Energy
Schaeffler prepares the way for digitalization - Automotive World
In the coming years, the automotive and industrial supplier, Schaeffler, wants to recruit up to 600 experts across the world to work on digital solutions for tomorrow s mobility. The planned new positions are part of a digitalization offensive the company started last year. A central pillar of the strategy is the development of intelligent products. At CES 2017, Schaeffler is showing how visions of automated driving, electrification and networking can be turned into reality. Automobiles are part of the Internet of Things where machines share data with each other to provide better solutions for people.
17% off SteelSeries Nimbus Gaming Controller, Play New Minecraft Apple TV Edition - Deal Alert
One of the biggest games in recent history is now even more widely available. Minecraft was just released on Apple TV (see review here on TechConnect), and no, you don't have to control it with that little silver remote. Take full control of the game with this Bluetooth gaming remote from SteelSeries, currently discounted 17% from $60 to $50 on Amazon. The SteelSeries Nimbus remote has all the control sticks, buttons and triggers you or your kids will need to control Minecraft right on your TV. A rechargeable Lithium ion battery provides up to 40 hours of gaming on a charge.
The Morning After: Tuesday, January 3rd, 2017
It's 2017 and time for CESHere's what to expect at CES 2017 The Engadget team spent their New Year's Day venturing to Las Vegas. That means it's CES season, and a buttload of TVs, wearables, self-driving cars and countless stupid "smart" things." Here's what we reckon you'll see this week. That thrill of incredibly quick acceleration (while exciting) is only a small portion of the Tesla P100D's charm. In a dense urban environment like San Francisco, where Roberto Baldwin drove it for a week, there aren't a lot of opportunities to live out your Top Gear dreams.
The Factory of the Future - Disruption
Manufacturing plays an essential role in the economies of both advanced and developing nations. According to a recent McKinsey Report it now accounts for approximately 16 percent of global GDP and 14 percent of employment. Changes in consumer demand and advances in technology bring both challenges and opportunities for the sector. How are business adapting to meet these challenges and which technologies are shaping the factory of the future? Factory tech today Factories have already adopted new technologies with a view to increasing productivity and reducing costs.
Kenmore Alfie Voice-Controlled Personal Shopper review: For shoppers with plenty of time but too little imagination
Don't confuse the Kenmore Alfie with the Amazon Dot. Kenmore's puck-shaped device aims to simplify your shopping experiences, not control your smart home. In that sense, it's more like an Amazon Dash, except that pushing its button initiates a speech-recognition session that helps you buy any product from virtually any retailer. Kenmore's website offers this example of Alfie's abilities: "Alfie, I'm searching for a drill with a budget of $40. The response, displayed on the Alfie smartphone app along with a picture of the product is "Hi Mary, I recommend Craftsman 3/8-inch Corded Drill, now for $39.99. Let know if you'd like to order it!"
Sparse model selection in the highly under-sampled regime
Bulso, Nicola, Marsili, Matteo, Roudi, Yasser
We propose a method for recovering the structure of a sparse undirected graphical model when very few samples are available. The method decides about the presence or absence of bonds between pairs of variable by considering one pair at a time and using a closed form formula, analytically derived by calculating the posterior probability for every possible model explaining a two body system using Jeffreys prior. The approach does not rely on the optimization of any cost functions and consequently is much faster than existing algorithms. Despite this time and computational advantage, numerical results show that for several sparse topologies the algorithm is comparable to the best existing algorithms, and is more accurate in the presence of hidden variables. We apply this approach to the analysis of US stock market data and to neural data, in order to show its efficiency in recovering robust statistical dependencies in real data with non-stationary correlations in time and/or space.
Tesla's new Roadster, and more in the week that was
Has Tesla succeeded in creating a vehicle that reacts faster than its driver? A recently-surfaced dashcam video appears to show Tesla's autopilot mode predicting an accident moments before it actually happens. It currently takes hours to charge an electric car - but Elon Musk just hinted that Tesla's next-gen superchargers will be able to juice up an eve in mere seconds. Musk also confirmed plans for a new Tesla Roadster, which is expected to debut in 2019. Uber recently launched a fleet of self-driving cars in California, but the state promptly shut the experiment down.
True Artificial Intelligence Will Change Everything - Prof. Jürgen Schmidhuber
My speech will be about the most important about the grand theme of the 1st century which is the rise of artificial intelligence which is going o transform every aspect of our civilization and before we will look at the content rillettes have a brief look at the previous century what was the most important thing in the previous century the journal nature in 1999 made a list of the most influential inventions after twenty century and number one of class once the invention from 1908 which made the 20th century stand out among our centuries ever in the history of mankind because it was the one that drove the population explosion from 1.6 billion people in the year nineteen hundred too soon 10 billion it's a chemical thing and a high pressure and high temperature nitrogen is extracted from thin air to make still 500 million tons of artificial fertilizer for a year now without that stuff half of humankind would not even exist this planet could sustain at most four billion people without that one invention billions and billions and billions would never have lived without it and soon two out of three people on this planet will depend on this one single mention nothing else was remotely as influential as an however the way I explosion of the present century is going to be much more impactful and grander than that because that we are not talking about smaller numbers such as for or 10 but we are talking about trillions of trillions and this has a lot to do with the fact that computers are getting faster by a factor of 10 per euro per five years and this trend has held at least since nineteen forty one man cannot souza built the first working program controlled computer and nineteen forty one seventy five years gone every five years since then computers became roughly 10 times cheaper which means that now we have a factor of a million billions and this trend has been running for a long time but only recently we have approached the computational power of a small animal brain and in the near future for the first time for a thousand euros.
15 Disruptive Technology Trends to watch in 2017 - Disruption
That company, the'secretive' Magic Leap has yet to showcase any of the Mixed Reality platform it is working on, but in the meantime Microsoft has opened up it's MR platform for developers and we expect to see some fruit in 2017. Self teaching Robots have been one of the breakthroughs of 2016 as we have seen more examples of bot to bot communication in which one machine shares its learning with another, and deep learning based networks which robots can tap into and teach themselves.
On the Exponential View
The following is the text of a talk I gave in San Francisco on December 1st, 2016. The audience was readers of my newsletter, Exponential View. You can sign up here. This is a long (7,500 word) transcript of the talk. You can scan it to see the slides and accompanying exhibits if that is easier. Or even read it in more than one sitting…. Exponential View has a purpose. In between all the emojis and all the spelling mistakes, this is what it's about: This is me on my first day at school back when I was in Zambia in sub-Saharan Africa. On the right is my friend Rehan, who I reconnected recently through Facebook. He is now known as Dr. Freeze and he does non-invasive body sculpting in Orange County. So I can get you a good rate. But I think it's important, this starting point is important. We often are inspired from where we come from and what the hell was I doing in Zambia? My dad was trained as economist and accountant, well he is retired now, but then he was an economist and was down in Zambia building the kind of institutions that we take for granted in countries like the U.S. and the U.K. to make the country function. Zambia had just got independence from the U.K. It needed a deeper civil service, it was having to build its legal system, create its system of distribution and so on. So I got an early exposure to the importance of economic institutions for making societies wealthier and making them work. While I was down in Zambia, which is a land-locked country and doesn't have great access to the sea and this is the 1970s, so we didn't have a vast range of toys.