Scope_Dog
Scope_Dog t1_je6092y wrote
Reply to comment by iamthewhatt in Former Google engineer predicts humans will achieve immortality within eight years by dustofoblivion123
why not? they have cured other illnesses by editing DNA. Immortality just seems like the beginning to me.
Scope_Dog t1_jc825ro wrote
These things really make me consider that it could be us from the future or some other trans-dementional beings.
Scope_Dog t1_jae5jps wrote
Reply to comment by Quiet_Dimensions in New medical device can detect and analyze cancer cells from blood samples, allowing doctors to avoid invasive biopsy surgeries, and to monitor treatment progress. by chrisdh79
I think they said it detects the waste from certain cells to identify the cancer.
Scope_Dog t1_ja8wudm wrote
Reply to comment by UniversalMomentum in Limitless Possibilities – AI Technology Generates Original Proteins From Scratch by CelebrationDirect209
Agree %100. We don't need AI with original thoughts and (gasp) feelings. That's a recipe for disaster. AI should serve people not replace them .
Scope_Dog t1_j9uv2m5 wrote
Hmm, I pictured 4 robots holding lazer guns. Pew Pew! Got it!
Scope_Dog t1_j9uu8bv wrote
Reply to What happens to the education system when AI answers our thoughts on demand? by Workerhard62
We'll all sit around quoting Shakespeare and Dostoevsky like in Ghost in the Shell 2.
Scope_Dog t1_j5pqy91 wrote
So can this thing shoot down rockets and missiles? or does it just interfere with them?
Scope_Dog t1_j5fvd88 wrote
Reply to Carbon capture nets 2 billion tonnes of CO2 each year — but it's not enough. As well as cutting emissions, governments need to ramp up investment in carbon dioxide removal technologies to hit climate goals. by filosoful
So we just need to cut emissions by 38 billion tons annually. You’re welcome.
Scope_Dog t1_j56fajo wrote
Reply to comment by Internauta29 in Watch Boston Dynamics' Atlas humanoid work at a 'construction site' - The Robot Report by Gari_305
Well, when you consider how much it costs to put a single live human into space to do work, and keep him alive, etc. it is much much cheaper to send an army of these things.
Scope_Dog t1_j4wi5lo wrote
Reply to Energy Teleportation and Negative Energy Observed in Quantum Research Breakthrough by Gari_305
I'm not a scientist but isn't this how Flynn got sucked into the grid?
Scope_Dog t1_j4whgkq wrote
Reply to Watch Boston Dynamics' Atlas humanoid work at a 'construction site' - The Robot Report by Gari_305
I live for this shit. Can't wait for the revolution. These things are going to build entire cities in space.
Scope_Dog t1_j3noqhn wrote
Reply to comment by Zakku_Rakusihi in A Singular Trajectory: the Signs of AGI by mjrossman
Love that attitude. Here we go!
Scope_Dog t1_izfeavi wrote
Reply to Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott: “2023 is going to be the most exciting year that the AI community has ever had” by ThePlanckDiver
Bring on the machine apocalypse! Anything is better than listening to shit about Donald Trump and MAGA dumb asses day after day.
Scope_Dog t1_iwwsstf wrote
Reply to ‘Full-on robot writing’: the artificial intelligence challenge facing universities | Australian universities by Gari_305
Best way to solve that, have students supplement their papers with a verbal presentation complete with visual aids.
Scope_Dog t1_iwwsj60 wrote
Reply to comment by Doug_Muler42497 in US can reach 100% clean power by 2035, DOE finds, but tough reliability and land use questions lie ahead by nastratin
Very promising stuff going on with geothermal! Just hoping those fancy new drills pan out.
Scope_Dog t1_iwws88c wrote
Reply to US can reach 100% clean power by 2035, DOE finds, but tough reliability and land use questions lie ahead by nastratin
2035 has been my guess for a while now, based on all we’ve seen with regard to the pace renewables are being deployed as well as the falling prices. Battery tech is well on its way as well.
Scope_Dog t1_ivgc5wt wrote
Reply to Humanoid robots could generate $154 billion in revenue over next 15 years, Goldman Sachs reports by Gari_305
I remember 10 years ago when Meta bought up a dozen of the biggest robotics companies. We all thought the robot revolution was about to happen. They ended up just selling them all or folding them because nobody had a marketable product.
Scope_Dog t1_iv294r8 wrote
Reply to comment by Brice706 in Destruction Democratised: Will AI, Synthetic Biology and Quantum Computing threaten the current world order? by CPHfuturesstudies
I don't know if you've looked out the window, but the communists aren't doing so well at the moment.
Scope_Dog t1_iunzmrc wrote
Reply to comment by CreamFilledLlama in BMW & Its Robots Are Going To Take Your Forklift Cert Away. Good Luck Having A Date Again, Ever. by Gari_305
Cool vid. Thanks!
Scope_Dog t1_iu5dmc6 wrote
I'll just point out that none of these projections factor in any type of carbon removal. When we are fully converted to renewable energy, there will be vast amounts of excess unused power to go to things like carbon removal and desalination. These projections also don't account for the exponential (or at least non-linear) advancement of renewable energy tech such as batteries, etc.
Scope_Dog t1_isu0w1a wrote
Reply to As middle-mile autonomous robotic delivery finally arrives, both Amazon and FedEx are shutting down their last mile robot delivery initiatives. by lughnasadh
Aw, a bit of sad news for robot enthusiasts. Hopefully work on Digit continues. (The bipedal delivery robot.)
Scope_Dog t1_is1th5z wrote
ok, I feel like this is a big deal. Is this a big deal? How is this not a magic bullet?
Scope_Dog t1_is1sg8m wrote
Reply to comment by Poochydawg in China’s Electric Trucks May Well Pull Forward Peak Oil Demand by PeteWenzel
Hmm, does making plastic and other things out of petroleum put C02 into the air or is it just when it is burned?
Scope_Dog t1_is1s89o wrote
Reply to comment by Still_Study_6059 in China’s Electric Trucks May Well Pull Forward Peak Oil Demand by PeteWenzel
These European countries knew it was a terrible idea to be reliant on Russian gas and oil they just chose to shrug their shoulders and move on.
Scope_Dog t1_jefp2hs wrote
Reply to In a post-scarcity utopia, is there a real necessity of human labor of any kind? by kvothekevin
yes, even in a world where every possible need is met by technology, you still need people to direct that power. You still need city planning, fashion design, product development, landscape design, etc. not to mention long term goals like expansion into space. This requires people to make educated decisions, and directing that labor toward desirable outcomes.