Thursday, October 5

The Giant Magellan Telescope


Artist’s concept of the completed Giant Magellan Telescope. The Giant Magellan Telescope is finalizing its last primary mirror, with the goal to surpass current space telescopes in sensitivity and resolution. Leveraging U.S. manufacturing, it promises unparalleled astronomical insights and aims for operation by the decade’s end. Credit: GMTO Corporation







Seven of the world’s largest mirrors will search the Universe for life beyond Earth

The Giant Magellan Telescope begins the four-year process to fabricate and polish its seventh and final primary mirror, the last required to complete the telescope’s 368 square meter (3,961 square foot) light collecting surface, the world’s largest and most challenging optics ever produced. 

Together, the mirrors will collect more light than any other telescope in existence, allowing humanity to unlock the secrets of the Universe by providing detailed chemical analyses of celestial objects and their origin.

Last week, the University of Arizona Richard F. Caris Mirror Lab closed the lid on nearly 20 tons of the purest optical glass inside a one-of-a-kind oven housed beneath the stands of the Arizona Wildcats Football Stadium. 

The spinning oven will heat the glass to 1,165°C (2,129°F) so as it melts, it is forced outward to form the mirror’s curved paraboloid surface. Measuring 8.4 meters (26.7 feet) in diameter—about two stories tall when standing on edge—the mirror will cool over the next three months before moving into the polishing stage.  READ MORE...

Electromagnetic Waves

 

Wednesday, October 4

Politics as Usual

 

Airliner Cockpit

 

MilliMobile An Autonomous Robot


Researchers at the University of Washington have created MilliMobile, a tiny, self-driving robot powered only by surrounding light or radio waves. It’s about the size of a penny and can run indefinitely on harvested energy. (UW Photo / Mark Stone)





University of Washington researchers are rolling out another tiny robotic breakthrough, this time in the form of an autonomous device that relies on surrounding light or radio waves to move in short bursts.

The robot, dubbed MilliMobile, is about the size of a penny and weighs as much as a raisin, and a typical power source, such as a battery, has been kicked to the curb in favor of more environmentally friendly approach.

MilliMobile has a solar panel-like energy harvester that sits above four tiny wheels, enabling the robot to roll — in incremental steps — about the 30 feet in an hour across surfaces such as concrete or packed soil.

Carrying three times its own weight in equipment such as cameras and sensors, the device takes internet-of-things style data collection and makes it mobile. Such tiny robots can be used on a smart farm to track humidity and soil moisture or in a factory to seek out electromagnetic noise to find equipment malfunctions — especially when deployed in a swarm.

“We took inspiration from ‘intermittent computing,’ which breaks complex programs into small steps, so a device with very limited power can work incrementally, as energy is available,” said the UW’s Kyle Johnson. “With MilliMobile, we applied this concept to motion. We reduced the robot’s size and weight so it takes only a small amount of energy to move. And, similar to an animal taking steps, our robot moves in discrete increments, using small pulses of energy to turn its wheels.”

MilliMobile was tested both indoors and out and in very low light situations, and was still able to inch along. The robot is also able to steer itself, navigating with onboard sensors and tiny computing chips.

Johnson, a UW doctoral student in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, was co-lead author on research that the team will present Monday at the ACM MobiCom 2023 conference in Madrid, Spain.   READ MORE...

Water Spout


 

An American Tragedy

Orson Wells, the famous Hollywood Actor/Director said there are two great tragedies in this world of ours:

  • Not getting what you want
  • Getting what you want

Take a minute or two and think about the implications of what he is saying, then reflect on this statement...

50% OF ALL FIRST MARRIAGES END IN DIVORCE

It has been this way since 2000

Obviously, this is a result of getting what you want...

Can you imagine how many children grow up in one parent homes?
Can you imagine the mental trauma through which they are constantly experiencing?
Will these sons and daughters be successful?
Will they get married and divorce like their parents?

It is difficult on children growing up with two parents, so I can just imagine what it would be like with only one parent.
Can the mother fill the role of the father?
Can the father fill the role of the mother?

I am sure this happens all the time, but these single parent adults are the exception to the rule not the rule.

If we think about what might happen to children with only one parent, maybe we should change our mind about abortion...  that is to say, maybe we should start encouraging abortion rather than discouraging it...
I do not support abortion.
I support a woman's right to choose.
But what is worse abortion or single parent families?

Success and Happiness like beauty is in the eye of the beholder...  so, who's to say that these children will not be successful or happy.  Who's to say that these children will not become criminals or drug dealers because they only had a single parent.

Life is a crap shoot...  children of divorce are like playing with loaded dice.


Loving Owls


 

Tesla's Bot Video


In the wake of Agility Robotics announcing their intention to scale production to 10,000 bipedal humanoid robots every year, Fourier Intelligence, a technology-driven company specializing in exoskeleton and rehabilitation robots, released a new video showcasing its GR-1 humanoid robot and production facilities.

Set in Salem, Oregon, “RoboFab”, Agility Robotics’ 70,000-square-foot robot factory is slated to open later this year and manufacture the company’s bipedal robot Digit.

“When you’re building new technology to improve society, the most important milestone is when you’re able to mass produce that technology at a scale where it can have a real, widespread impact,” Agility Robotics’ co-founder and CEO Damion Shelton said.

With recent developments in artificial intelligence, machine learning, and robotics engineering, the prospects for a human-esque robot capable of performing the actions of real people have been better than ever before.

Fourier Intelligence’s GR-1— first unveiled at the 2023 World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai— is equipped to assist patients from their beds to wheelchairs and pick up objects, boosted by the ability to carry loads of up to 110lb (50kg).

The newly released video flaunts Fourier Intelligence’s production prowess, custom-built actuators, and body parts that are being 3D printed.

And it isn't just Fourier Intelligence seemingly interested in reminding the public of their existence.

Optimus not-at-its-prime.
Tesla issued an update on its take on a humanoid robot, Optimus, with a video that eerily looks CGI-like.

What seemed like a half-baked idea from Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk when first announced was not helped by an underwhelming demo organized by the company at Tesla AI Day last year.

Optimus, barely able to walk about and wave wearily at the crowds, has since gained strength and credibility, reported Electrek.

The new video released by Tesla depicts the bot autonomously sorting objects by color amidst human interruption and self-calibrating its arms and legs.

The humanoid leverages vision and joint position encoders to locate its limbs in space, which allows for precise calibration and efficient learning of tasks. Optimus now trains using a neural network that runs entirely on-board.

The company claims Optimus' capabilities to include learning new tasks such as un-sorting and ended the video with the bot flaunting its dexterity. “Time to stretch after a long day of work,” the company captioned.   READ MORE...

USS Enterprise Filming Model

 

Tuesday, October 3

Revolution

 

Ancient Human Remains in Spain


Human remains are found in a cave, and unearthed to be analyzed by Tibicena, an archaeology company, in Galdar, on the island of Gran Canaria, Spain March 13, 2023.(photo credit: Tibicena Arqueologia y Patrimonio S.L./Handout via REUTERS)




Ancient human remains that were buried in caves in Spain have been shown to be modified prior to their burial, according to a recent study.

The research, published in the peer-reviewed journal PLOS ONE on Wednesday last week, examines the Cueva de los Marmoles, one of the most important cave contexts from southern Spain.

The significance of this cave is that it "returned a large number of commingled skeletal remains suggesting its funerary use from the Neolithic to the Late Bronze Age," the study said. However, the reason why these buried remains were modified still remains a mystery to researchers.


Researchers in the study also explored the fragmentation patterns that characterized different skeletal regions and took both macroscopic and microscopic analyses of whatever modifications were made to the human remains.

Radiocarbon data
The study concluded that through radiocarbon data, the remains date back several millennia, and also estimates that the minimum amount of people's remains discovered number up to 12 - seven adults and five children. 

The research does acknowledge that caves have been used as burial sites in the Iberian Peninsula for thousands of years, with its practice being originated in the 4th millennium BCE.  READ MORE...

Trump


 

How To Live Your Life

It is so easy today, because of social media, to become influenced by celebrities whether they are from Hollywood or athletics.  For some reason we look up to these people and I for one cannot figure out why.

  • Yes, they are rich
  • Yes, they are attractive
  • They overconsume alcohol
  • They overconsume drugs
  • They are obsessed with tattoos
  • They have multiple marriages
  • They have multiple children
  • They believe the law does not apply to them

Is this who you really want to emulate?

What's wrong with who you are?

So, the first lesson to living a successful life is accept who you are and stop worrying about who you would like to be.

Next, forget about following the advice of your parents, your teachers, your preacher, your peers, or your friends...
So, what the hell do I do now?
Well...  use the internet to find out what you want to be and what it takes to get there.
There are lots of jobs that will provide you with a financially safe future if you just look for them and put your preconceived ideas and biases behind you.
Go to college if you want to but be smart about it.
Go to a community college your first two years.
Work while you go in order to pay for your next two years or sometimes your employer will pay.

Start out small and work up.  I talked with a restaurant owner the other day who told me he started out as bussing tables.  He worked his way up and eventually became the manager and then the owner.  He is financially well off and has no college loan debt.  His life has been happy, and he feels successful.

So...  what's wrong with that?

The second lesson to a successful life is always give 110% even when you don't feel like it.  In so doing, you will begin to look for things that need to be done, rather than being told what to do.  While you work for someone else, you are actually managing yourself not the other way around.

The third lesson is kind to people.  Do unto others what you would like them to do unto you EVEN WHEN THEY DON'T DO IT...  It is easy to get made and want revenge, but it is difficult to walk away and let it pass.  You want to control anger and not let anger control you...  regardless of the situation in which you might find yourself.

The fourth lesson is learn how to balance your life so that you can give everyone, INCLUDING YOURSELF, what they/you need.  That includes, work, family, friends, and rejuvenation of self.  You must learn to sharpen the saw...  the saw being yourself.  You also must learn to focus.  When at home, don't think about work and when at work, don't think about home.  There is a time and a place for everything...  it will take a little time to learn that.

The fifth lesson is learn to enjoy life.  See life as something that is positive rather than negative.  Tun negatives into positives.  Plan for the best but expect the worst.  In other words, have contingency plans.  The better you are at planning the better your life will be.  Don't make a plan and file it away.  Execute that plan every day and revisit the plan every week.

Don't look back - always look ahead.

Monster

 

FedEx's New Robot


FEDEX UNVEILED A two-armed robot called DexR this week that’s designed to automate one of the trickiest tasks facing the company’s human employees—loading a truck with packages.


The new robot aims to use artificial intelligence to stack rows of differently sized boxes inside a delivery truck as efficiently as possible, attempting to maximize how many will fit.


That task is far from easy for a machine. “Packages come in different sizes, shapes, weights, and packaging materials, and they come randomized,” says Rebecca Yeung, vice president of operations and advanced technology at FedEx. 


The robot uses cameras and lidar sensors to perceive the packages and must then plan how to configure the available boxes to make a neat wall, place them snugly without crushing anything, and react appropriately if any packages slip.


“A few years ago, AI was not at a stage where it was smart enough to handle this kind of complex decision-making,” Yeung says. DexR is currently in testing, ahead of a wider rollout at FedEx at some point in the future.


While generative AI tools like ChatGPT have created a sense in many industries that AI technology is ready to take on just about anything, handling objects in the messy, unpredictable real world still poses formidable challenges for algorithms. 


Most industrial robots are designed to carry out highly repetitive jobs with extreme precision, but no variation. 
READ MORE...

We Didn't Start It

 

Monday, October 2

Worlds Largest Cruise Ship

 

Tachyons Are Cosmic Engines of Time Travel

A reactor core gives off the blue glow of Cherenkov radiation — one of the few ways in which a tachyon may be detected.   Image by Argonne National Laboratory.



Interstellar travel is the greatest challenge mankind will ever face. Not only because it’s so grandiose and marked by impressive shimmering spacecraft — tall and boundless, scaled by materials born of human ingenuity — but because it’s a necessary step in exploration and understanding of the cosmos. 


It becomes ever more necessary as time goes on, and ever more difficult. This is the complication we face.


Soon, even speeds approaching that of light may not be enough as our universe continues to expand at an enormous rate. The light of our closest star systems and galaxies will struggle to make their way to us, their existence visible only in our books and our computer programs which will have to remind us that the surrounding sky didn’t always look so empty. 


At lightspeed today travel between star systems would take years for a one-way trip. As much of a feat as luminal speeds are, they may someday prove to be insufficient themselves. But where the speed of light has presented to us an obstruction, so too is there a peculiar hope. There are, after all, two sides to every limit.


A comment Einstein makes in his 1905 paper reads, “…velocities greater than that of light have no possibility of existence.” 


But modern science and mathematics have found clever ways around this, loopholes which permit superluminal speeds without contradicting the theory of relativity.  READ MORE...

Puppies