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Monthly Archives: February 2020
RPA Adoption across Industries and the Associated Risks – EnterpriseTalk
Posted: February 19, 2020 at 3:43 am
What is the single most significant trend you see in enterprise adoption of automation over the last year? How do you see it panning out to impact the industry over 2020?
Intelligent (AI-driven) automation will replace rules-based automation. While many RPA platforms now offer AI capabilities, historically, RPA and AI have been used as two separate applications one is rules-based, and the other is adaptive and predictive. Over the next year, RPA and process analytics will become entirely infused with AI and machine learning (ML), accelerating process mining and discovery, and dramatically simplifying human effort in these areas. Automation Anywhere has been engaging in this area and our software bots will be able to automatically identify the best business processes to automate, act upon this insight, and optimize deployments to guarantee the best possible results.
Smart Ways to Fast-track AI Implementation
This is not the first time you are joining a team as the first CIO. What typical challenges do you see the very first head of IT faces in a company? How do you mitigate them?
Often, CIOs biggest challenge is managing and prioritizing a myriad of opportunities available so that their organization is in the best position to evolve and thrive. More importantly, as the first CIO of Automation Anywhere, my goal is to provide governance and harness the positive momentum that we have experienced during the companys steady growth and become a partner to the product, marketing, and sales teams.
One of my priorities at Automation Anywhere is to set up a Center of Excellence (CoE) to implement thousands of bots internally to automate end-to-end business processes. The company has more than 200 bots deployed internally, with expectations to grow that number to 500 bots in the coming months and over 1,000 or more in the next year to 18 months. My job is to remove roadblocks to internal automation of processes and arm our team with the knowledge and confidence to tell us how we can use our RPA tools to save time, effort and make our work more human.
Intelligent Automation Technology Is a Necessity In 2020
In your experience, which vertical is seeing the most significant adoption, and reaping the highest benefit form RPA?
A fascinating aspect of RPA is that almost any industry can benefit from utilizing this powerful technology. A report from Futurum Research commissioned by Automation Anywhere found that the media and publishing sector has been the most eager to embrace automation, with 87.5 percent of respondents claiming that their firms have already implemented some form of RPA. The complete digitization of media has driven companies and content publishers to replace manual content and media management processes with flexible, adaptable, machine-learning-based automated solutions.
There is no more doubt about RPA adoption in enterprises. But it is also true that enterprises need to be ready for this kind of process transformation. What do you advise companies planning to adopt RPA for benefits? What should they do to be, so to speak, RPA ready?
RPA will transform business, but thats not a given. There is the right way as well as the wrong way to implement RPA. Adoption is a long-term journey of creating change that will empower the workforce to become more productive and creative. The RPA journey is closely connected to digital transformation. Creating an enterprise-wide strategic move is the hallmark of successful RPA implementations. RPA, as one of the core elements of digital transformation, has the power to augment and free resources. It redefines the standards of speed, efficiency, and changes the way businesses operate both, organically and intentionally.
Discovery is the first step in ensuring your organization is RPA-ready. CIOs should start by assessing organizational fit, appetite, and readiness for RPA, and researching the available RPA tools and then begin to sketch a vision for organizational transformation. Its essential to bring in HR early to keep people at the center and establish an open, pragmatic approach from the start.
Voice-based AI Assistant Certainly the Future of Workplace
Are there any risks associated with RPA and its rapid entry into the B2B enterprise? Have you seen any instances of such an incident? If yes, how did you eliminate it?
Ive spoken with hundreds of CIOs over the last two years, so from my vantage point in hearing about challenges at other companies, RPA offers tremendous value for businesses: dramatically reducing operating costs with near-zero error rates, 70% higher productivity gains, and infinite scalability. While RPA is the fastest-growing segment of the global enterprise software market, according to Gartner, there are still several barriers to overcome before the full promise of RPA is fulfilled.
Getting a deployment off the ground can be the hardest part. The largest stumbling block I see is the need for proper RPA skills and training. Integrating emerging technologies with an existing workforce is challenging. Automation not only stands to change how individuals perform their jobs but will transform the behavior of the organization itself. For CIOs, it will transform the IT team to do so much more impact on the rest of the company. Thats why Automation Anywhere launched Automation Anywhere University (AAU), our online RPA training academy, to prepare the workforce of today with skills for the automation-driven future. Through AAU, Automation Anywhere has trained more than 350,000 developers, business analysts, partners, and students in RPA to prepare the workforce of today for the automation-driven future.
How to Zoom onto the Perfect AI Model by Measuring Business Needs Accurately?
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I Assumed Science Had All the Answers. Then I Started Asking Inconvenient Questions. – ChristianityToday.com
Posted: at 3:42 am
I had an unusual childhood for an American. Members of my extended family were union organizers and left-wing radicals, and my parents had even been members of the American Communist Party. My indoctrination in the dogmas of communism and atheism was deep and long lasting. At the same time, my father gave me a love of science and reason, and he taught me the importance of asking questions. These gifts, along with my training in scientific thought and research, eventually cracked open the prison cell that held my soul captive during those early years.
Breaking free was a slow process, akin to chipping away at a dungeon door with a dull spoon. Early on in life, my curiosity led me to ask questions. I saw contradictions in some of what I had been taught. If humans were a blind product of evolutionary chance, with no special purpose or significance, then how could the stated goals of socialismto advance human dignity and valuemake sense? And if religion, particularly Christianity, was really such a terrible historical evil, then why were so many Christian clergy members involved in the civil rights movement?
As I studied science and began my research career in biochemistry and molecular biology, I formed a passionate attachment to a life of knowledge rooted in the scientific worldview. I found comfort and joy in the beauty, complexity, and wisdom of the scientific description of reality. But I also began wondering whether there might be something more to human existence than science and pure reason.
At this point, the question of faith was off the table. I knew that evolution was true and the Bible (which I hadnt actually read) was false. I knew that a supernatural god living in the sky was a fairy tale. I knew that science held the keys to unlock all mysteries. Or did it?
I was disturbed to learn that, according to science, some things are actually unknowable. It is impossible to know, for instance, the position and speed of an electron simultaneously. This is a critical feature of quantum mechanics, even though it makes little rational sense. If the uncertainty principle is true (and it must be, since so much modern technology is based on it), then how valid is the idea of a purely deterministic and predictable world?
I also began to contemplate other questions. Where did the universe come from? How did life begin? What does it mean to be a human being? What is the source of our creativityof art, poetry, music, and humor? Perhaps, I thought, science cannot tell us everything.
Now I was beginning to seriously wonder about the whole religion thing. I met Christians who were smart and scientifically minded, and for the first time I attended a church service. I was surprised at what I found. Nobody glared at me with suspicion, and I heard no thundering condemnation of sinners. The pastor spoke about the power of love. The people next to me shook my hand and wished me peace. It was all quite beautiful, and I decided to return.
Then I read the Gospels and had another shock: I found them beautiful and inspiring. So far as I could tell, they carried the ring of truth. And the Book of Acts struck me as actual history, not at all like a fictional account concocted to enslave the massesthe kind of reading my Marxist upbringing would have conditioned me to affirm.
The door to my prison cell was swinging open, and I stood there gazing out onto a new world, the world of faith. Yet I was afraid to fully leave. Suppose I was being fooled, misled into a trap? I remained stuck in that place of indecision for several years. And then the Holy Spirit pulled me over the threshold.
It happened one day while I was traveling alone on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in the rural middle part of the state, with a long way to go. Turning the radio on, I heard the unmistakable voice of an evangelical Christian preacher, the kind I used to mock and avoid. But this preacher was really good. I have no idea what he was saying, but his voice and inflection were mesmerizing and I listened for a few minutes before turning the radio off. Driving in silence for a while, I began wondering how I would sound if I ever tried preachingafter all, I always liked to talk. I laughed a bit, thinking about what I could possibly say. The first thing that came to my mind was something about sciencehow, if there were a God, he might have used science to create the world.
And then something happened. I felt a chill up and down my spine and could hear myself speaking in my mindpreaching, in fact. I could see an audience in front of me, people in an outdoor stadium, dressed in summer clothing. I pulled the car over to the right lane and slowed down. It was not a vision exactly, but it was intense. I knew I wasnt making the words upI was listening just as much as the audience.
I talked about knowing that Jesus loves me. With a voice full of passionate emotion, I assured the crowd that whatever their sins might be, they were no worse than my own, and that because of Christs sacrifice on the cross we could all be saved. I explained that Gods love is more powerful than any other kind and that anyone can have it without deserving it.
At some point during this experience, I had pulled over onto the shoulder of the road, where I sat behind the wheel crying for some time. I had never considered the things I had been saying. Some of the concepts were unfamiliar. The only explanation I could fathom was that the Holy Spirit had entered into my life in dramatic fashion. Thank you, Lord, I said out loud in between sobs. I believe, and I am saved. Thank you, Lord Jesus Christ.
When I recovered my composure, I was aware of a great feeling of joy and release. I had no more doubts, no trace of hesitationI had crossed over, stepping over the ruins of my prison cell into my new life of faith. From that day onward, my life has been devoted to the joyful service of our Lord.
Today, I am an active member of my church and have served as lay leader for several years. I am a fellow of the American Scientific Affiliation, the largest organization of Christians in the sciences, and the vice president of its metropolitan Washington, DC, chapter. I also serve as editor in chief of the ASAs online magazine God and Nature. I assist my wife, who is codirector of a local charity that distributes food to the needy. I am an active online evangelist.
Along the way, I made many discoveries. I learned about the power of the Bible as a guide from God to the central questions of our existence. I learned that the true purpose of science is to describe how things are, not to engage in misplaced speculation about why the world is the way it is. I learned that modern atheist taunts about the purposelessness and meaninglessness of the universe and our own existence are not only false but destructive. Most importantly, I learned that nothing I have learned came through my own merit, but only from the grace of our Lord, whose love and mercy are beyond understanding.
Sy Garte is a biochemist who has taught at New York University, the University of Pittsburgh, and Rutgers University. He is the author of The Works of His Hands: A Scientists Journey from Atheism to Faith (Kregel Publications).
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I Assumed Science Had All the Answers. Then I Started Asking Inconvenient Questions. - ChristianityToday.com
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The tragedy of the even dumber church – Christian Post
Posted: at 3:42 am
By Robin Schumacher, Voices Contributor | Monday, February 17, 2020
Its true time really does fly.
Eight years ago, I wrote an article entitled The Tragedy of the Dumb Church[1], which struck a nerve with a lot of people. It was circulated widely on the web and also resulted in invitations to speak on some nationally syndicated radio shows.
In the article, I talked about how a friend of mine, who has a real heart for grounding youth in the faith, contacted all our community churches about conducting free-of-charge apologetics training for their young people. His gracious offer was sadly met with a talk-to-the-hand response from every local church.
Now its my turn.
Because I continue to see data suggesting that many people leave the church or consider it irrelevant because it fails to answer the tough questions that are thrown at it, I contacted the mega-church I go to about starting up an apologetics ministry. Because Im formally trained in apologetics and theology, I offered to spearhead it and help train a volunteer staff who could serve as a group ready to answer people inside or outside the church who struggle with questions about Christianity.
I spoke with five(!) campus and connection pastors about it, and also offered to teach formal culturally relevant classes at the church where these issues could be openly discussed. This time, I was the one who got the shrug-of-the-shoulders response or simply ghosted on email.
That experience got me thinking could it be that between the last time I wrote on this subject and now, things have gotten worse on this front for the church?
The fact is, its ugly out there and getting worse.
Data from the Barna group has identified a number of disturbing trends that should cause all Christians concern.Gen Z teens are much less likely to assert religious identitythan generations before them with a rise in espoused atheism also being witnessed.Almost half of practicing Christian Millennials (47%) believe that evangelism is wrong, and my bet is that their lack of confidence in not being able to answer hard questions from their unbelieving friends plays a role in this.
Who can blame them? In the worldview ring, the opposing corner of Christianity has an impressive array of challengers that is certainly intimidating.
First up is the currentpost-truthculture. Postmodernism was one thing, but dealing with a secular mood that acknowledges something is true and yet rejects it because it goes against their personal preferences or interferes with their social/political activism is an entirely different beast.
Then we havescientism, which is the default fall back foundation for those who reject spirituality. Scientism is critical to and for the non-religious in order to, as Richard Lewontin puts it, not allow a divine foot in the door.
For some, scientism devolves into something more antagonistic something I callhatetheism. Think of it as atheism with healthy doses of snideness, contempt, and a willingness to do anything needed to make religious faith appear idiotic and even dangerous. For example, Victor Stenger does just this when he says, Science flies you to the moon. Religion flies you into buildings.
Last but not the least is the relatively new voice ofapatheism. On its opposition to Christianity, authorsPaul Rowan BrianandBen Sixsmithstate: The greatest threat to Christianity is found not in the arguments of the atheist but in the assumptions of the apathetic. The danger is not a hostile reception of belief in God but an incurious indifference to the idea.
Against these seemingly-powerful opponents to Christianity, who can blame Gen Z and others for being bullied into silence and inaction?
But are these four enemies of Christianity really the big, bad wolves they seem to be? I don't think so and heres why.
If there are two words that perfectly define our day, they are:appallingly superficial. The whole world ofdigital Babylonexemplifies this perfectly in everyday life and they apply equally well to the religious landscape.
For example, in discussing his exit from Christianity, one blogger leaning into hatetheism provided a list of books that motivated him to leave the faith. He concluded by saying that he hoped to read them one day.
Seriously?
This shallow attitude is both sad and encouraging at the same time. Sad, in that it shows how flippant some people take matters of religion. But also encouraging because when such an attitude is directly and lovingly confronted by the robust intellectualism, logic, and meaningfulness that has defined Christianity since day one, it disintegrates into the vapor that it is.
These house-of-cards foundations are likely why apologist William Lane Craig says that he is oftentimes confronted by upset unbelievers at the end of his debates who assert that the only way their side did so poorly during the event was because it was a setup. However, they get really intellectually defrocked when they discover that Craigs opponents were not chosen by Craig but instead hand-picked by their own atheist group.
The fact is, Christianity is indeed a robust, personally meaningful and intellectually satisfying alternative to its rivals who truly arent as ferocious as they appear.
Sometimes I get the argument from church leaders that theyre only responding to the desires of their members in not offering apologetics and similar, deeper theological education. They say no one is asking for it so it must not be wanted.
Nothing concerns me more about the spiritual state of a church than when I hear such a thing, and heres why.
Years ago, I met a great couple who hadnt been going to my church very long. Although they were both busy executive professionals, they were doing 3-4 different Bible studies each week and loving every minute of it. I remember them telling me, We just cant get enough!
That kind of appetite is a telling sign that the person in question has truly been born again. It personifies Anselms motto for the Christian faith: faith seeking understanding, which means that a true faith in God and Christ prompts a hungering quest for deeper understanding of spiritual truths.
Jonathan Edwards said in his great work,A Treatise Concerning Religious Affections, that a persons cravings will unveil their spiritual condition. If a professing faith doesnt seek the kind of understanding and holy affections to which Anselm and Edwards refer, then maybe it isnt a Christian faith.
In other words, show me a church without a desire for learning about God and living it out, and Ill show you a church that is pregnant with unbelievers.
So what steps should the dumb church take? Here are a few suggestions I have for churches like mine:
Years ago, a man came up to Francis Schaeffer and asked him many deep questions about Christianity. After Schaeffer answered everything that was thrown at him, the man paused, then said: Thank you. Now I can worship God much better.
By contrast, todays dumb church would likely not be of much help. Instead, it has contributed to the sad state about which A. W. Tozer spoke of in his classic book,The Knowledge of the Holy: The message of this book . . . is called forth by a condition which has existed in the Church for some years and is steadily growing worse. I refer to the loss of the concept of majesty from the popular religious mind. The Church has surrendered her once lofty concept of God and has substituted for it one so low, so ignoble, as to be utterly unworthy of thinking and worshipping people. This she has not done deliberately, but little by little without her knowledge;and her unawareness only makes her situation all the more tragic (emphasis mine).
Let us all pray that todays dumb church takes the action needed to both overpower her enemies and equip her people so that our God is thought of and worshipped properly.
[1]My original post was lost when Christianpost removed their blogging site, but one of the reprints of the post was copied and postedhere.
Robin Schumacher is a software executive and Christian apologist who has written many apologetic articles, appeared on nationally syndicated radio programs, and presented at various apologetic events. He holds a Master's in Christian apologetics and a Ph.D. in New Testament.
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The tragedy of the even dumber church - Christian Post
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In the Mathematical Glory of the Universe, Physicist Discovered the Truly Divine – Discovery Institute
Posted: at 3:42 am
How did this slip through? John Horgan with Scientific American interviewed a physicist colleague, Christopher Search. The physicist is appealingly direct in rejecting the atheism associated with Stephen Hawking and other venerated names in the field. More than that, he says it was physics that brought him to a recognition of the truly divine in the universe:
Over the years my view of physics has evolved significantly. I no longer believe that physics offers all of the answers. It cant explain why the universe exists or why we are even here. It does though paint a very beautiful and intricate picture of the how the universe works. I actually feel sorry for people that do not understand the laws of physics in their full mathematical glory because they are missing out on something that is truly divine.
The beautiful interlocking connectedness of the laws of physics indicates to me how finely tuned and remarkable the universe is, which for me proves that the universe is more than random chance. Ironically, it was by studying physics that I stopped being an atheist because physics is so perfect and harmonious that it had to come from something. After years of reflecting, I simply could not accept that the universe is random chance as the anthropic principle implies.
More on the anthropic principle and on multiverse theory:
Like string theory, this is not science. How do you test the existence of other universes? The universe is everything out there that we can observe. Another universe would therefore be separate from our own and not interact with it in any manner. If we could detect other universes, that would imply that they are observable by us but that leads to a contradiction since our universe is everything that is observable by us.
The anthropic principle is something I discuss in my freshmen E&M class actually. However, I think it is a total cop-out for physicists to use the anthropic principle to explain why the laws of physics are the way they are. The anthropic principle implies the existence of other universes where the laws of physics are different. But the existence of these other universes is untestable. It also implies that our existence is mere random luck.
At the end of the day, the existence of multiverses and the anthropic principle are really religious viewpoints wrapped up in scientific jargon. They have no more legitimacy than believing that God created the universe.
He came to these conclusions after breaking with dogmatic atheism:
I was always curious about how things work. When I was young, physics seemed to offer answers to all of the mysteries of the universe. It felt authoritative and unequivocal in its explanations of nature and the origin of the universe. In that sense it was the perfect religion for my teenage self as I went through an atheist phase, which admittedly was probably provoked by all the popular physics books that I was devouring at that age such asA Brief History of Time. Those books were always so dogmatic like the Catholic Sunday school I went to as a kid.
As it happens, these are all themes that are developed with great rigor and depth in Center for Science & Culture director Stephen Meyers next book, The Return of the God Hypothesis.
Photo credit: Hubble Spots Galaxys Dramatic Details, by ESA/Hubble & NASA, W. Li et al.
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In the Mathematical Glory of the Universe, Physicist Discovered the Truly Divine - Discovery Institute
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Why Quantum Computing Gets Special Attention In The Trump Administration’s Budget Proposal – KUT
Posted: at 3:41 am
From Texas Standard:
The Trump administration's fiscal year 2021 budget proposal includes significant increases in funding for artificial intelligence and quantum computing, while cutting overall research and development spending.
If Congress agrees to it, funding for artificial intelligence, or AI, would nearly double, and quantum computing would receive a 50% boost over last year's budget, doubling in 2022 to $860 million. The administration says these two fields of research are important to U.S. national security, in part, because China also invests heavily in these fields.
Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics to solve highly complex problems more quickly than they can be solved by standard or classical computers. Though fully functional quantum computers don't yet exist, scientists at academic institutions, as well as at IBM, Google and other companies, are working to build such systems.
Scott Aaronson is a professor of computer science and the founding director of the Quantum Information Center at the University of Texas at Austin. He says applications for quantum computing include simulation of chemistry and physics problems. These simulations enable scientists to design new materials, drugs, superconductors and solar cells, among other things.
Aaronson says the government's role is to support basic scientific research the kind needed to build and perfect quantum computers.
"We do not yet know how to build a fully scalable quantum computer. The quantum version of the transistor, if you like, has not been invented yet," Aaronson says.
On the software front, researchers have not yet developed applications that take full advantage of quantum computing's capabilities.
"That's often misrepresented in the popular press, where it's claimed that a quantum computer is just a black box that does everything," Aaronson says.
Competition between the U.S. and China in quantum computing revolves, in part, around the role such a system could play in breaking the encryption that makes things secure on the internet.
Truly useful quantum computing applications could be as much as a decade away, Aaronson says. Initially, these tools would be highly specialized.
"The way I put it is that we're now entering the very, very early, vacuum-tube era of quantum computers," he says.
Written by Shelly Brisbin.
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Saturn’s weird, Earth-like moon just failed a key test for alien life – Space.com
Posted: at 3:41 am
Saturn's most Earth-like moon looks a bit less likely to host life, thanks to quantum mechanics, the weird rules that govern subatomic particles.
Titan, the second largest moon in our solar system after Jupiter's Ganymede, is unique in two ways that have convinced some researchers that this moon might host extraterrestrial life: It's the only moon in our solar system with a dense atmosphere, and it's the only body in space, besides Earth, known to definitely have pools of liquid on its surface. In Titan's case, those pools are frigid lakes of hydrocarbons, closer to the gasoline in a car than the oceans on Earth. But some researchers have suggested that complex structures could arise in those pools: bubbles with special properties that mimic ingredients found to be necessary for life on our planet.
On Earth, lipid molecules (fatty acids) can spontaneously arrange themselves into bubble-shaped membranes that form the barriers around the cells of all known life-forms. Some researchers think this was the first necessary ingredient for life as it formed on Earth.
Related: 9 strange scientific excuses for why humans haven't found aliens yet
On Titan, researchers have speculated in the past, an equivalent set of bubbles might have emerged, these consisting of nitrogen-based molecules called azotosomes.
But for those structures to arise naturally, the physics has to work just right in the conditions actually present on Titan: temperatures of about minus 300 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 185 degrees Celsius), without liquid water or atmospheric oxygen.
Previous studies, using molecular dynamics simulations a technique often used to examine the chemistry of life suggested that such bubble structures would arise and become common on a world like Titan. But a new paper, published Jan. 24 in the journal Science Advances, suggests that those earlier simulations were wrong.
Using more complex simulations involving quantum mechanics, the researchers in the new paper studied the structures in terms of their "thermodynamic viability."
Here's what that means: Put a ball at the top of a hill, and it's likely to end up at the bottom, a position of lower energy. Similarly, chemicals tend to arrange themseIves in the simplest, lowest-energy pattern. The researchers wanted to know whether the azotosomes would be the simplest, most efficient arrangement for those nitrogen-bearing molecules.
Titan represents a "strict test case for the limits of life," the researchers wrote in their paper. And in this role, the moon fails. Azotosomes, the simulation showed, just aren't thermodynamically viable on Titan.
This work, the researchers said in a statement, should help NASA figure out what experiments to include on its Dragonfly mission to Titan, planned for the 2030s. It's still theoretically possible that life emerged on Titan, the researchers said in the paper, but such life would likely not involve anything we'd recognize as a cell membrane.
Originally published on Live Science.
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The fastest way to heat certain materials may be to cool them first – Science News
Posted: at 3:41 am
To heat a slice of pizza, you probably wouldntconsider first chilling it in the fridge. But a theoretical study suggests thatcooling, as a first step before heating, may be the fastest way to warm upcertain materials. In fact, such precooling could lead sometimes to exponentially faster heating, two physicists calculate in a study accepted in Physical Review Letters.
The concept is similar to the Mpemba effect, the counterintuitive and controversial observation that hot watersometimes freezes faster than cold water (SN:1/6/17). Scientists still dont agree on why the Mpemba effect occurs, andits difficult to reproduce the effect consistently. The new study is a way ofthinking of effects like the Mpemba effect from a different perspective, saysphysicist Andrs Santos of Universidad de Extremadura in Badajoz, Spain, who was not involved with the research.
This potential for faster heatingdoesnt actually apply to pizza slices, but to certain simplified theoreticalmodels of materials, which scientists use to make calculations that help themunderstand real materials. Physicists Amit Gal and Oren Raz of the WeizmannInstitute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, studied a theoretical system calledthe Ising model, a 2-D grid of atoms which have magnetic poles that pointeither up or down. In particular, they considered a version of the Ising model inwhich neighboring atoms tended to point their poles in opposite directions,behavior which is called antiferromagnetic. In that system, heating could occurfaster after a precooling phase.
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For the new effect to occur, there mustbe some relevant property of the system other than a uniform temperature thatis affected by the precooling. Otherwise, thered be no difference between asystem that had been precooled and rewarmed, and one that hadnt. Thetemperature cannot really tell the whole story, Gal says.
In the case of the antiferromagnetic Isingmodel, the researchers considered the total magnetization produced from all theatoms, as well as how many magnets pointed in the opposite direction of theirneighbors. Cooling the material could change the ratio between those twoproperties in a way that would allow heating to proceed more quickly.
Raz hopes that physicists might look forthe effect in real materials next, such as magnetic alloys.
The prospects are exciting, says physicist Adolfo del Campo of the Donostia International Physics Center in Spain. Scientists have been searching for ways to speed up heating in tiny machines that follow the rules of quantum mechanics and can bypass some of the limits of standard machines (SN: 4/1/19). If the effect can be exploited in such minute machines, he says, it would [be] quite handy.
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Rokus surround sound system is simple, immersive, and not for everyone – Digital Trends
Posted: at 3:41 am
Simple, immersive, affordable surround sound. Thats the promise of Rokus new operating system update, which allows you to link up the companys soundbar, sub, and Roku Wireless Speakers for a slick and concise surround setup that costs just $500.
On many fronts, Rokus makeshift system delivers on its promise, booming and sweeping its way to some pretty sweet cinematic immersion. But, after spending some quality time with the newly minted setup, I can tell you it wont be for everyone, especially those looking for a system as musical as it is cinematic.
Here are the highs and lows of Rokus new Voltron-style surround setup.
Rokus new system is designed to be so easy to use that even your aging Aunt Freda can set it up and enjoy those mahjong tournaments on ESPN 7 in immersive surround. Roku shoots for a broad audience, so the system needs to be accessible for all. For the most part, thats the case when it comes to setup, but there are some caveats to mention.
The Roku Smart Soundbar is basically a Roku TV in soundbar form. You can stream directly from it and easily access the onscreen menu for everything from streaming apps to sound settings. Once youve got the bar set up and all components plugged in, pairing the wireless subwoofer and speakers to the bar is done by simply holding down the remotes Home button for five seconds and selecting them from the on-screen menu.
Thats assuming the new update that makes this possible goes off without a hitch, of course. Updates can be tricky, and you may need to hit the reset button on the speakers or sub, though the simple on-screen directions should make this clear. However, since the Roku Wireless Speakers were originally designed to pair to a Roku TV, they kept chiming improper directions about doing just that after I plugged them in. This may be something thats worked out in the update (or a future one).
Youll also need to find a place to set up the speakers behind (and to the left and right of) the listening position. This will likely require you to pick up speaker stands or find a console for them, etc. So, while the setup is simple, it isnt necessarily a breeze for surround newbies.
Thats not to say this system isnt intuitive as all get-out its Roku, after all and operation is a snap once youre up and running. Apart from the luxury of a built-in video streamer, easy access to on-screen sound settings, a signature perk of Roku audio gear, is perhaps the most useful feature.
A tap of the star key on the soundbars remote calls up a small but effective suite of settings, including leveling and night mode (for keeping the system from blasting during commercials or when the kids are sleeping), two settings to pump up dialogue (low and high), and a range of bass controls for the subwoofer. The settings are limited, but work well for those for whom a graphic EQ is as mysterious as quantum physics.
Like most modern soundbars, the system also works seamlessly with your TV remote for power and volume when connected via HDMI ARC (cable included).
Theres also a cool feature called Expanded Stereo mode, which uses digital signal processing (DSP) to pump ambient sound into the surround satellites for stereo content. The Movies and TV mode, which is on by default, actually works impressively well, seeming to magically pull only the background effects into the back speakers for a more immersive experience. I was less impressed with the Music version when streaming Bluetooth, but it does give you a bigger soundstage.
Smart assistant support includes Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant for some basic functionality like streaming from select services, volume control, and turning the system on and off, while the microphone in the remote allows for searching streaming content via Rokus operating system as well.
The opposite side of the coin that is Rokus dead-simple interface is that, well, theres not a lot you can do to tune the system manually. For control freaks like yours truly, the lack of incremental levels for the subwoofer and (especially) zero control over the satellites is maddening. While there are settings that raise or lower bass output, the only way to control the surround volume appears to be where you place them in conjunction with your listening position.
Also somewhat frustrating is Bluetooth streaming, which demands you go through the settings via your TV for initial pairing. Id rather just have an input key. That said, once youve paired to it, the system is designed to allow you to stream to the bar with the TV off (though for my TCL 6-series Roku TV, it seemed to turn on the TV when I turned on the bar).
Speaking of inputs, the options are limited. Unlike competitors such as Vizios $500 SB36512-g6 surround soundbar (which also tacks on Dolby Atmos, by the way), theres no way to stream over Wi-Fi, or even a 3.5mm input.
When it comes to performance, the highlights of this four-piece system are easily the subwoofer and satellite components, which deliver power and immersion, respectively, that rises above what youll get from the vast majority of competitors at this price point.
After connecting the sub, Rokus booming test demo freaked out my normally quiet dog from a dead slumber, causing him to bark as viciously as a 15-pounder can at what he deemed a full-on invasion. The impressive little tub holds court in everything from major action scenes to acoustic tracks, offering clean and powerful bass that punches well above its weight when measured by both size and price point.
Meanwhile, the Roku Wireless speakers offer power and clarity thats far above what youll see in most surround bars in this price class (or even well above it). Designed as stand-alone speakers for Roku TVs, their smooth-and-clear, dual-driver attack adds definition, detail, and poise to the swirling effects of action scenes, while swelling brilliantly with ambient sound in slower moments.
The result is excellent immersion that really pulls you into the moment in films like Avengers: Infinity War and The Dark Knight. But the setup also leaves something to be desired when it comes to the weakest link in this chain, the soundbar itself.
While the bar is the piece that ties it all together, its also the wild card of the system. Loaded with DSP, at times it can sound quite good, reveling in the meat of the sound for clean and detailed midrange effects and dialogue. At other times, youre reminded of its stubby size, which limits its soundstage significantly, while its smaller tweeters seem to be stretching to produce more velocity, resulting in a shouty sound signature.
That goes for music playback, too, which often comes off flat and boxy. My first impression when I called up a Spotify playlist was that of disappointment as the soundstage seemed to collapse on itself significantly. The subwoofer helps take some of the load, adding punch to songs that hit hard and chocolaty bass to acoustic fare, but I often wished for more warmth and presence in the middle of the sound and more definition up top.
This wasnt always the case I certainly found myself enjoying some tunes, usually those with excellent mixing, but in general, Bluetooth streaming is lackluster. You can lean on the Roku Wireless Speakers a bit by engaging the Expanded Stereo Music mode, but it cant really make up for the lack of musicality upfront. And perhaps ironically, I found myself wishing I was just listening to the twin speakers on their lonesome instead.
At $500, Rokus mostly wireless surround setup has a lot going for it. Its slick and simple to use, offers a great streamer built-in (assuming you dont already have one), and provides compelling surround sound immersion for your favorite cinematic scenes. Its not the best for music streaming, though, and while its easy to use, I find its limitations in both connection options and settings frustrating.
If you love the simple and intuitive nature of Roku and especially if youve already invested in one of these components the full system might be a good option. Otherwise, you can get more well-rounded surround solutions from Vizio and other brands, often for less.
Updated 2/20/2020: This piece has been updated to clarify that basic smart assistant functionality is supported for Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa.
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Cliff’s EdgeA Text to and from the Dead? – Adventist Review
Posted: at 3:41 am
February 14, 2020
CLIFFORD GOLDSTEIN
How did humanity survive in the primeval BSP (Before Smart Phones) era? How did we shop, communicate, or find our way to whatever unknown location we were driving to? (Remember how cutting edge a printed Google map was?) Smart phone technology that once amazed us (I remember my astonishment with Shazam, the app that instantly identified whatever music you heard playing) now seems as humdrum as indoor plumbing. Who knows what smart phone technology will bring next?
How about a call or text to or from the dead? The Soulphone Foundations (thesouldphonefoundation.org) motto is: Bringing Spirit Communication Technology to Life, and by Spirit they mean you-know-who. The iconic Hollywood line, I see dead people! will supposedly become a reality because the Soulphone Foundation claims that it is creating technology that will allow us to contact the deceased via texts, phone calls, and video-conferencing.
After all, its science, which, according to the Soulphone folk, shows that the dead still exist: a basic understanding of the physics of light and electromagnetic fields, when integrated with quantum physics, illustrates how our bioenergy and information persists in the vacuum of space (sometimes called the zero-point field) long after physical death. Its not surprising that they shuffle into the mix the mind-mocking realm of quantum physics. Even Albert Einstein, one of its founders, referred to some quantum phenomena as spooky action at a distance (though he wasnt talking about the kind of spooks the Soulphone Foundation is).
Calling the dead post material persons (PMPs), the site claims that when humans morph into corpses they simply pass on into another phase of forever but retain their consciousness, identity, and core aspects of their previous physical form. But most importantly, the Soulphone folk claim to be developing, in three phases, technology that will allow communication between material and postmaterial persons.
The first phase, SoulKeyboard,TM will allow texting and typing with postmaterial family, friends, and experts in every field of expertise. Phase two, SoulVoice,TM is supposed to enable talking with your dear ones who are living in another part of forever. The third phase, SoulVideo,TM will open the way to hearing and seeing those who are experiencing the field of all possibilities from a different observation point. The Foundation envisions apps that will allows us to communicate with the dead and, also, it hopes to host webinars with postmaterial geniuses in science, healthcare, religion, law.
Especially creepy, at least from a Seventh-day Adventist perspective, is how they test if the communicating dead are really whom they claim to be. For example, the site says, a bereaved parent might ask the following question of a son or a daughter who has changed worlds: Did you have a dog named Snoopy when you were a child. Did we give you a pocketknife for your tenth birthday? Correct answers are final proof for deeply realizing that life and love are forever. How interesting in light of this warning:Spiritual beings sometimes appear to persons in the form of their deceased friends, and relate incidents connected with their lives and perform acts which they performed while living [Ellen G. White,Patriarchs and Prophets(Mountain View, Calif.: Pacific Press Pub. Assn., 1890, 1908), pp. 684, 685].
Among the Soulphone aficionados are plenty of heady material persons: Ph.D.s, M.D.s, bestselling authors, and so forth. A leading figure, Gary Schwartz, earned his doctorate from Harvard, where he taught for years, and later at Yale. Some of the foundation staff had children who, tragically, transitioned, which helps explain their involvement with the Soulphone Foundation and their desire to communicate with them.
No doubt, these people are getting messages from the other side, the wrong side (unfortunately). This is spiritualism, a twenty-first century version. Instead of seances its science; instead of Ouija Boards its quantum physics and the zero-point field. The enemy of souls cloaks the same old lie (You will not certainly die [Gen. 3:4]) in the untrammeled authority of science and technology. If, as the Foundation claims, science can show that the dead exist in a post-material form, then why couldnt science create technology that allows us to contact them?
The logic sounds great, except that the dead are now but dust, molecules sprinkled across the earth, and as such know no pain, no fear, no sorrow. The dead know nothing (Eccl. 9:5), which is great for the dead because they close their eyes in death and, in what will seem to them but an instant, many will be resurrected, in flesh and bone, to a new existence. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes. There shall be no more death, or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away (Rev. 21:4).
However sincere, even honest, the Soulphone folk surely are, sincerity and honesty dont change the state of dead. Which means that whomever they contact with their SoulKeyboard,TM SoulVoice,TM or SoulVideo,TM it wont be their transitioned loved ones whoundisturbed by the tumult and rage herepeacefully and quietly rest until Christ comes back. Then the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable. . . . Then the saying that is written will come true: Death has been swallowed up in victory (1 Cor. 15:52-54).
Clifford Goldstein is editor of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide. His latest book, Baptizing the Devil: Evolution and the Seduction of Christianity, is available from Pacific Press.
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10 of the weirdest gaming wiki pages – PC Gamer
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Video games are dense creations. There are thousands of different doodads in Starbound, countless different micro-celebrities in Destiny and Final Fantasy XIV, and entire tomes of background lore in StarCraft, Halo, and The Witcher. The sheer amount of content demanded by games once inspired epic GameFAQs plain text walkthroughs entire megabytes in size. Today the army of dedicated game archivists have moved on to sprawling wikis, ensuring no tiny detail is forgotten. This is a wonderful outlet for any fan. I've lost entire days scrolling through the curated factoids on Wowpedia. I mean, where else am I going to read the pre-retcon history of the Draenei?
That being said, sometimes wiki editors go to truly outlandish lengths to document their favorite games. Sometimes they remember things that no human being was ever meant to recall. Sometimes they're literally forced to define the pendulum of quantum physics because a franchise decided to go down that rabbit hole. Sometimes, like in Disco Elysium, there needs to be a page just called, "Communists."
This list is a tribute to the weirder, funnier side of video game wikis. Where would we be without all these anonymous obsessives, who ensure that no trivia, no matter how broad or ancillary, goes to waste?
Did you know that the man in the pot from Getting Over It has a name? Did you know that his name is Diogenes, of all things? Sure enough, make your way to the Getting Over It wiki and you can read all the biographical details of the sledgehammer guardian. On that page, you can read that Diogenes bears a striking resemblance to Vin Diesel and Vladimir Putin, and that nobody knows how he fits his legs in that pot.
"Diogenes tends to be a silent character throughout the game," reads one passage. "However, when it comes to moments of pulling himself up onto ledges with a lot of force, you can often hear him grunting, and from time to time you can hear him mutter the word, 'No,' when falling."
Thanks for clearing that up!
Kralnor, a level 11 Orc Warlock, made an inscrutable post on the World of Warcraft forums back in the early days of the game's lifespan. "I dont like to stress the fact that the warlock rocks, but he jus does," it reads, in its original syntax. "So, for all you staff users out there, feel free to come in and post, my staff is a good one, but here is how it goes."
1. post message in the room
2. LOOK IT OVER
3. dont report anything, i might get in trouble 🙂
and 4. Have fun!!!
We still have so many questions. Why did staff users need their own dedicated forum thread? Why did Kralnor think he was going to get in trouble? What staff was he using anyway? Should I be offended that I'm more of a sword guy? These questions swirled into a maelstrom on the Warcraft boards until it was finally, mercifully, locked. But the legend of Kralnor remains. He was immortalized by Blizzard in the World of Warcraft Trading Card Game, and therefore his legacy lives on in the universe's corresponding wikia database.
Is there a better distillation for the cantankerous anarchy of Rust than its Wikia page for Raw Human Meat? According to the database, Raw Human Meat provides less regeneration stats than Cooked Human Meat, and it has the chance of giving you food poisoning. Cool! Thanks Rust! I am glad that even in one of the most hellish online player communities in the world, the wiki has the good sense to not recommend eating the flesh of your fellow man.
Look man, corporate cross-promotion might seem harmless at the time, but this is where it leads to. Halo, one of the most protected commodities in the industry, now has an entry on its wiki dedicated to a rancid cherry-citrus soft drink. Why? Because Microsoft had the gall to stick Master Chief on the bottles back in 2007, as hype for Halo 3 reached staggering heights. Mountain Dew is officially part of the Halo canon. This is a hell of your own making, Gates.
Similar to the Mountain Dew, but not quite as egregious: a couple years ago some eagle-eyed Terraria fans dug up an item called "Mysterious Package" from the Terraria inventory. On screen, this "mysterious package" looks conspicuously similar to an Amazon cardboard delivery box (it has the logo and everything!) and on use, the box summons a Prime Delivery drone. The Mysterious Package was never implemented into Terraria, so most fans have concluded that it was meant to serve some sort of Amazon promotional tie-in that never got off the ground.
Still, the idea that the Bezos estate is acknowledged within Terraria wiki makes a lot of sense. This is a game about mastering land, sea, and air until you're so resource-rich you no longer know what to do with yourself. Remind you of anyone?
I know this is PC Gamer, and therefore this isn't the place to wax poetic about ancillary Nintendo characters. But no list of weird video game Wikia entries can be complete without paying homage to Mario's Time Machinea scarcely remembered Super Nintendo game where the Tiny Plumber Who Rides Dinosaurs takes a trip through Actual Human History. In one scene, Mario runs into the revolutionary abolitionist Frederick Douglass, you know, the former slave, for a brief history lesson in the racial justice movement of the 18th century. Because of this, Frederick Douglass is forever a part of the Mario multiverse.
You already know what I'm thinking: PUT FREDERICK IN SMASH.
One of the main advantages of indie game development is that you can put pretty much whatever you want into the product you're making, forcing any customers in your wake to deal with your vision. Case in point: Guppy, the name of the cat that belongs to The Binding of Isaac's creator Edmund McMillan. Isaac can transform into Guppy by collecting the right suite of items, which mandates that Guppy will permanently immortalized in the game's Wiki. When I die, don't bury me, just turn me into a really good buff in a roguelike.
One more weird Nintendo exception. In the early days of the development of Ocarina of Time, Nintendo used assets from Star Fox to test some of the enemies. Those assets were left in the game's code, and with the proper Gameshark finangling, you can absolutely summon a Star Fox-style Arwing in Kokiri Forest. Watch as it scours the skies! Chuck a boomerang at it, if you'd like! The Zelda Wiki, as uncompromising as it often is, is forced to take the Arwing at face value.
"The Arwing relies on a hit-and-run tactic that involves flying toward Link to attack and falling back at great speed. It can fly at varying altitudes and can even venture underwater unhindered. Unlike most enemies encountered in the game, the Arwing has no fade-in routine and will remain active and visible on-screen even when it is very far away from Link."
Good advice for the next time Link finds himself in space.
You can go down this rabbit hole with plenty of other Star Wars properties, but like, just look at the description of the human race on the Knights of the Old Republic wiki. It will seriously start to make you wonder how, exactly, earthlings enforced hegemony over what's supposed to be a galaxy far, far away.
"Since humans are the most common sentient species, they are often considered to be a standard or average to which the biology, psychology, and culture of other species are compared."
Literally, even in the dead of space, human-first nationalism reigns unchecked. I reject this premise entirely. Luke Skywalker is an alien.
Herobrine has no pupils and the default skin. He appears in your Minecraft seeds late at night and haunts you until you uninstall.
None of that is true, but due to Minecraft's extreme popularity and incredibly young fanbase, the legend of "Herobrine" managed to pierce the veil between creepypasta and canon. Because of that, Herobrine is the proud occupant of his very own Minecraft Wiki page, so he may terrorize future generations of builders for years to come.
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