Share this postRobots & StartupsWould you rather be working on flying cars or 180 characters?!? - Issue #88Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMoreWould you rather be working on flying cars or 180 characters?!? - Issue #88Andra KeayNov 10, 2022Share this postRobots & StartupsWould you rather be working on flying cars or 180 characters?!? - Issue #88Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMoreSharenullANA Avatar XPRIZE Competition Presentation – Summary of the Challenge, including Finals results and data Panel #1: ANA Avatar XPRIZE Judge Panel – several Judges, Discussion on the Prize experience and findings Panel #2: ANA XPRIZE Winning Team Panel Three of the winning teams from Finals to discuss their experiences.null“There are a lot of interesting technologies coming out of Seattle, with women founders at the top,” she said. “That is really exciting, and I think we’ll see a lot more in the next decade.”IEEE offers honors & recognitions that recognize entrepreneurial excellence for which IEEE members can be considered. Honors & recognitions categories include career excellence, impressive initiatives, and skills in entrepreneurship as well as in industry leadership.Your description for this link...Application Deadline: 31 October 2022 Artificial Intelligence (AI) paired with robotic technologies offer cutting-edge solutions to societal challenges innullU.S. chip maker Nvidia Corp is offering a new advanced chip in China that meets recent export control rules aimed at keeping cutting-edge technology out of China's hands, the company confirmed on Monday.Sinovation Ventures is a Chinese venture capital firm led by legendary AI technologist Kai-Fu Lee. Investments in U.S.-based HPC-AI Tech could serve a greater purpose for the celebrity AI researcher and longtime investor in AI developed in China. It could help Lee maintain a decades-long cross-border bond with the U.S. that is slowly eroding.From its roots in academia to the first startup applications ROS and now ROS 2 along with the open source project ROS-Industrial are making a real difference with real solutions and products.ProfilePicture.ainullIs the Adam Link series worth reading? Probably not for its literary value, because the prose and plotting represents everything pulp fiction about the Golden Age of Science Fiction: a linear narrative of a technological adventure with a creaky plot (5). Although the stories focus on the Frankenstein complex, the closing narration for the 1964 The Outer Limits I, Robot episode may best capture their real lesson: “Man will build more robots and learn how to make them better. And, given enough time, he may learn how to do the same for himself (6).”PreviousNext