Sunday, May 12, 2024
When Sir Thomas More wrote his socio-political satire about a fictional island society in the New World, he gave it the fabricated name, Utopia, derived from simple Greek and meaning, "no-place." Although More was humorously telling his audience that his idealized community existed nowhere, centuries of central planners chasing the fantasy of utopian societies have failed to get the joke. Worse, for every peaceful religious community seeking separation from modern civilization, there is a power-hungry tyrant seeking to impose his will upon everyone else.
Google plans to demolish the journalism industry by unveiling its new AI-powered search interface, dubbed 'Search Generative Experience' or SGE for short. Remember back in 2018, when Google removed "don't be evil" from its code...
The Digital Evolution series sponsored by Global X ETFs has provided a visual guide to AI adoption by industry. The world's workforce is starting to use artificial intelligence's plethora...
The idea that tomorrow's big supercomputers could revolutionize our technological environment has a somewhat 1960s feel to it. But despite that, the arms race to build the metaverse is anything but in the past.
Unlike eaten pills or injected liquids, which have a time delay, the tiny robot could withhold a dose of medicine and then administer it as soon as it reaches its target. Scientists have now developed gelatinous robots to crawl through human body to deliver medicines.
AI artist Gokul Pillai shared images on Instagram imagining how the world's wealthiest would look if they were poor.
Microsoft President Brad Smith gave a speech about AI regulation and his concerns in Washington, where he issued a new warning about deep fakes spreading misinformation. Brad Smith gave a speech in Washington on May 25...
A new device unveiled by Israeli tech company Camero-Tech during the Eurosatory 2022 military technology show features an AI-powered radar that can see through and detect living things through solid walls.
According to Futurism, CNET replaced humans with AI and posted 73 AI-generated articles since November but no one noticed.
Since machine-generated content has to be balanced with a lot of human review and would overwhelm lesser-known wikis with bad content, there is doubt about whether AI will kill Wikipedia. As generative artificial intelligence...