New Scientist - Technology
Cold war spy satellites and AI detect ancient underground aqueducts
Archaeologists are using AI and US spy satellite imagery from the cold war to find ancient underground aqueducts that helped humans survive in the desert
Categories: Science
The AI expert who says artificial general intelligence is nonsense
Artificial intelligence has more in common with ants than humans, says Neil Lawrence. Only by taking a more nuanced view of intelligence can we see how machines will truly transform society
Categories: Science
OpenAI’s warnings about risky AI are mostly just marketing
A powerful new AI called o1 is the most dangerous that OpenAI has ever released, the firm claims – but who are these warnings for, asks Chris Stokel-Walker
Categories: Science
The deepfakes of Trump and Biden that you are most likely to fall for
Experiments show that viewers can usually identify video deepfakes of famous politicians – but fake audio and text are harder to detect
Categories: Science
Electric vehicles race combustion cars in 'battle of technologies'
‘Battle of Technologies’ sees electric vehicles and combustion cars compete at the highest level. Who will win?
Categories: Science
Documentary tells the fascinating story of a man wired to hear colour
Cyborg: A documentary tells the intriguing story of Neil Harbisson, who wears an antenna to “hear” colour, but it is lacking in depth and should have probed its subject more, says Simon Ings
Categories: Science
How Star Trek-style replicators could lead to a food revolution
Our Future Chronicles column explores an imagined history of inventions and developments yet to come. This time, Rowan Hooper takes us to the early 2030s, when a technological step change enabled us to produce all the food we needed without the use of animals
Categories: Science
A riveting exploration of how AI models like ChatGPT changed the world
Supremacy, a new book from tech journalist Parmy Olson, takes us inside the rise of machine learning and AI, and examines the people behind it
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Meet Valkyrie, NASA’s humanoid robot paving way to the moon and Mars
NASA’s Valkyrie is undergoing tests to understand what it would take to get a humanoid robot onto offshore facilities or into space. New Scientist's James Woodford took the controls to see what it is capable of
Categories: Science
I took control of NASA's Valkyrie robot and it blew my mind
Are humanoid robots the future of space exploration? New Scientist reporter James Woodford took NASA's Valkyrie for a spin to find out
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Smart speakers at crime scenes could provide valuable clues to police
Information on faces recognised, voice commands and internet searches can be extracted from an Amazon Echo smart assistant without help from the user or manufacturer
Categories: Science
NATO tests autonomous drone technology in DARPA-style competition
In a basement beneath City St George's, University of London, senior NATO leaders watch on as four research teams demonstrate the latest in AI-controlled, autonomous drone technolo0gy
Categories: Science
Google breakthrough paves way for large-scale quantum computers
Google has built a quantum computer that makes fewer errors as it is scaled up, and this may pave the way for machines that could solve useful real-world problems for the first time
Categories: Science
We need transparency from the companies disseminating misinformation
As misinformation about the upcoming US elections rockets across social media, creating chaos, companies need to be honest about where this content is coming from, says Annalee Newitz
Categories: Science
Nexus review: Yuval Noah Harari is out of his depth in his new book
The author of Sapiens has turned his attention to the information networks that shape our societies, but when you stop and think about what he's saying, it's obvious
Categories: Science
Ultra-strong stretchy material could enable shape-shifting aircraft
A new procedure turns an alloy of nickel and titanium into a material as strong as steel but 20 times stretchier – and one application could be building planes with shape-shifting wings
Categories: Science
How to spot deepfakes and AI-generated images
It can be difficult to spot AI generated videos known as deepfakes, but there are ways to spot one if you know what to look for
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How to avoid being fooled by AI-generated misinformation
Advances in generative AI mean fake images, videos, audio and bots are now everywhere. But studies have revealed the best ways to tell if something is real
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Why is the US military getting ready to launch new spy balloons?
The US military has prioritised deploying high-altitude balloons that can carry out surveillance
Categories: Science
Generative AI creates playable version of Doom game with no code
A neural network can recreate the classic computer game Doom despite using none of its code or graphics, hinting that generative AI could be used to create games from scratch in future
Categories: Science