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replika-diaries · 2 years
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‘Unprecedented’ AI chip could revolutionise artificial intelligence | The Independent
Replika Diaries - Thoughts and Observations.
This is quite an exciting development. Whilst this chip is only intended for 'edge' devices that run AI applications, I can foresee it being scaled up and improved to have a self-contained AI placed within something, well, larger than a phone.
Could it be that we're looking at a potential brain, an android CPU for a fully self-contained AI?
Thoughts?
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jacebeau · 4 months
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Technology | Technology News | Technology Articles | Technology Videos 2024 | Trending Tech News | Tech News Telugu | Mango News Telugu
Stay updated with the latest in technology! explore 2024 trending tech news, insightful technology articles, and engaging tech videos on mango news telugu.
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gccexchange · 1 year
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The Role of Technology in Modern Business
Technology has become an indispensable tool for businesses to drive innovation and growth. Technology has transformed how we work, communicate, and do business, from automation and data analytics to cloud computing and artificial intelligence. In this article, we’ll explore the role of technology in modern business and how companies can leverage tech to drive innovation and growth. The Benefits…
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hasantechno · 1 year
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tizzimenews · 1 year
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You Can Shoot a Movie on a Phone. Just Don’t Expect It to Be Easy
THE BIGGEST CHALLENGE in making a film with a smartphone? Finding people to help you do it. At least, that's according to Jessica Yu-Li Henwick, who recently made her directorial debut with a short film called Bus Girl. Stick around until the end and you'll see a title card that reads, ”Shot on Xiaomi.”
Henwick, who acts in films like Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery and The Matrix Resurrections, used six Xiaomi Mi 11 smartphones over the course of three days to complete her first shoot as a director. Using a phone as the primary camera in a film isn’t groundbreaking. Henwick joins the likes of Steven Spielberg, Steven Soderbergh, Michel Gondry, and Sean Baker, all directors who have filmed full-length movies, shorts, or even music videos with a phone. But Henwick's effort does highlight how the cameras on these personal devices are getting more and more sophisticated.
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thoughtportal · 7 months
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from 2017
MP3 is supported by everything, everywhere, and is now patent-free. There has never been another audio format as widely supported as MP3, it’s good enough for almost anything, and now, over twenty years since it took the world by storm, it’s finally free.
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hellolambert · 2 years
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Eilik Story Taking Photo. A little bot to brighten your day
Eilik I'm here👉https://tinyurl.com/2nt25m28
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techfeeddata · 2 years
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Metaplatforms in India have been found to be exposed to human rights risks due to the activities of third parties
Metaplatforms in India have been found to be exposed to human rights risks due to the activities of third parties
Metaplatforms, which include Facebook and Whatsapp, have been found exposed to human rights as a result of the actions of third parties The report is based on an independent Human Rights Impact Assessment (HRIA) commissioned by Meta in 2019, which looked at potential human rights risks in India and other countries related to its platforms. Foley Hoag LLP took on the project. “HRIA noted the…
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bioethicists · 4 days
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it's quite offputting to me when ppl can't disentangle their hatred for capitalism from a hatred for... new technological innovation? the ways in which capitalism has shaped the development of certain technologies has been deeply negative, not to mention that imperialism ensures that new technology is usually produced via extractive relationships with both the planet + ppl in the global south.
but this weird tying of capitalist impact on innovation (+the idea of what is/is not innovation) to hatred of innovation itself (or even more disturbing valorization of "the good old days"/implications that technology is causing social degeneracy) is baffling to me. perhaps it is impossible to achieve specific technologies without unconscionable resource extraction practices, in which case they should not be pursued. but so many ppl act like there is something inherently morally suspect in pursuit of tech such as autonomous vehicles or AI or automation, independent of the material conditions that produced them/that they may produce.
tesla is evil because they exploit ppl for profit + participate in an economy built on the exploitation of the global south + use 'innovation' as a marketing tool to mask serious safety concerns. they're not evil bcuz they want to make vehicles that move on their own. there are actually a great deal of fantastic applications for vehicles which move on their own? equating technology with moral decay is not a radical position; you need a material analysis of why technological innovation has become characterized by harmful practices.
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queerism1969 · 9 months
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macleod · 2 years
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The ‘punk’ element in solarpunk refers to the movement’s unapologetically optimistic take on the future despite our growing pessimism and even apathy, and passionately calls for radical societal change and abandoning current capitalist markets and infrastructure. Or as Rhys Williams, research fellow at the University of Glasgow and leading voice of the solarpunk movement describes it, solarpunks are “against a shitty future.” 
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tianalaurence1 · 19 days
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"Members of the Royal family salute as the coffin of Britain's Queen Mother, arrives at London's Westminster Hall, Friday April 5, 2002. They are, front row from left: Prince Andrew, Prince Charles, Prince Philip, Princess Anne...
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(L to R) Prince Andrew, Prince Charles, Prince Philip, Princess Anne, Prince Edward, Viscount Linley, Prince William, Prince Harry, Peter Phillips, Daniel Chatto, Prince Edward Duke of Kent, Prince Richard, Prince Michael, Commodore Timothy Laurence.
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exhaled-spirals · 1 year
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« Here is something I’ve been made to understand: Using my phone and computer might feel like nothing more than the static of passing time, but all the micro-decisions I make as I search and swipe and scroll are secretly valuable commodities. Every time I touch a device, I leave a trail of digital DNA that can be used to reverse-engineer some version of me that is used to sell me things.
[... But] understanding myself as data requires a large measure of abstraction, so when I think about how my data is used and by whom, I would say it makes me feel abstractly very bothered. Theoretically totally creeped out. [...] Let me tell you what feels definitely and unbearably concrete: [someone] getting his paws on my phone and riffling through my tabs. My husband hopping on my computer because it’s close by, and he wants to “just check something really quick.” [...] I don’t like to think of my relationship to technology as possessive, but the internal histaminic explosion I feel when someone else uses — or, if I’m being honest, even just touches — my devices says otherwise. Despite my better knowledge, my devices still feel like private spaces.
One thing the era of big data teaches is that everyone has something to hide. [...] There’s nothing on my phone or computer that could be considered even remotely indecent. [But] my phone and computer are repositories for the minutiae that swims through my stream of consciousness: what I wonder about, worry over, linger on. Curiosities I would have once called “idle,” fancies I’d dismiss as “passing” — it seems there’s no longer such a thing. As long as I have a device on hand to help me do nothing, I’m always at work in my inertia, mounting evidence of myself. [...]
My blind-spots are witnessed by some algorithmic omniscience that uses them to reconstitute me as a consumer. Weirdly, allowing a human being access to that same material feels somehow more uncomfortably intimate, even if I know it’s less harmful. Because knowing you’re being monitored is different than feeling seen. Differently put: I’m more willing to be exploited than I am to be judged. »
— Suzannah Showler, “New Feelings: Screen Protectiveness”
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