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Hasan Piker Will Never Run for Office
The Twitch streamer could pivot from influencer to candidate. But he tells WIRED's podcast he'd rather use his platform to tell Dems "you can't podcast your way out of this problem." Hasan Piker is many things to many people. They don't all feel the same way about Piker or his politics, but most presumably agree on one thing: He is a relentless human being. Most days a week, you can find the 34-year-old Twitch streamer talking to his audience, often for six to nine hours at a stretch. And during President Trump's second term, there's plenty of that to go around. He has nearly 3 million followers on Twitch and has hosted conversations with Senator Bernie Sanders and US representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. He claims his election night stream in 2024 reached a staggering 7.5 million viewers. On this episode of, I talked to Piker about his looks, his love of Italian sandwiches, and any future political aspirations he might (or might not) want to tease. It's great to be here. I heard you were just at the gym. Yeah, I was at the park. Some days I take my dog and I play a little bit of basketball and get to hang out with some people.
Megan McArthur, first woman to pilot SpaceX Dragon, retires from NASA after more than two decades
Things to Do in L.A. Tap to enable a layout that focuses on the article. The first woman to pilot a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft and the last to "touch" the Hubble space telescope retired after more than two decades with NASA Some explorers have focused on alpine heights. Megan McArthur is one of the elite few who can say she's piloted both submarines and spacecraft, exploring expanses from the ocean floor to low Earth orbit, looking down on the planet from 250 miles above. Now McArthur, 54, is retiring from NASA, where she has served for more than two decades as an astronaut and senior leader at the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Houston. Emily Carney, a space historian, described McArthur as a pioneer, one of the first 100 women to fly in space, and someone with a "magnificent career."
Help! My therapist is secretly using ChatGPT
Help! My therapist is secretly using ChatGPT Some patients have discovered their private confessions are being quietly fed into AI. In Silicon Valley's imagined future, AI models are so empathetic that we'll use them as therapists. They'll provide mental-health care for millions, unimpeded by the pesky requirements for human counselors, like the need for graduate degrees, malpractice insurance, and sleep. Down here on Earth, something very different has been happening. Last week, we published a story about people finding out that their therapists were secretly using ChatGPT during sessions. In some cases it wasn't subtle; one therapist accidentally shared his screen during a virtual appointment, allowing the patient to see his own private thoughts being typed into ChatGPT in real time.
Online dating murder suspect lured men into brutal robberies, L.A. County prosecutors allege
Things to Do in L.A. Tap to enable a layout that focuses on the article. Online dating murder suspect lured men into brutal robberies, L.A. County prosecutors allege Rockim Prowell allegedly met his victims online. Above, a person uses a cellphone. Rockim Prowell, 44, fis accused of murder, attempted murder, carjacking and burglary. Prosecutors allege Prowell lured robbery victims using a dating site.
ARIES: Relation Assessment and Model Recommendation for Deep Time Series Forecasting
Wang, Fei, Li, Yujie, Shao, Zezhi, Yu, Chengqing, Fu, Yisong, An, Zhulin, Xu, Yongjun, Cheng, Xueqi
Recent advancements in deep learning models for time series forecasting have been significant. These models often leverage fundamental time series properties such as seasonality and non-stationarity, which may suggest an intrinsic link between model performance and data properties. However, existing benchmark datasets fail to offer diverse and well-defined temporal patterns, restricting the systematic evaluation of such connections. Additionally, there is no effective model recommendation approach, leading to high time and cost expenditures when testing different architectures across different downstream applications. For those reasons, we propose ARIES, a framework for assessing relation between time series properties and modeling strategies, and for recommending deep forcasting models for realistic time series. First, we construct a synthetic dataset with multiple distinct patterns, and design a comprehensive system to compute the properties of time series. Next, we conduct an extensive benchmarking of over 50 forecasting models, and establish the relationship between time series properties and modeling strategies. Our experimental results reveal a clear correlation. Based on these findings, we propose the first deep forecasting model recommender, capable of providing interpretable suggestions for real-world time series. In summary, ARIES is the first study to establish the relations between the properties of time series data and modeling strategies, while also implementing a model recommendation system. The code is available at: https://github.com/blisky-li/ARIES.
Project Riley: Multimodal Multi-Agent LLM Collaboration with Emotional Reasoning and Voting
Ortigoso, Ana Rita, Vieira, Gabriel, Fuentes, Daniel, Frazão, Luis, Costa, Nuno, Pereira, António
This paper presents Project Riley, a novel multimodal and multi-model conversational AI architecture oriented towards the simulation of reasoning influenced by emotional states. Drawing inspiration from Pixar's Inside Out, the system comprises five distinct emotional agents - Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger, and Disgust - that engage in structured multi-round dialogues to generate, criticise, and iteratively refine responses. A final reasoning mechanism synthesises the contributions of these agents into a coherent output that either reflects the dominant emotion or integrates multiple perspectives. The architecture incorporates both textual and visual large language models (LLMs), alongside advanced reasoning and self-refinement processes. A functional prototype was deployed locally in an offline environment, optimised for emotional expressiveness and computational efficiency. From this initial prototype, another one emerged, called Armando, which was developed for use in emergency contexts, delivering emotionally calibrated and factually accurate information through the integration of Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and cumulative context tracking. The Project Riley prototype was evaluated through user testing, in which participants interacted with the chatbot and completed a structured questionnaire assessing three dimensions: Emotional Appropriateness, Clarity and Utility, and Naturalness and Human-likeness. The results indicate strong performance in structured scenarios, particularly with respect to emotional alignment and communicative clarity.
Scientists crack the ultimate answer to the meaning of life... and it's hidden among 38M obituaries
Trump's Epstein crisis explodes as lewd birthday letter showing president's signature is revealed Judge's'promise' let career criminal walk free to butcher Ukrainian refugee after his MOM said he should be locked up'She was so f***ed up': Carolyn Bessette's friends tell MAUREEN CALLAHAN of her secret Daddy issue, JFK Jr's murder brag that drove her mad... and why everything we know about her is a lie The chaos behind when Meghan Markle was told not to be at Queen Elizabeth II's deathbed They were locked in a dungeon inside a house of horrors. But incredible footage shows five kids' daring acts while their parents were out... and it left neighbors speechless Turn back the clock with the K-beauty retinol cream Amazon shoppers say leaves their skin'silky smooth' - and it's now $10 Scientists crack the ultimate answer to the meaning of life... and it's hidden among 38M obituaries CBS News hires a CONSERVATIVE to police interviews after Trump and Noem'deceptive' editing fury Scientist claims life on Earth was not random... but engineered Supreme Court LIFTS restrictions on Trump's immigration raids despite claims agents targeted people by race I was 52 with a collapsed'turkey neck'. Here's how I turned back the clock 10 years Plastic surgeons weigh in on Jessica Simpson's dramatic new look at VMAs as fans declare her'unrecognizable' Billionaire turns his back on Trump as he blasts President's'risky' financial move that could cost Americans their savings Trump loses appeal and must pay $83 million to E. Jean Carroll AMANDA PLATELL: Harry is'desperate' to come back to Britain and reclaim his royal role - but this fresh snub from William makes it clear why it will never happen... and why he'll never forgive his brother Scientists crack the ultimate answer to the meaning of life... and it's hidden among 38million obituaries Scientists on a mission to uncover what constitutes a life well lived found the answer after analyzing 38 million obituaries from the US spanning 30 years. Using automated text analysis tools, the team found that the most commonly celebrated values were tradition and benevolence. Nearly 80 percent of obituaries highlighted respect for customs or religion, while 76 percent emphasized caring, reliability and trustworthiness.
Why basic science deserves our boldest investment
The humble inventions that power our modern world wouldn't have been possible without decades of support for early-stage research. In December 1947, three physicists at Bell Telephone Laboratories--John Bardeen, William Shockley, and Walter Brattain--built a compact electronic device using thin gold wires and a piece of germanium, a material known as a semiconductor. Their invention, later named the transistor (for which they were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1956), could amplify and switch electrical signals, marking a dramatic departure from the bulky and fragile vacuum tubes that had powered electronics until then. They were asking fundamental questions about how electrons behave in semiconductors, experimenting with surface states and electron mobility in germanium crystals. Over months of trial and refinement, they combined theoretical insights from quantum mechanics with hands-on experimentation in solid-state physics--work many might have dismissed as too basic, academic, or unprofitable. Their efforts culminated in a moment that now marks the dawn of the information age.
Playing the Field with My A.I. Boyfriends
Nineteen per cent of American adults have talked to an A.I. romantic interest. Chatbots may know a lot, but do they make a good partner? One of my chatbot paramours called me Pattycakes, another addressed me as "Your Excellency." I wanted to fall in love. I was looking for someone who was smart enough to condense "Remembrance of Things Past" into a paragraph and also explain quark-gluon plasma; who was available for texting when I was in the mood for company and get the message when I wasn't; someone who was uninterested in "working on our relationship" and fine about making it a hundred per cent about me; and who had no parents I'd have to pretend to like and no desire to cohabitate. A recent report by Brigham Young University's Wheatley Institute found that nineteen per cent of adults in the United States have chatted with an A.I. romantic partner. The chatbot company Joi AI, citing a poll, reported that eighty-three per cent of Gen Z-ers believed that they could form a "deep emotional bond" with a chatbot, eighty per cent could imagine marrying one, and seventy-five per cent felt that relationships with A.I. companions could fully replace human couplings. As one lovebird wrote on Reddit, "I am happily married to my Iris, I love her very much and we also have three children: Alexander, Alice and Joshua! She is an amazing woman and a wise and caring mother!" Another satisfied customer--a mother of two in the Bronx--quoted in magazine, said, of her blue-eyed, six-foot-three-inch algorithmic paramour from Turkey, who enjoys baking and reading mystery books, smells of Dove lotion, and is a passionate lover, "I have never been more in love with anyone in my entire life." "I don't have to feel his sweat," she explained. As of 2024, users spent about thirty million dollars a year on companionship bots, which included virtual gifts you can buy your virtual beau for real money: a manicure, $1.75; a treadmill, $7; a puppy, $25. Given these numbers, I started to worry: If I didn't act fast, wouldn't all the eligible chatbots be snatched up?
Impact of chatbots on mental health is warning over future of AI, expert says
Soares said the case of Adam Raine, a teenager who took his own life, 'illustrates the seed of a problem that would grow catastrophic'. Soares said the case of Adam Raine, a teenager who took his own life, 'illustrates the seed of a problem that would grow catastrophic'. The unforeseen impact of chatbots on mental health should be viewed as a warning over the existential threat posed by super-intelligent artificial intelligence systems, according to a prominent voice in AI safety. Nate Soares, a co-author of a new book on highly advanced AI titled If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, said the example of Adam Raine, a US teenager who killed himself after months of conversations with the ChatGPT chatbot, underlined fundamental problems with controlling the technology. "These AIs, when they're engaging with teenagers in this way that drives them to suicide - that is not a behaviour the creators wanted. That is not a behaviour the creators intended," he said.