This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through May 14) – Singularity Hub

Posted: May 17, 2022 at 6:42 pm

COMPUTING

IBMs Target: a 4,000-Qubit Processor by 2025Edd Gent | IEEE SpectrumThe first iteration of [IBMs 2020] road map topped out with the [1,121-qubit] Condor processor that is scheduled for release in 2023, but now the company has revealed plans for a 1,386-qubit processor, called Flamingo, to appear in 2024 and for a 4,158-qubit device called Kookaburra to make its debut in 2025.

DeepMinds New AI Can Perform Over 600 tasks, From Playing Games to Controlling RobotsKyle Wiggers | TechCrunchGato is what DeepMind describes as a general-purpose system, a system that can be taught to perform many different types of tasks. Researchers at DeepMind trained Gato to complete 604, to be exact, including captioning images, engaging in dialogue, stacking blocks with a real robot arm and playing Atari games.

These Nanobots Can Swim Around a Wound and Kill BacteriaMax G. Levy | WiredThe team loaded silica nanobots with experimental antibioticsincluding one derived from wasp venomto treat infected wounds on mice. The nanobots, which were dropped onto one end of an infected wound, traveled through the skin to treat the entire areathe first report of nanobots killing bacteria in animals.

Google Says Its New Image Search Features Are Like Ctrl+F for the World Around YouEmma Roth | The VergeWhen explaining the feature, Raghavan used the example of trying to find a nut-free chocolate bar in a supermarket. Youll be able to scan an entire shelf of chocolate bars and then see overlays that provide helpful insights, like reviews about each object. We think Raghavans description of the feature sums this up quite nicely: This is like having a supercharged Ctrl+F for the world around you.i

Clearview AI Settles Suit and Agrees to Limit Sales of Facial Recognition DatabaseRyan Mac and Kashmir Hill | The New York TimesUnder the settlement, which was filed with an Illinois state court, Clearview will not sell its database of what it said were more than 20 billion facial photos to most private individuals and businesses in the country. But the company can largely still sell that database to federal and state agencies.

ESPN+ Debuts McEnroe vs. McEnroe the First-Ever Tennis Match Between a Real Person and Their Virtual AvatarLauren Forristal | TechCrunchIn the match, the real McEnroe will face off against his ultimate opponenthis younger self. The team at Unit 9 spent a day with John in order to bring the vision to life via full-body scanning, motion capture, andUnreal Engine MetaHumantechnology (a cloud-based app that creates photorealistic digital humans). The avatar game system will be projected on a hologram particle screen and will be a simulation of gameplay with a system of ball launchers and ball return robots.

Paradise at the Crypto Arcade: Inside the Web3 RevolutionGilad Edelman | Wiredto a core of true believers, Web3 stands apart from the garish excesses and brazen misbehavior of the flashing-neon crypto casino. If cryptocurrency was originally about decentralizing money, Web3 is about decentralizingeverything. Its mission is almost achingly idealistic: to free humanity not only from Big Tech domination but also from exploitative capitalism itselfand to do it purely through code.

The Man Who Controls Computers With His MindFerris Jabr | New York Times Magazine16 years ago, Dennis DeGray was paralyzed in an accident. Now, implants in his brain allow him some semblance of control. Only a few dozen people on the planet have had neural interfaces embedded in their cortical tissue as part of long-term clinical research. DeGray is now one of the most experienced and dedicated among them. Since that initial trial, he has spent more than 1,800 hours spanning nearly 400 training sessions controlling various forms of technology with his mind.

How Starlink Scrambled to Keep Ukraine OnlineTom Simonite | WiredThe speedy, widespread rollout of Starlink in Ukraine has also been an unplanned experiment in the potential geopolitical power of next-gen satellite internet services. If SpaceX or similar providers are willing, high-speed internet from the sky could be a powerful way to provide connectivity to people or populations suffering the privations of war or authoritarian government.

Black Hole Image Reveals the Beast Inside the Milky Ways HeartJonathan OCallaghan | QuantaThe image immediately reveals new information about the Milky Ways monster. The major things we found out about Sag A* were: Is the black hole spinning? Yes, it is, said Sara Issaoun, an astrophysicist and member of the EHT team. And what is the orientation of the black hole with respect to us? Now we are fairly confident it is pointed more or less face on to us, with the poles pointing up and down, as though we were viewing it from a spot high above its equator.

AIs Threats to Jobs and Human Happiness Are RealEliza Strickland | IEEE SpectrumBut short-term job chaos will give way to long-term prosperity, says AI expert Kai-Fu Lee. IEEE Spectrum spoke to Lee about [his book AI 2041: Ten Visions for Our Future], focusing on the last few chapters that take on the big issues of job displacement, the need for new economic models, and the search for meaning and happiness in an age of abundance. Lee argues that technologists need to give serious thought to such societal impacts, instead of thinking only about the technology.

San Francisco Police Are Using Driverless Cars as Mobile Surveillance CamerasAaron Gordon | MotherboardWhile the companies themselves, such as Alphabets Waymo and General Motors Cruise, tout the potential transportation benefits their services may one day offer, they dont publicize another use case, one that is far less hypothetical: Mobile surveillance cameras for police departments. Autonomous vehicles are recording their surroundings continuously and have the potential to help with investigative leads, says a San Francisco Police department training document obtained by Motherboard via a public records request. Investigations has already done this several times.i

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This Week's Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through May 14) - Singularity Hub

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