Michael Nuschkeflipped into RetirementSingularity2 days agoWant to Live a Long and Fulfilling Life? Change How You Think About Getting OldThe Wall Street Journal. - Debra Whitman | Photographs by Shuran Huang for WSJ Nearly every Friday morning for the last three years, I’ve exercised side-by-side with Perry Chapman. At 70, Perry is over 15 years older than me, but she puts me to shame. Perhaps this shouldn’t be surprising given that she takes several Pilates classes a week and has just started weightlifting …
Michael Nuschkeflipped into Disruptive Tech - Creative Destruction2 days agoAI is powerful, dangerous, and controversial. What will Donald Trump do with it?verified_publisherVox - Kelsey PiperIn 2020, when Joe Biden won the White House, generative AI still looked like a pointless toy, not a world-changing new technology. The first major AI image generator, DALL-E, wouldn’t be released until January 2021 — and it certainly wouldn’t be putting any artists out of business, as it still had …
Michael Nuschkeflipped into Radical Healthy Life Extension2 days agoAI will help us live longer, Northern Data exec saysverified_publisherQuartz - Andy MillsRosanne Kincaid-Smith, COO of Northern Data Group, told Quartz that artificial intelligence has the potential to completely revolutionize the healthcare sector
Michael Nuschkeflipped into YOUR PERSONAL BOT1 day ago5.5G key to making mobile AI, virtual assistants a realitytelecoms.com - Jay Ian BirbeckYang Chaobin delivers a keynote speech at the Global Mobile Broadband Forum in Istanbul, Türkiye, Oct. 31, 2024. [Photo Courtesy of Huawei] Virtual …
Michael Nuschkeflipped into Shambhala Singularity2 days agoDoes psilocybin really provide long-term relief from depression, as new study suggests?psypost.org - Johan Lundberg and Guusje HaverPsilocybin, the psychedelic substance found in magic mushrooms, is a promising new treatment for psychiatric disorders, especially depression. The …
Michael Nuschkeflipped into Focus on Mexico1 day agoHow extreme weather affects migration between the U.S. and Mexicoverified_publisherFast Company - BY Associated PressScientists predict migration will grow as the planet gets hotter. Extreme weather is contributing to undocumented migration and return between Mexico and the United States, suggesting that more migrants could risk their lives crossing the border as climate change fuels droughts, storms, and other …