H+ Weekly - Issue #373
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This week - turning dead spiders into robots; DNA-based artificial neural networks; 3% of new code at Google is AI-generated; and more!
MORE THAN A HUMAN
▶ Teen Amputee On How Her Bionic Arms Changed Her Life (15:47)
Here is an interview with Tilly Lockey - a teenage girl who lost both arms as a child and now wears a pair of fashionable bionic arms. She shares her life as a child amputee, the prosthetics she had over the years, how she got her bionic arms and how they have changed her life and how people see her.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
ML-Enhanced Code Completion Improves Developer Productivity
In this blog post, researchers from Google AI describe their efforts in making AI provide useful code suggestions for Google engineers. There is one sentence there I'd like to highlight: "Currently, 3% of new code (measured in characters) is now generated from accepting ML [machine learning] completion suggestions".
How to tell if artificial intelligence is working the way we want it to
Massive artificial neural networks are famous for being extremely complex and it is practically impossible to understand what is going on inside this black box. But there are researchers who try to make tools to understand the inner workings of neural networks. This article describes what are explanation methods and how they work.
ROBOTICS
Necrobotics: Dead Spiders Reincarnated as Robot Grippers
Researchers took a bunch of dead spiders and gave them a second life as robotic grippers. Since spider legs are basically hydraulic grippers, researchers were able to control spider's legs by injecting air into its limbs and turning them into a claw gripper.
Chess robot grabs and breaks finger of seven-year-old opponent
During a chess tournament in Moscow, a robot playing against humans grabbed a finger of a seven-year-old child and broke his finger. The child did not want to wait for the robot to finish its movement and then make its move. In the confusion, the robot mistakenly grabbed the child's finger and broke it. According to the tournament organisers, the child is not traumatised and the company behind the robot are “going to have to think again”.
Microsoft launches Project AirSim, an end-to-end platform to accelerate autonomous flight
Microsoft launched Project AirSim - a platform running on Microsoft Azure designed to safely build, train and test autonomous aircraft through high-fidelity simulation. The plaftorm allows AI agents controlling the drones to train on each phase of flight, from takeoff to cruising to landing. It will also offer libraries of simulated 3D environments representing diverse urban and rural landscapes.
Sensing Breakdown: Waymo Jaguar I-Pace RoboTaxi
If you have ever wondered how many sensors a driverless car has, then here is an article for you. It lists all sensors installed on Waymo's taxi and there is a lot of them.
BIOTECHNOLOGY
The molecular implementation of a DNA-based artificial neural network
Researchers from China made an artificial neural network not in software but with DNA. Apart from being interesting, this DNA-based architecture that could inform the design of new molecular computing systems. In the future, their approach could be used to create various molecular diagnostic devices for biomedical applications.
DeepMind uncovers structure of 200m proteins in scientific leap forward
DeepMind's Alphafold has deciphered the structure of virtually every protein known to science, paving the way for the development of new medicines or technologies to tackle global challenges such as famine or pollution.
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Conrad Gray (@conradthegray)
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