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Anthropic wants caution but the market wants more AI
analysis The latest news from the Western AI Front is that Anthropic Inc, the US-based creator of Claude, has called for a "global freeze" on the development of AI, so humanity can catch up. Except it didn't really. In a long blog post on Anthropic's website headed "When AI builds itself", all about how Claude is not only writing its own code but "proposing its own experiments", it was explained that "the human role is narrowing at each step in the AI development process".
Investors bet humanoid robots will transform industry and homes over the next decade
Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son told CNBC this week that physical AI and robotics were where he saw the next trillion-dollar company emerging from. Humanoid robots, designed to mimic human movement and capabilities, have been hitting headlines in recent years, from their use as baggage handlers at Japanese airports to Tesla's big bet on its Optimus humanoid. Market watchers have predicted that the machines will change the world over the next decade and forecast that the industry will grow...
How autonomous machines are transforming road and tunnel safety
As Europe embarks on massive underground infrastructure projects, a new technological ecosystem is being tested to eliminate human risk and cut carbon emissions in one of the world's most energy-intensive sectors. Autonomous heavy machinery and drones are joining forces to cut emissions and enhance safety in tunnel construction, thanks to a Spanish-led EU initiative. With the construction industry responsible for nearly 40% of global energy-related CO2 emissions, the carbon footprint of the...
Superintelligence: The Idea That Eats Smart People (2016)
This is the text version of a talk I gave on October 29, 2016, at Web Camp Zagreb [video] (45 mins) SuperintelligenceThe Idea That Eats Smart People | | | In 1945, as American physicists were preparing to test the atomic bomb, it occurred to someone to ask if such a test could set the atmosphere on fire. This was a legitimate concern.
Future Power Rankings: How all 68 Power 4 college football teams stack up
Projecting a college football program's future is harder than ever. Rosters and fortunes change dramatically and championship pathways are more open than ever. The assets that make a program great in 2026 might not be there in 2027.
Off the Record: Politics, protests and dead flamingos dominate EU-Western Balkans summit
Euronews Europe editor Maria Tadeo provides highlights and analysis from the EU-Western Balkans summit held this week in her signature newsletter Off the Record. When I launched this newsletter, I promised you zeitgeist, so here's the zeitgeist — I am filing this at ungodly hours, from a flat in Tivat, on the coast of Montenegro, on five hours' sleep, praying for no typos and my keyboard on fire. But oh boy how I love this job.
China, tungsten and a supply shock in metal critical for war that will last far beyond Iran conflict
The Iran war has caused well-documented price spikes and shortages on a range of items Americans depend upon. Oil and gas, of course, but also petrochemicals and everything derived from them (e.g. plastics) and helium are among raw materials that have been besieged by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Still, there is another element which has seen its price surge amid increasingly short supply because of war, but where the shock will not relent even if the Strait is reopened.