A New Experiential Gallery Just Might Change Your Mind About AI Art
Billed as the “world’s first museum of AI arts,” Dataland uses wearables and troves of material from the Amazon to merge nature, biometrics, and art.
AI Insider·
Insider Brief Teleoperated humanoid robots completed two surgeries in a preclinical trial, a first step toward using more mobile and flexible robots in operating rooms where surgical access is limited. The proof-of-concept experiment, published in the July 8 issue of Nature, was conducted by engineers and surgeons at UC San Diego to test whether humanoid […]
Read full articleBilled as the “world’s first museum of AI arts,” Dataland uses wearables and troves of material from the Amazon to merge nature, biometrics, and art.
Preclinical trial is testing the feasibility of humanoid robots in surgery.
The post UC San Diego humanoid robots perform live surgery in world first appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Two humanoid robots controlled from afar performed two surgeries at the University of California, San Diego. According to a study published July 8 in Nature, this is the first time that general-purpose humanoid machines have been used on living subjects. The outcome is important for the many people around the world who can’t reliably get in touch with surgeons. Small robots that a doctor can control remotely could be used in places where specialized surgical systems can’t reach. In the first surgery, a robot and a real surgeon worked together. The surgeon helped take out the gallbladder with the machine. The second method went even further. There was no one at the table when the two humanoid robots worked together. The researchers say that both surgeries were done on large mammals that are not primates. The engineers and surgeons who worked on the study called their robots “Su
Repurposing old phones into data centers highlights sustainable tech innovation, potentially influencing future resource-efficient computing solutions. The post Google and UC San Diego want to turn 2,000 old Pixel phones into a data center appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
New institute will partner with six schools and UC San Diego Health to accelerate the delivery of data-driven, equitable health care July 6, 2026 — UC San Diego today announced the […] The post UC San Diego Launches Institute for Applied Health Intelligence appeared first on AIwire.
Microsoft’s controversial claim that its Majorana chip program will make possible a scalable quantum computer by 2029 has been thrown into new doubt by a scientific paper that questions whether the company has correctly interpreted its own experimental evidence. According to a peer-reviewed paper by Dr. Henry Legg from the University of St Andrews, published this week in Nature, Microsoft’s Topological Gap Protocol (TGP) framework, designed to infer the existence of quantum states in theorized Majorana particles, is flawed. “Last year Microsoft claimed they had built the equivalent of a precision Swiss watch. However, when I opened the case to examine the mechanism, I found what looked like a chaotic jumble of mismatched parts,” said Legg. He believed the results gathered from Microsoft’s TGP software data analysis could also be explained by other effects, as well as being skewed by the data chosen for analysis. Because of this, he believed the company’s researchers had jumped to the w
Microsoft's quantum computing credibility faces challenges, highlighting the need for rigorous validation and transparency in scientific claims. The post Microsoft’s quantum computing claims face new scrutiny from Nature critique appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft's unproven quantum claims highlight the challenges and skepticism in advancing topological quantum computing commercially. The post Scientist questions Microsoft’s quantum computing claims in Nature paper appeared first on Crypto Briefing.