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Study: Deactivating your Facebook account is good for your mental healthIf you spend enough time online, you have probab...
04/02/2019

Study: Deactivating your Facebook account is good for your mental health

If you spend enough time online, you have probably heard rumblings that social media, and checking your phone as much 28 times a day, may be bad for your mental health. It can promote anxiety, lower self-esteem, amp up the FOMO, ruin our sleep patterns and attention spans, and make us unhappy, unhealthy, and depressed.

Now a new study, one that meets the gold standard in scientific assessment, suggests that quitting Facebook is absolutely good for your mental health.

The study comes from researchers at Stanford University and New York University, who recruited 2,844 Facebook users via Facebook ads (natch) and asked them to fill out extensive questionnaires about their overall well-being, political views, and daily routine. Half of the users were then randomly assigned to be paid to deactivate their Facebook account for four weeks. Because social media is so addictive, researchers had to regularly check that their Facebook accounts remained deactivated. Over the course of the month, they assessed the participants’ moods.

“Deactivation caused small but significant improvements in well-being, and in particular on self-reported happiness, life satisfaction, depression, and anxiety,” the authors wrote. “Effects on subjective well-being as measured by responses to brief daily text messages are positive but not significant.”

Researchers concluded that not using Facebook also reduced overall online activity, including other social media use, and increased IRL activity like watching television Netflix and hanging out with friends and family. The users whose accounts were deactivated also had lower levels of political polarization and news knowledge, and an increase in subjective well-being. Even after their accounts were reactivated, those who had a one-month hiatus ended up spending less time on Facebook for several weeks after the experiment ended.

In short, go ahead and deactivate Facebook even if it’s just for a few weeks. It really could improve your mental health.
https://www.fastcompany.com/90300084/study-deactivating-your-facebook-account-is-good-for-your-mental-health

Rotating black holes may serve as gentle portals for hyperspace travelOne of the most cherished science fiction scenario...
17/01/2019

Rotating black holes may serve as gentle portals for hyperspace travel

One of the most cherished science fiction scenarios is using a black hole as a portal to another dimension or time or universe. That fantasy may be closer to reality than previously imagined.

Black holes are perhaps the most mysterious objects in the universe. They are the consequence of gravity crushing a dying star without limit, leading to the formation of a true singularity – which happens when an entire star gets compressed down to a single point yielding an object with infinite density. This dense and hot singularity punches a hole in the fabric of spacetime itself, possibly opening up an opportunity for hyperspace travel. That is, a short cut through spacetime allowing for travel over cosmic scale distances in a short period.

Researchers previously thought that any spacecraft attempting to use a black hole as a portal of this type would have to reckon with nature at its worst. The hot and dense singularity would cause the spacecraft to endure a sequence of increasingly uncomfortable tidal stretching and squeezing before being completely vaporized.

Flying through a black hole
My team at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and a colleague at Georgia Gwinnett College have shown that all black holes are not created equal. If the black hole like Sagittarius A*, located at the center of our own galaxy, is large and rotating, then the outlook for a spacecraft changes dramatically. That’s because the singularity that a spacecraft would have to contend with is very gentle and could allow for a very peaceful passage.

The reason that this is possible is that the relevant singularity inside a rotating black hole is technically “weak,” and thus does not damage objects that interact with it. At first, this fact may seem counter intuitive. But one can think of it as analogous to the common experience of quickly passing one’s finger through a candle’s near 2,000-degree flame, without getting burned.

My colleague Lior Burko and I have been investigating the physics of black holes for over two decades. In 2016, my Ph.D. student, Caroline Mallary, inspired by Christopher Nolan’s blockbuster film “Interstellar,” set out to test if Cooper (Matthew McConaughey’s character), could survive his fall deep into Gargantua – a fictional, supermassive, rapidly rotating black hole some 100 million times the mass of our sun. “Interstellar” was based on a book written by Nobel Prize-winning astrophysicist Kip Thorne and Gargantua’s physical properties are central to the plot of this Hollywood movie.

Building on work done by physicist Amos Ori two decades prior, and armed with her strong computational skills, Mallary built a computer model that would capture most of the essential physical effects on a spacecraft, or any large object, falling into a large, rotating black hole like Sagittarius A*.

Not even a bumpy ride?
What she discovered is that under all conditions an object falling into a rotating black hole would not experience infinitely large effects upon passage through the hole’s so-called inner horizon singularity. This is the singularity that an object entering a rotating black hole cannot maneuver around or avoid. Not only that, under the right circumstances, these effects may be negligibly small, allowing for a rather comfortable passage through the singularity. In fact, there may no noticeable effects on the falling object at all. This increases the feasibility of using large, rotating black holes as portals for hyperspace travel.

Mallary also discovered a feature that was not fully appreciated before: the fact that the effects of the singularity in the context of a rotating black hole would result in rapidly increasing cycles of stretching and squeezing on the spacecraft. But for very large black holes like Gargantua, the strength of this effect would be very small. So, the spacecraft and any individuals on board would not detect it.

This graph depicts the physical strain on the spacecraft’s steel frame as it plummets into a rotating black hole. The inset shows a detailed zoom-in for very late times. The important thing to note is that the strain increases dramatically close to the black hole, but does not grow indefinitely. Therefore, the spacecraft and its inhabitants may survive the journey. Khanna/UMassD
The crucial point is that these effects do not increase without bound; in fact, they stay finite, even though the stresses on the spacecraft tend to grow indefinitely as it approaches the black hole.

There are a few important simplifying assumptions and resulting caveats in the context of Mallary’s model. The main assumption is that the black hole under consideration is completely isolated and thus not subject to constant disturbances by a source such as another star in its vicinity or even any falling radiation. While this assumption allows important simplifications, it is worth noting that most black holes are surrounded by cosmic material – dust, gas, radiation.

Therefore, a natural extension of Mallary’s work would be to perform a similar study in the context of a more realistic astrophysical black hole.

Mallary’s approach of using a computer simulation to examine the effects of a black hole on an object is very common in the field of black hole physics. Needless to say, we do not have the capability of performing real experiments in or near black holes yet, so scientists resort to theory and simulations to develop an understanding, by making predictions and new discoveries.

Author
Gaurav Khanna
Professor of Physics, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

https://theconversation.com/rotating-black-holes-may-serve-as-gentle-portals-for-hyperspace-travel-107062

Honda, CalTech and NASA's JPL might have a real alternative to Li-ion batteriesThe new battery chemistry is based on flu...
20/12/2018

Honda, CalTech and NASA's JPL might have a real alternative to Li-ion batteries

The new battery chemistry is based on fluoride and would have greater energy density while being less environmentally damaging than current lithium-ion technology.

The Honda Research Institute has been working with scientists from California Institute of Technology (CalTech) and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory on new battery chemistry that could present a more energy-dense and environmentally-friendly alternative to lithium-ion batteries, according to a paper published on Friday in Science Magazine.

Right now the world's electric cars are -- with a few exceptions -- powered by lithium-ion batteries. Lithium-ion has a lot of benefits over older battery chemistries like nickel metal-hydride, thanks to its more favorable charge and discharge rates and the fact that it's less likely to develop a "memory" if not consistently fully discharged before it's recharged.

Lithium-ion batteries also have a few significant downsides, namely the damage to the environment that occurs when lithium and cobalt are mined and the cells' propensity for catching on fire and being very difficult to extinguish once they do. The fluoride-based battery chemistry being developed by Honda, NASA and CalTech would alleviate many of these issues.

One of the most exciting benefits of fluoride chemistry is its potential to be much more energy dense than lithium. This would mean that an electric car equipped with this new battery technology could go further on a pack of the same physical size or the same distance with a physically much smaller battery pack.

Fluoride-ion battery technology isn't entirely new, but previous versions of it required its solid-state electrolyte to be heated to as much as 300 degrees Fahrenheit to function properly. The advances from Honda, JPL and CalTech are the creation of a room-temperature liquid fluoride electrolyte (aka a tetraalkylammonium salt–fluorinated ether combination) and copper–lanthanum trifluoride core-shell cathode (also a new development) that work together to make a function cell. Teamwork, as they say, makes the dream work.

This is all pretty cool, and very exciting, but don't expect to see the next Honda Insight rocking fluoride-ion batteries. The technology is promising but likely quite a ways away from being ready for mass production.
BY
KYLE HYATT
DECEMBER 8, 2018 8:59 AM PST

Taylor Swift used facial recognition to track her stalkers at a concertSecurity for Taylor Swift at California’s Rose Bo...
20/12/2018

Taylor Swift used facial recognition to track her stalkers at a concert

Security for Taylor Swift at California’s Rose Bowl in May 2018 included a facial recognition system monitored from almost 2,000 miles away.

A kiosk set up to show highlights of the singer’s rehearsals secretly recorded the faces of onlookers, which were sent to a “command post” in Nashville, Tennessee that attempted to match those images to hundreds of images of known Taylor Swift stalkers, according to Rolling Stone.

“Everybody who went by would stop and stare at it, and the software would start working,” Mike Downing, chief security officer at live entertainment security company Oak View Group, who personally attended the event, said. Oak View Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It’s unknown whether the footage was kept, or if it even identified any real stalkers—and if it did, what happened after they were identified.

But concert venues are typically private locations, meaning even after security checkpoints, its owners can subject concert-goers to any kind of surveillance they want, including facial recognition.

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By Dave GershgornDecember 12, 2018

How Google Challenged Coders to Make AI More Culturally AwareThe Inclusive Images Competition's winners made progress ag...
07/12/2018

How Google Challenged Coders to Make AI More Culturally Aware
The Inclusive Images Competition's winners made progress against algorithmic bias.

Ethical AI
By now, it should surprise no one to hear that artificial intelligence has a bias problem. People program their societal prejudices into algorithms all the time, often without meaning to. For instance, most image-recognition algorithms correctly identify women in flowing white dresses as “brides” but fail to do so for Indian women wearing wedding saris.

To solve that problem, Google created an open challenge called the Inclusive Images Competition. The goal of the contest, the MIT Technology Review reports, is to develop data sets and algorithms that result in AI that recognizes more diverse people and customs.

Deep Unlearning
Three months ago, competing teams set out to train image-detection algorithms to be more culturally inclusive, both by using more thoughtful labels on the photos used during training and by improving the algorithms themselves.

These new algorithms were then put through a stress test of photos sent from volunteers around the world. Those that accurately labeled the new photos — for instance, identifying a woman in the process of getting married as a “bride” instead of the vague, less-helpful default label of “person” earned more points according to Google’s metrics.

Dan RobitzskiDecember 3rd 2018

continue reading https://futurism.com/google-eradicate-racist-ai/

NVIDIA's new AI turns videos of the real world into virtual landscapesAttendees of this year's NeurIPS AI conference in ...
07/12/2018

NVIDIA's new AI turns videos of the real world into virtual landscapes

Attendees of this year's NeurIPS AI conference in Montreal can spend a few moments driving through a virtual city, courtesy of NVIDIA. While that normally wouldn't be much to get worked up over, the simulation is fascinating because of what made it possible. With the help of some clever machine learning techniques and a handy supercomputer, NVIDIA has cooked up a way for AI to chew on existing videos and use the objects and scenery found within them to build interactive environments.

NVIDIA's research here isn't just a significant technical achievement; it also stands to make it easier for artists and developers to craft lifelike virtual worlds. Instead of having to meticulously design objects and people to fill a space polygon by polygon, they can use existing machine learning tools to roughly define those entities and let NVIDIA's neural network fill in the rest.

"Neural networks — specifically generative models — will change how graphics are created," Bryan Catanzano, NVIDIA's vice president of applied deep learning, said in a statement. "This will enable developers, particularly in gaming and automotive, to create scenes at a fraction of the traditional cost."

Here's how it works. Catanzano told reporters that researchers trained the fledgling neural model with dashcam videos taken from self-driving car trials in cities for about a week on one of the company's DGX-1 supercomputers. (NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang once called the DGX-1 the equivalent of "250 servers in a box," so pulling off a similar feat at home seems all but impossible.)
(continue to read) https://www.engadget.com/2018/12/03/nvidia-ai-video-to-video-synthesis/

Chris Velazco,
12.03.18 in AV

25 Dying Professions You Should Avoidy Dave Copeland on August 9, 2018John Pugliano, author of “The Robots are Coming: A...
02/12/2018

25 Dying Professions You Should Avoid

y Dave Copeland on August 9, 2018

John Pugliano, author of “The Robots are Coming: A Human's Survival Guide to Profiting in the Age of Automation,” sees plenty of white collar jobs that will be threatened by automation.

"Bottom line, any routine job that can easily be defined by a mathematical or logic equation will be at risk," Pugliano said. "Opportunity will be [there] for those that can create new produces/services or solve/fix unexpected problems."

So your accountant may not have a job in the future, but plastic surgeons and emergency room doctors should do well. And plumbers, Pugliano said, will always have work.

Pugliano and other experts contacted by Work + Money offered professions to avoid (not because they will completely disappear, but because the job market will likely be in a state of decline) while also providing alternatives where skills utilized in those dying professions can be applied for a more secure employment future.

- Travel Agent:
Thanks to online travel booking sites, everyone is their own personal travel agent these days. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) projects that the number of travel agents will decline by 12 percent over the next ten years.

There is, however, an alternative career on the rise. The Occupational Outlook Handbook predicts an increase in the need for people who are experts in specific destinations or particular types of travelers. That could include corporate, luxury, study abroad or travelers over 55.

- Mortgage Brokers:
The number of traditional mortgage brokers dropped by 80 percent during the Great Recession, and for those who were able to keep their jobs, average salaries dropped by 30 percent. And the profession hasn’t really recovered, thanks to online brokers like Rocket Mortgage and Guaranteed Rate that make getting an online quote quick, according to Timothy G. Wiedman, a retired professor of management and human resources at Doane University in Nebraska.

Add in that Millennials, the home buyers of the future, have grown up doing everything online, and the outlook for mortgage brokers looks bleak at best.

"However, many of the numeric and financial skills possessed by folks who might be attracted to that profession could be utilized elsewhere in the financial services industry," Wiedman said. "So, by earning different professional credentials, those folks won't starve."
Read more:

AI system focused on finding overlooked links in millions of scientific studiesA new AI system is designed to help scien...
02/12/2018

AI system focused on finding overlooked links in millions of scientific studies

A new AI system is designed to help scientists find previously undiscovered connections in the mass of already published research(Credit: phonlamai/Depositphotos)

In the age of big data we often seem to be drowning in a constant torrent of research and information. The massive challenge we now face is how to sort through all the work that has been produced. In an exciting collaboration between computer scientists and cancer researchers at the University of Cambridge, a novel AI system has been developed to help sort through millions of scientific studies and help researchers uncover previously missed connections.

Science, by its very nature, is a piecemeal process. Each tiny new discovery or development adds to our greater body of knowledge, but we are now reaching a point where there is such a giant volume of data available on every research topic, no single human mind can reasonably wade through it.

"As a cancer researcher, even if you knew what you were looking for, there are literally thousands of papers appearing every day," says Anna Korhonen, one of the developers of the new AI system.

Called LION LBD, the system is initially focusing on cancer research due to the broad volume of research on the topic spanning a number of different scientific fields. The system incorporates machine learning, natural language processing (NLP) and text mining methods modeled on a technique called literature-based discovery (LBD).

https://newatlas.com/ai-cancer-algorithm-research-cambridge/57434/

US Army soldiers will soon wear Microsoft’s HoloLens AR goggles in combatMicrosoft has won a $480 million deal to supply...
29/11/2018

US Army soldiers will soon wear Microsoft’s HoloLens AR goggles in combat
Microsoft has won a $480 million deal to supply more than 100,000 augmented-reality HoloLens headsets to the US Army, Bloomberg reports.

Uses? The Army plans to use the headsets for combat missions as well as training. The technology will be adapted to incorporate night vision and thermal sensing, offer hearing protection, monitor for concussion, and measure vital signs like breathing and “readiness.” AR firm MagicLeap also bid for the contract, according to Bloomberg.

A first: HoloLens is used for training by the US and Israeli military already, but this would be the first time it’s been used for live combat. It’s another example of how AR is being adopted far more enthusiastically by organizations than consumers.

Tensions: The deal is more good news for Microsoft, which overtook Apple as the world’s most valuable company yesterday. However, there could be pushback against this contract—and it’s as likely to come from Microsoft employees themselves as from external groups. The relationship between the technology sector and the US military has become fraught over the past year, with employees at Amazon, Google, and Microsoft protesting their companies’ bids for government contracts. The solution? Move uneasy staff members to other projects, Microsoft president Brad Smith said last month.

https://www.technologyreview.com/the-download/612490/us-army-soldiers-will-soon-wear-microsofts-hololens-ar-goggles-in-combat/

4 Ways Your Business Can Benefit From Having a Mobile AppThey’re in all of our pockets now, aren’t they?I’m talking, of ...
29/11/2018

4 Ways Your Business Can Benefit From Having a Mobile App

They’re in all of our pockets now, aren’t they?

I’m talking, of course, about mobile devices. And the core functionality of those devices (other than making phone calls, I’ve been told) is to run a whole host of applications that serve nearly every imaginable purpose.

Businesses from all corners of the world, offering a ridiculous range of products, have begun migrating from the physical world of handing out leaflets, printing advertisements, and hanging billboards, to the mobile realm. And you should too.

Now, I know what you might be thinking:

Our business doesn’t need a mobile app to sell products to our loyal customers!

And maybe that’s been the case in the past. But if you want to prepare for the future and start seeing the massive benefits right out the gate, you’ll need a mobile app.

Not so easily convinced? Then here are 4 ways (and then some) that your business will reap the benefits of creating a mobile app for your customers.

1. Provide More Value to Your Customers
Business is all about reciprocation. You offer a product, the market opens their wallets with their demand, right?

Maybe you’ve sat down with your employees and tried to nail down the best way to encourage more of this wallet-opening engagement from your customers. You want to increase their interaction with your business to promote sales, of course, but you also want to provide a level of value for your customers that they can’t get anywhere else.

One way to do this is create a loyalty program within your app. It would work like this:

The more customers interact with your business and product, the more points they collect, which can in turn be used for great deals on the products they already know they want.

Starbucks uses their mobile app to their advantage by offering rewards exclusively to app subscribers, which then motivates customers to buy coffee (And other delicious snacks) from them. They’re even more ahead of the curve by allowing their users to pay directly from the app, speeding up the whole transaction process.

https://buildfire.com/ways-business-benefit-having-mobile-app/

Companies fed up with crappy Wi-Fi are deploying 5G insteadAutomakers, oil companies, and shipping ports plan to build p...
29/11/2018

Companies fed up with crappy Wi-Fi are deploying 5G instead
Automakers, oil companies, and shipping ports plan to build private 5G networks for faster, more reliable connectivity.
by Elizabeth Woyke November 28, 2018

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