all bacteria are bad. Prebiotics may improve gastrointestinal health as well as potentially enhance calcium absorption.
Prebiotics are in foods including bananas, onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus, artichokes, soybeans and whole-wheat foods.
Probiotics are the "good" bacteria or live cultures just like those naturally found in your gut. These active cultures help change or repopulate intestinal bacteria to balance gut flora. This functional component may boost immunity and overall health, especially GI health. Some strains of these live cultures may help prevent specific allergy symptoms, reduce symptoms of lactose intolerance and more. However, effects can vary from person to person.
To obtain more probiotics, King recommends enjoying fermented dairy foods including yogurt, kefir products and aged cheeses, which contain live cultures. Plus, she suggests some nondairy foods that also have beneficial cultures, including kimchi, sauerkraut, miso, tempeh and cultured nondairy yogurts.
Check the label to make sure the food contains live active culture, especially on dairy products. There should be a list of the strains present as well. Remember, if the food has been heated (for pasteurization or canning purposes) it will likely not contain any probiotics (such as canned sauerkraut).
Prebiotics and probiotics make a great "dynamic duo" when it comes to healthy eating.Ultimately, prebiotics and probiotics work together synergistically. In other words, prebiotics are breakfast, lunch and dinner for probiotics, which restore and can improve GI health. Products that combine these are called synbiotics. On the menu, that means enjoying bananas with yogurt or stir-frying asparagus with tempeh for a win-win.
The bottom line: At a minimum, prebiotics and probiotics are keys for good gut health.Incorporating health-promoting functional foods, such as foods containing prebiotics and probiotics, into the diet aids in creating a healthier you. As stated earlier, consuming prebiotics and probiotics from food sources is generally best as they are more readily available for absorption and digestion.
In reality though, that is not always easy to do. If that is the case, there are many probiotic supplements now available on the market. Because probiotics are considered dietary supplements, they are not regulated as drugs by the FDA. Unlike drugs, their safety and efficacy does not have to be provedthrough numerous clinical trials and laboratory testingfor them to be sold. Talk with your health care provider before starting any supplement.
For specific advice on obtaining prebiotics and probiotics for your own specific health needs, especially if you have GI issues or a weakened immune system, contact your health care provider of a registered dietitian nutritionist.
Jane Rowan is the extension agent for family and consumer sciences at the Taylor County Extension Office. Contact her at 325-672-6048 or l-rowan@tamu.edu.
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North Sea Tyra extension fuels growth: SH Group establishes footprint in Esbjerg – Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide
Posted: at 4:50 am
Based on the Danish governments sanction of the Tyra life extension plans and a continued request from customers for local presence, SH Group has decided to establish a footprint in Esbjerg. The foundation is strong competences within mechanical, hydraulic and electrical work, and the goal is to be the first choice one-stop-shop for owners, operators and wind-companies, especially those companies who are now going to redevelop the Tyra field.
SH Group has employed Bjoern Joensen and Hardy Jeremiassen as Business Development Coordinator and Head of Business Development for offshore-, wind- and marine service in a new department in Esbjerg, which will have special focus on the opportunities arising from the just agreed North Sea Tyra extension plan.
The new team Bjoern Joensen (33) grew up in the port of Esbjerg, and he comes to SH Group with a very broad background from the marine/offshore industry. Since 2006, he has worked his way up from Service Engineer to Team Lead for Rigs & Vessels at Fan Kran Service. Hardy Jeremiassen (52) is the previous owner of Oilpower Hydraulics, and for 6 years he was Service Coordinator and Project Manager with Fan Kran Service, before changing to PMC Technology in 2014. Now both have taken hire with SH Group. Many years in the marine and offshore business has given them a very strong and stable network nationally and internationally. They have used their technical insight for solving a wide variety of projects for customers, and this is a good basis for the new department. And the expectations to the new department are high.
Jeppe Sonne, Sales- and Marketing Director with SH Group, says: Both Bjoern and Hardy have years of experience with servicing hydraulic and mechanical equipment, and they are well-known in Esbjerg. We see a clear trend in customers requesting one single source of supplies for all mechanical, hydraulic, control systems and electrical work. With our in-house technical department of approx. 100 employees and many well-executed project references, we are certain that we can supply such a comprehensive package. That agreement on the Tyra field extension was reached this week just makes us speed up everything related to the new department in Esbjerg.
Focus on customers, safety and delivery As Business Development Coordinator, it is Bjoern Joensens job to establish the new Esbjerg organization within SH Group. Aside from phasing in SH Groups safety procedures in Esbjerg, the goal is to expand the co-operation with existing customers and make new partnership related to the North Sea agreement. Also, a service organization with service engineers and workshop is to be build-up, so that SH Group will be a visible, local company both for customers and potential new employees.
As Head of Business Development, Hardy Jeremiassen has the primary responsibility for sales, and it is his task to grow relations via his extensive network of customers looking for a one-stop-service-shop. Focus is on local, national and international customers, who consider Esbjerg a central location for service work on assets. Source: SH Group
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Activism is mainstream again how can protests create change? – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:50 am
Hundreds of thousands of people marched in cities around the world on 21 January 2017 to protest threats against womens rights. Photograph: Barry Lewis/Getty
Protesting is back. People have woken up to the undeniable fact that power ultimately lies with them. We cant change whats already happened, but we can organise to ensure that the huge progress we have made tackling some of the worlds greatest problems is not lost.
We are returning to the traditional and most effective form of protest marching, with placards, bull-horns and a collective, defiant voice.
The fragmenting of political systems across the globe has worrying implications for democracy. But it has also sparked greater determination. A visible, protesting public is one of the most effective ways to hold political leaders to account and push the agendas that matter.
In Romania, its estimated that 500,000 people recently took to the streets to protest about corruption. A friend, Bea, who took part in the protests, described them as driven by anger, but that people were left with a sense of community, hope and solidarity. Those protesting included families, professionals, creatives, journalists, students and more. They exchanged tea, snacks and water. Reminiscent of the days of Jubilee 2000, a human chain of 30,000 people was formed around parliament.
Activism must become as much a part of our civic duty as paying council tax or dividing rubbish for recycling
Bea believes the protests have produced a mindshift, people now understanding that we can only drive positive change together. That in itself is an incredible outcome.
Anyone who has been on a protest can attest to the exhilaration that people power provides. This renewed protest zeitgeist offers a golden opportunity to reawaken those causes. But how can this new found vigour have the most impact?
It would intensify impact if we link protests to the UNs sustainable development goals, aiming to make the world a safer, fairer, cleaner and more peaceful place by 2030. In 2015, 193 countries signed up to the SDGs and its up to the people to hold their governments to account to achieve them.
Reminding our leaders of their duties requires everyone who cares to take action. With renewed purpose, activism must become as much a part of our civic duty as paying council tax or dividing rubbish up for recycling.
We at One campaign are marching all the way to 2030, armed with pens and placards, bull horns, biros and banners. We urge you join us to capitalise on the re-energised protest movement and join fellow global citizens to push for the SDGs to do as they are intended make us all safer and the world a fairer place.
Theres a saying: if you want to build a ship, dont ask people to collect wood and assign them tasks, but teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea.
Its the same same principle for campaigning if people care about an issue, they will take action.
Saira OMallie is the UK director (interim) at One Campaign.
Join our community of development professionals and humanitarians. Follow @GuardianGDP on Twitter. Join the conversation with the hashtag #Dev2030.
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Activism is mainstream again how can protests create change? - The Guardian
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