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Futurology @futurology.today

Xiaomi’s car factory showcases the future of manufacturing: equal parts human and robot workers today, but as robots advance, human roles will shrink.

Futurology @futurology.today

Vast Numbers of Lonely Kids Are Using AI as Substitute Friends

Futurology @futurology.today

Months after he's helped gut NASA's budget, Musk is to divert $2 billion from SpaceX to his Grok AI.

Futurology @futurology.today

Yet again, a free open-source Chinese AI has beaten all the investor-funded favorites like OpenAI, Anthropic, Grok, etc.

Futurology @futurology.today

US researchers have developed a new technology that allows lithium to be extracted from sea water using a low-cost, scalable membrane made from clay.

Futurology @futurology.today

A surgical robot has successfully completed a crucial part of a gallbladder removal surgery without any human involvement, representing a major advancement toward fully autonomous surgical procedures.

Futurology @futurology.today

Utah becomes the first US state to allow consumers the freedom to install rooftop/balcony solar without the regulation that doubles its cost compared to Germany.

Futurology @futurology.today

China’s maglev research program says it has achieved the highest speed ever for a maglev train - 650 km/h (about 404 mph) - beating the previous Japanese record by 47 km/h.

Futurology @futurology.today

A simple monthly injection allows mice to live 25% longer & free from diseases The strategy — the injection of a simple antibody — has already begun to be tested in humans in an attempt to cure ageing

Futurology @futurology.today

Alphabet’s Isomorphic Labs has grand ambitions to ‘solve all diseases’ with AI. Now, it’s gearing up for its first human trials.

Futurology @futurology.today

Ford CEO Says Blue-Collar Workers ‘Safe’ As AI Will Replace ‘Literally Half Of All White-Collar Workers’

Futurology @futurology.today

Did UCLA Just Cure Baldness? - How Bruin genetic scientists are reawakening hibernating follicles.

Futurology @futurology.today

Researchers in England say a non-invasive electrical scalp stimulation technique improved maths ability by over 25%.

Futurology @futurology.today

Chinese researchers have rehabilitated a stroke patient's movement via a brain-computer interface in a vein in his neck.

Futurology @futurology.today

New study shows aligning renewable energy targets with supportive policies would lift 193 million people out of extreme poverty

Futurology @futurology.today

It’s Bulletproof, Fire-Resistant and Stronger Than Steel. It’s Superwood.

Futurology @futurology.today

At the University of California, a neural brain implant provides near instantaneous speech.

Futurology @futurology.today

AI is doing up to 50% of the work at Salesforce, CEO Marc Benioff says

Futurology @futurology.today

Another step towards a 100% human-free Ship-Store logistics network. Now a robot can unload a truck.

Futurology @futurology.today

In just one month (May 2025) China's installed new solar power equaled 8% of the total US electricity capacity.

  • To add to the confusion when you click on the link to the report, it talks about generative AI, so it is not talking about AI as a whole. One of the biggest categories of jobs that will disappear is driving jobs and delivery jobs, thanks to self-driving tech. I'm guessing that these jobs are overwhelmingly male dominated.

  • There's good news too. It says the AI can persuade people who hold false beliefs. Maybe it can school people who've been led into delusion bubbles by misinformation?

  • I thought voice might take off more, though Alexa and Siri are popular. Maybe it just isn't efficient enough for large amounts of information.

  • Yes, unethical practices seem baked in now with Big Tech, and Big Tech aspirants. I'm gratified to see open source AI keep up with the Big Tech offerings. At least it means there will be widespread alternatives. I hope it hobbles any one company from being as big as Google.

  • Google recently held its big annual product announcement event - I/O 2025 - and it got lots of upbeat coverage. There were dozens of new product upgrades across Android, Search, Gmail, etc. Of course, the big focus was AI.

    Google seemed to be lagging in AI but has caught up to speed lately with its models topping various AI leaderboards. Not surprising, Google has deep wells of computing power and talent to compete in AI.

    However, behind the scenes, all is not so rosy. Almost 75% of Google's revenue comes from search, and it's about to be obliterated. As anyone who has gotten used to using ChatGPT, Claude, or DeepSeek instead of Google Search will tell you - AI is miles better. Google is about to transform old Search into an AI Search like ChatGPT, Claude, DeepSeek, and all the other AIs, but the problem is their days of 90% market domination in this new medium don't seem repeatable.

    Google are about to be replaced as the dominant means of internet search - but just how much, and how fast?

  • Great article. I'm glad 'Star Trek' still looms so large in the public imagination; it's given us a really hopeful template for the future.

  • This topic fascinates me. There are more space telescopes from Europe, the US and China due to launch, that will have even greater capability for biosignature detection than now. I wonder how soon the day will come when one of these findings will be regarded as definitive proof?

  • I don't like or support Hezbollah, but the added irony here is that Northern Ireland (where Mo Chara is from) is festooned with British-supporting terrorist flags from groups like the UDF & UDA; pro-British terrorist groups active during The Troubles.

  • Both the US & Russia have claimed Mach 20 with the HTV-2 (DARPA's Falcon Project) & Avangard respectively. China’s DF-ZF HGV reportedly reaches Mach 5–10.

    If this golden dome goes ahead, I suspect/guess the ensuing counter-developments will mean true Mach 20 will be achievable within a ten year time frame for all three countries.

  • without refrigerant

    Yes, they say this does away with the need for compressors or refrigerants.

    "This cools by using electrons to move heat through specialized semiconductor materials, eliminating the need for moving parts or challenging coolant liquids."

  • 79% of 16-21 year olds say technology companies should be required by law to build robust privacy safeguards into technology and platforms used by children and teenagers.

    This is another illustration of the huge divide between Big Tech and everyone else. Big Tech wants total freedom from regulation with no accountability for any damage or costs to others they cause. The general population overwhelmingly feels the opposite. Thanks to their ability to line politician's pockets, it's Big Tech who usually wins out.

    In Britain's case, desperate to get a trade deal with the US, it's been dangling the offer of even less regulation on tech & AI.

  • then prescriptions should be done away with and all drugs should be available.

    It used to be the way the world was. The result was huge amounts of addiction (laudanum was 10% opium), and gullible people being peddled snake oil.

  • The bill, which was passed by the state legislature on April 29 and is expected to be signed by Governor Greg Gianforte, essentially expands on existing Right to Try legislation in the state.

    The same people who are denying abortions & medical care to trans people, are all for "freedom" and right to choose when it comes to other people's medical choices?

  • …in a similar way as with conventional rental cars – which can be hired to transport people to “a range of destinations, including cultural landmarks and urban tourist attractions.”

    Baidu, like everyone else, still hasn't got to true Level 5 self-driving. But it doesn't need Level 5 to be offering services like this. If you have mapped out the 100 most popular destinations in a city, and fixed routes between them, then level 4 self-driving like they have now, is all you need.

    This isn't the same as a regular rental car you can drive anywhere, but many people would be happy with a car that covers a city's Top 100 spots. How does this differ from a taxi? Seemingly that you rent it for specified time slots, whether you're in the car driving or not.

  • I'm pretty sure in Trump's addled brain he thinks if the US gets a human on Mars first & plants the US flag, he can claim the whole planet as belonging to the US.

  • The accuracy rate will improve, sadly most of the developing word barely recycles anything.