Jan
26
2009
CWmike writes to tell us that artificial intelligence and robotics have made another wobbly step forward with the most recent robot from Stanford. “Stair” is one of a new breed of robot that is trying to integrate learning, vision, navigation, manipulation, planning, reasoning, speech, and natural language processing. “It also marks a transition of AI from narrow, carefully defined domains to real-world situations in which systems learn to deal with complex data and adapt to uncertainty. AI has more or less followed the ‘hype cycle’ popularized by Gartner Inc.: Technologies perk along in the shadows for a few years, then burst on the scene in a blaze of hype. Then they fall into disrepute when they fail to deliver on extravagant promises, until they eventually rise to a level of solid accomplishment and acceptance.”

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Comments Off on A.I. and Robotics Take Another Wobbly Step Forward | tags: google, Intel, robot, robotics | posted in technical news
Jan
26
2009
Spacedonkey writes “Researchers at Intel, RTI International of North Carolina, and Arizona State University have made ultra-thin ‘micro-refrigerators’ for computer chips. The device uses a thermoelectric cooler made from nanostructured thin-film superlattice that can reduce the temperature by 55C when a current passes through it. In testing, it reduced the temperature on part of a chip by 15C without impairing its performance. The researchers say the component could be particularly useful for cooling hot spots that frequently occur on multi-core chips.”

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Comments Off on Intel Develops Micro-Refrigerator To Cool Chips | tags: google, Intel | posted in technical news
Jan
26
2009
After a dramatic decline over several years, the availability of methamphetamine — a highly addictive stimulant “cooked” with chemicals from over-the-counter cold medications — began to creep up in 2008. The reversal, reported by the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC), worries law enforcement agencies.


Comments Off on ABC News: Meth May be Making a Comeback | tags: google, Intel, news | posted in technical news
Jan
26
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Intel released the article ‘Quake Wars Gets Ray Traced’ (PDF) which details the development efforts of the research team that applied a real-time ray tracer to Enemy Territory: Quake Wars . It describes the benefits and challenges of transparency textures with this rendering technology. Further insight is given into what special effects are most costly. Examples of glass and a 3D water implementation are shown. The outlook hints into the area of freely programmable many-core processors, like Intel’s upcoming Larrabee, that might be able to handle such a workload.” We mentioned the ray-traced Quake Wars last in June; the PDF here delves into the implementation details, rather than just showing a demo, and explains what parts of the game give the most difficulty in going from rasterization to ray-tracing.

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Comments Off on How Quake Wars Met the Ray Tracer | tags: games, google, Intel, program, technology | posted in technical news
Jan
25
2009
A study carried out by researchers from Stockholm University has found that pedigree dogs are becoming less intelligent. According to researchers this is likely because they are being bred for looks rather for their work ability and strength.


Comments Off on Research Shows Dogs Are Getting Dumber | tags: google, Intel | posted in technical news
Jan
24
2009
alphadogg writes “The Downadup worm — also called Conflicker — has now infected an estimated 10 million PCs worldwide, and security experts say they expect to see a dangerous second-stage payload dropped soon. ‘It has the potential to infect about 30% of Windows systems online, a potential 300 to 350 million PCs,’ says Don Jackson, director of threat intelligence in the counter threat unit at SecureWorks. The worm, first identified in November and suspected to have originated in the Ukraine, is quickly ramping up, and while Downadup today is not malicious in the sense of destroying files — its main trick is to block users from accessing antivirus sites to obtain updates to protect against it — the worm is capable of downloading second-stage code for darker purposes.”

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Comments Off on Downadup Worm — When Will the Next Shoe Drop? | tags: cap, google, Intel, security, virus | posted in technical news
Jan
24
2009
Philip Hingston writes “Computers can’t play like people — yet. An unusual kind of computer game bot-programming contest has just been held in Perth, Australia, as part of the IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Games. The contest was not about programming the bot that plays the best. The aim was to see if a bot could convince another player that it was actually a human player. Game Development Studio 2K Australia (creator of BioShock) provided ,000 cash plus a trip to their studio in Canberra for anyone who could create a bot to pass this ‘Turing Test for Bots.’ People like to play against opponents who are like themselves — opponents with personality, who can surprise, who sometimes make mistakes, yet don’t robotically make the same mistakes over and over. Computers are superbly fast and accurate at playing games, but can they be programmed to be more fun to play — to play like you and me?” Read on for the rest of Philip’s thoughts.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on BotPrize — A Turing Test For Bots | tags: computers, games, google, Intel, program, programming, robot | posted in technical news
Jan
24
2009
Comments Off on Kettle campaign surpasses fund goal – London Free Press | tags: google, Intel, news, tv | posted in technical news
Jan
24
2009
Intel Chairman Craig Barrett will step down from his post in May, ending a 35-year stint at the tech giant, the company announced Friday. Barrett, who joined Intel in 1974, also served as the chief executive of the company from 1998 through 2005.


Comments Off on Intel chairman Craig Barrett to step down | tags: google, Intel | posted in technical news
Jan
23
2009
Amidst a bevy of bad news in the PC market, Intel Corp. took two corrective steps this week, aggressively slashing prices on chips on Monday and announcing today that it would close four chip plants and cut as many as 6,000 jobs.


Comments Off on Intel to shut four plants, lay off 6,000 | tags: google, Intel, news, tv | posted in technical news