bowling ball
Britain's most dangerous spider strikes again: Man is hospitalised with flesh-eating bite 'the size of a bowling ball' as experts warn false widows are rapidly spreading across the UK
Horrifying next twist in the Alexander brothers case: MAUREEN CALLAHAN exposes an unthinkable perversion that's been hiding in plain sight Alexander brothers' alleged HIGH SCHOOL gang rape video: Classmates speak out on sick'taking turns' footage... as creepy unseen photos emerge Model Cindy Crawford, 60, mocked for her'out of touch' morning routine: 'Nothing about this is normal' Kentucky mother and daughter turn down $26.5MILLION to sell their farms to secretive tech giant that wants to build data center there Live Nation executives mocked'stupid' concert-goers in emails where they bragged about how to best rip them off: '$60 for closer grass' NFL superstar Xavier Worthy spills all on Travis Kelce, the Chiefs' struggles... and having Taylor Swift as his No 1 fan Heartbreaking video shows very elderly DoorDash driver shuffle down customer's driveway with coffee order because he is too poor to retire Amber Valletta, 52, was a '90s Vogue model who made movies with Sandra Bullock and Kate Hudson, see her now Nancy Mace throws herself into Iran warzone as she goes rogue on Middle East rescue mission: 'I AM that person' Hidden toxins in kids' treats EXPOSED: Health guru Jillian Michaels' sit-down with Casey DeSantis reveals dangers lurking in popular foods Britain's most dangerous spider strikes again: Man is hospitalised with flesh-eating bite'the size of a bowling ball' as experts warn false widows are rapidly spreading across the UK READ MORE: World's biggest spider web contains 111,000 creepy crawlies A man was left hospitalised with a flesh-eating infection after a'pinprick' false widow spider bite left him with a hand'the size of a bowling ball'. Chris Keegan, 40, woke up with a small insect bite on his right hand and initially thought nothing of it. But after it began to turn red, he decided to speak to a pharmacist who prescribed him with antibiotics for what he was told was a spider bite. Another round of antibiotics from the doctors also failed to stop the redness and Mr Keegan decided to go to the hospital after his hand'swelled up and turned purple'. Within a few hours, his hand was being operated on to remove any dying skin to prevent the infection from taking hold.
Samsung's adorable Ballie robot will roll right into your heart
Samsung showed off a remodeled Ballie, a sunshine-yellow autonomously driving robot, at CES 2024. Described as an "at-home assistant," this bowling ball of a robot is designed to answer your phone calls, play calming music, display the hottest news stories, and more. Maybe I'm the type of person that's easily charmed by whimsical things, but this little dude knocked the contrarian right out of me. One of the cooler things about Ballie is its built-in 1080p projector and spatial LiDAR sensor. That means it'll project movies and conference calls on the floor, wall, or any other hard surface.
The Model Is The Message
An odd controversy appeared in the news cycle last month when a Google engineer, Blake Lemoine, was placed on leave after publicly releasing transcripts of conversations with LaMDA, a chatbot based on a Large Language Model (LLM) that he claims is conscious, sentient and a person. Like most other observers, we do not conclude that LaMDA is conscious in the ways that Lemoine believes it to be. His inference is clearly based in motivated anthropomorphic projection. At the same time, it is also possible that these kinds of artificial intelligence (AI) are "intelligent" -- and even "conscious" in some way -- depending on how those terms are defined. Still, neither of these terms can be very useful if they are defined in strongly anthropocentric ways. An AI may also be one and not the other, and it may be useful to distinguish sentience from both intelligence and consciousness. For example, an AI may be genuinely intelligent in some way but only sentient in the restrictive sense of sensing and acting deliberately on external information. Perhaps the real lesson for philosophy of AI is that reality has outpaced the available language to parse what is already at hand. A more precise vocabulary is essential.
How can we tell if artificial intelligence understands our language?
This article is part of "the philosophy of artificial intelligence," a series of posts that explore the ethical, moral, and social implications of AI today and in the future. If a computer gives you all the right answers, does it mean that it is understanding the world as you do? This is a riddle that artificial intelligence scientists have been debating for decades. And discussions of understanding, consciousness, and true intelligence are resurfacing as deep neural networks have spurred impressive advances in language-related tasks. Many scientists believe that deep learning models are just large statistical machines that map inputs to outputs in complex and remarkable ways.
Understanding Machine Learning: How machines learn?
"If (there) was one thing all people took for granted, (it) was conviction that if you feed honest figures into a computer, honest figures (will) come out. Never doubted it myself till I met a computer with a sense of humor." This post is the first in a series of articles in which we will explain what Machine Learning is. You don't have to have formal training or experience in data analysis. We will write using simple language, without unnecessary technical jargon. Let's start with the definition, of course.
Understanding Machine Learning: How machines learn?
"If (there) was one thing all people took for granted, (it) was conviction that if you feed honest figures into a computer, honest figures (will) come out. Never doubted it myself till I met a computer with a sense of humor." This post is the first in a series of articles in which we will explain what Machine Learning is. You don't have to have formal training or experience in data analysis. We will write using simple language, without unnecessary technical jargon. Let's start with the definition, of course.