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ESA ACT

Photoshop Contest: 115 More Pieces of Amazing Iranian Technology Created with Photoshop - 0 views

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    :-)
ESA ACT

qwantz.com - dinosaur comics - February 12 2007 - 0 views

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    A bit weird but worth posting...
Francesco Biscani

The Cathedral and the Bazaar - 7 views

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    Albeit a bit dated, this is the classical Eric Raymond paper about the self-organizing open source model (the bazaar) compared to the usual closed software development model (the cathedral). Is science today more a bazaar or a cathedral?
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    funny .... this is exactly the book that Franco mentioned during one of the first meetings I had with him on the ACT, our research, how to organise, the potential of new ways of cooperating etc ...
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    Science today is a Basilica.
Giusi Schiavone

RedTacton - 4 views

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    impressive: use of human body for communication between electronic devices
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    i saw once a similar system that would automatically transfer your business card when you shake hands ... funny ..
Paul N

Have We Been Interpreting Quantum Mechanics Wrong This Whole Time? - 6 views

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    "The experiments involve an oil droplet that bounces along the surface of a liquid. The droplet gently sloshes the liquid with every bounce. At the same time, ripples from past bounces affect its course. The droplet's interaction with its own ripples, which form what's known as a pilot wave, causes it to exhibit behaviors previously thought to be peculiar to elementary particles - including behaviors seen as evidence that these particles are spread through space like waves, without any specific location, until they are measured." Pilot-wave theory reresurrected. Maybe something for the next "fundamental" :P physics RF?
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    And for the next 'Experimental Physics Stagiaire' position why not try to do "Unpredictable Tunneling of a Classical Wave-Particle Association" http://stilton.tnw.utwente.nl/people/eddi/Papers/PhysRevLett_TUNNEL.pdf, there are some rumors online that the results of Yves Couder Experiments can be reproduced with simple DIY vibrating tables! It is very funny to see the videos of the MIT's replication of this experiment (with lightening legends for those who are uncomfortable with the concepts involved https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YF5iHQMjcsM)
Luís F. Simões

The great chain of being sure about things | The Economist - 2 views

  • The technology behind bitcoin lets people who do not know or trust each other build a dependable ledger. This has implications far beyond the cryptocurrency
  • Ledgers that no longer need to be maintained by a company—or a government—may in time spur new changes in how companies and governments work, in what is expected of them and in what can be done without them. A realisation that systems without centralised record-keeping can be just as trustworthy as those that have them may bring radical change.
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    The blockchain technology behind bitcoin has been gaining traction. This article makes a good job of describing it, and the different (not-bitcoin) ways in which it's being adopted. Worth reading, even if only for the funny bit about self-driving self-owning cars who pay themselves for fuel, parking and repairs.
zoervleis

Google's Go AI Beats Professional Player - 0 views

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    This is the biggest breakthrough in game AI (and one of the biggest in AI in general) since Deep Blue beat Kasparov in chess: For the first time, a human professional player was defeated in the game of Go. The approach was a combination of tree search and deep neural networks. Very proud of a former colleague on the team at Google Deepmind!
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    Funny enough, facebook also had a very similar paper around the same time.
Paul N

Google's AI has learned how to draw by looking at your doodles - 0 views

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    "To create Sketch-RNN, Google Brain researchers David Ha and Douglas Eck collected more than five million user-drawn sketches from the Google tool Quick, Draw! Each time a user drew something on the app, it recorded not only the final image, but also the order and direction of every pen stroke used to make it. The resulting data gives a more complete picture (ho, ho, ho) of how we really draw." It's funny because this David Ha used to be a quant banker ha ha
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