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Showing posts from April, 2014

#humor #pets


#humor #pets

Originally shared by Chris Kim A

PETTING CHART

Because #Caturday
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Stole this from Sean Coleman over on the FB

On the streets of Salvador, at Pelourinho. lol


On the streets of Salvador, at Pelourinho. lol

#humor   #salvador   #pelourinho   #brasil   #brazil   #football   #bahia  

Originally shared by What's Hot Online


Take this ; )

#art #cars


#art   #cars  

Originally shared by Humorindo

Não Sigam Mente Poluida

#artificialintelligence #robotics


#artificialintelligence   #robotics  

Originally shared by Futurism 1.0

Nano Guide: Artificial Intelligence 101

Artificial intelligence: from Skynet to the very intuitive computer systems of the Star Trek universe, AI has played a very strong role in modern pop-culture. IBM's jeopardy-winning Watson is one of the most advanced forms of AI humanity has created to date and we are constantly pushing ourselves to make better and smarter machines. The holy grail of computer science is to make an artificially intelligent computer, to give it "the spark of life" - but, what does this mean? What is artificial intelligence?

To learn more about this concept, and what many believe is the future of robotics, see: http://www.fromquarkstoquasars.com/nano-guide-artificial-intelligence-101/

Conceptual AI artwork, “Earth to Universe,” by Donato Giancola

#robotics #bioinspired


#robotics   #bioinspired  

Originally shared by Adafruit Industries

An engineering company is creating a robot army inspired by nature
http://adafru.it/aSb

PolicyMic has the story on Festo’s incredible nature inspired robots. You can see more animated gifs over at their site.

German engineering firm Festo is creating a robot army. Sounds scary, right? But there’s no need to fear a “Skynet”-type apocalypse quite yet, because these robots want to do good by making laborious tasks easier in the factories of the future. And they’re using nature as their inspiration.

Festo summarizes the motivation behind their research on their website: “Gripping, moving, controlling and measuring – nature performs all of these tasks instinctively, easily and efficiently. What could be more logical than to examine these natural phenomena and learn from them?”

It makes a lot of sense. Why reinvent the wheel when nature has already spent epochs perfecting the mechanics needed for survival on the Earth? This practice of bio-mimicry is widespread in other fields such as molecular biology, where many drugs are designed by optimizing already existing natural products from microorganisms.

What’s really brilliant about this body of research is that while many of the designs have obvious practical applications, many others have been made in the creative spirit of learning, with some wild results.

See more gifs of the robots herehttp://adafru.it/aSb
#robotics