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Food at college gets high-tech boost with first robotic kitchen in university setting
Denisse Castillo, senior director of residential dining at Florida International University, describes what it's like working with the first robotic kitchen in a campus setting. Hungry students at Florida International University (FIU) near Miami are being fed by a robot these days. "Beastro" – yes, it has a name – is the first robotic kitchen in the country to be used in a university setting, according to FIU. (See the video at the top of this article, and another one down below.) On a recent morning at the Ernest R. Graham University Center on FIU's flagship campus, Beastro prepared chicken teriyaki for Jocelyn Hernandez, 22, a senior studying natural and applied sciences, as Fox News Digital watched and filmed. Soon after, Beastro was busy making a cheese omelet for Pablo Reyes, 20, a junior biomedical engineering student.
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Key moments that defined education in America in 2023
America's Newsroom anchor Bill Hemmer looks back at the top headlines of the past 12 months. Supreme Court rulings, wars waged over parental rights, crackdowns on conservative school boards and scandals that imbued some districts with controversy: Education's rocky landscape showcased this year's equally tumultuous cultural climate, and the issue has taken center stage for candidates going into 2024. Republicans continued to capitalize on parents' concerns that children are being exposed to age-inappropriate content in the classroom while calling for school choice and cautioning against giving transgender students access to single-sex spaces. Democrats, meanwhile, called out the opposition for alleged "book bans" and a majority defended transgender students' access to spaces corresponding with their preferred gender. The gridlock is expected to augment the intensity of an already explosive election season next year, and the issues aren't expected to fade anytime soon.
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Head of Google Bard believes AI can help improve communication and compassion: 'Really remarkable'
Kurt "The CyberGuy" Knutsson explains new Google Maps features, powered by AI. Artificial intelligence is influencing nearly all aspects of life in 2023. From education to the workplace to creative endeavors, AI is making its mark on our everyday lives. Google Bard product lead Jack Krawczyk sat down with Fox News Digital for an interview in New York City recently to discuss how generative AI frontrunner Google Bard has developed to accommodate people's lifestyles. As just one example, Krawczyk mentioned that parents can use Google Bard to snap a photo of their craft drawer -- then ask the AI tool what kind of art can be made using the available supplies.
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Gen Z is comfortable with multiple sex partners, study finds 57% 'willing to consider' non-monogamy
Ashley Madison chief strategy officer Paul Keable insists people would be cheating whether or not the controversial'dating' site existed. Gen Z appears to be more comfortable with the concept of non-monogamy than previous generations, according to controversial online "dating" service Ashley Madison. The polarizing Ashley Madison, which caters to people looking to cheat on their partners and uses the slogan "Life is short. Have an affair," said that Gen Z is the top age group to sign up for their scandalous product and accounted for 40% of new members in 2022. To understand why so many members of Gen Z, defined as those 18-29 years old, are joining the pro-adultery site, the company surveyed their Gen Z members as well as those ages in the general population across 10 countries via YouGov.
Top 20 American cities for 'adulterous behavior' revealed by controversial dating service Ashley Madison
Ashley Madison chief strategy officer Paul Keable insists people would be cheating whether the controversial dating site existed. EXCLUSIVE – Florida residents might want to keep a close eye on their spouses this winter. Controversial online dating service Ashley Madison, which caters to married people and uses the slogan "Life is short. Have an affair," examined where members reside to determine "hotspots across the world when it comes to adulterous behavior." Keable explained that millions of single Americans look for companionship during the cold winter months, which is often dubbed "cuffing season."
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New Jersey parent pans school's handling of AI-generated porn images featuring daughter's face
Francesca Mani and her mother Dorota join'The Ingraham Angle' to demand accountability for victims. Francesca Mani told "The Ingraham Angle" that the principal at Westfield High School recently notified her that she was one of multiple victims. "After that, I just felt, like, betrayed because I never thought it'd be my classmate, and when I came home, I told my mom and I said, 'We need to do something about this because it's not OK, and people are making it seem like it is.'" Mani said she never personally witnessed the explicit images, but that she felt betrayed. Mani said she believes she knows who the main culprit in the dissemination of the images is, but did not mention their name on air.
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Biden admin's AI Safety Institute not 'sufficient' to deal with risks, must check user 'procedures': expert
Seekr Technologies CEO Pat Condo spoke with Fox News Digital about a partnership with Bear Grylls to encourage digital media literacy among young people. Experts tell Fox News Digital that the Biden administration's plan to establish an artificial intelligence (AI) safety commission may prove "necessary" but not "sufficient" to address potential risks for the burgeoning technology. "The odds are [the algorithm] is not where the majority of the risk lies," said Phil Siegel, founder of the Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation (CAPTRS). "It is more likely the risk lies in the users either using it for bad or just plain misusing it." President Biden on Monday signed an executive order that the White House said included the "most sweeping actions ever taken to protect Americans from the potential risks of AI systems" – the requirement for companies to notify the government when training new models and sharing results of "read-team safety tests."
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Bill Maher reverses decision to bring back show amid strike negotiations, hopes they 'finally get this done'
Piers Morgan weighs in on the return of Bill Maher's'Real Time' amid writers strike on'One Nation with Brian Kilmeade.' After initially declaring his show would return amid the writers strike, talk show host Bill Maher announced Monday he has reversed that decision for the time being. "Real Time with Bill Maher's" 21st season was cut short after Hollywood writers went on strike in May. Writers are asking for higher pay, a guaranteed number of writers per room, better residuals and safeguards around the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the writing process in their list of demands. With no foreseeable end to the strike, Maher initially revealed that the show would return without writers and simply skip the segments that rely on writers.