Skip to main content

Home/ Physics of the Future/ Group items tagged using

Rss Feed Group items tagged

William C

Nanotechnology Introduction - 0 views

  •  
    "The term "nanotechnology" has evolved over the years via terminology drift to mean "anything smaller than microtechnology," such as nano powders, and other things that are nanoscale in size, but not referring to mechanisms that have been purposefully built from nanoscale components. See our "Current Uses" page for examples. This evolved version of the term is more properly labeled "nanoscale bulk technology," while the original meaning is now more properly labeled "molecular nanotechnology" (MNT), or "nanoscale engineering," or "molecular mechanics," or "molecular machine systems," or "molecular manufacturing." Recently, the Foresight Institute has suggested an alternate term to represent the original meaning of nanotechnology"
Woody H

Oculus Rift - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  •  
    "The Oculus Rift is an upcoming virtual reality head-mounted display. It is being developed by Oculus VR, which has raised US $91 million, of which $2.4 million was raised with crowdfunding via Kickstarter.[4] The company was founded by Palmer Luckey and Scaleform co-founders Brendan Iribe and Michael Antonov,[5] as well as Nate Mitchell. id Software co-founder John Carmack was later hired as its Chief Technology Officer.[6]"
Woody H

What Is A QR Code And Why Do You Need One? - 0 views

  •  
    uses for qr codes
Nicholas C

Your children will live to see man merge with machines. But will it save or destroy us?... - 0 views

  •  
    passage about robot merging
Aaron Maurer

In One Month, Everyone In Iceland Will Own Cryptocurrency - 0 views

  •  
    I came across this article about new currency. Very interesting. Great topic with students who think the existing currency is all we can use in buying and selling.
Haley M

7 Best-Case Scenarios for the Future of Humanity - 0 views

  •  
    Scenarios for the Future of humanity
  •  
    I believe this is an extraordinary website. It seems to do a great job exhibiting what our future may hold. Seems very useful as an outline for research or opinions.
William B

Medicine in the Year 2060 with Dr. Michio Kaku (FOX Feature) - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    future of medicine
  •  
    This video will be majorly beneficial, especially during this stage of our research. This site is reliable because it is from Dr. Kaku's youtube page, (which may also be beneficial in the future to remember), and the information from this video may give us a better view on what subjects to explore as our research continues.
Dru F

'Physics Of The Future': How We'll Live In 2100? : NPR - 1 views

  •  
    This page summarizes the whole book, "Physics of the Future" . It will be very useful in understanding the summary book.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    This is a 10 minute interview with the author of the book on PBS so you can listen to it. This is going to change the world of warfare and many other fields. ""The first people to buy these contact lenses will be college students studying for final exams," he tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross. "They'll see the exam answers right in their contact lenses. ... In a cocktail party, you will know exactly who to suck up to, because you'll have a complete read out of who they are. President Barack Obama will buy these contact lenses, so he'll never need a teleprompter again. ... These already exist in some form [in the military]. You place [a lens] on your helmet, you flip it down, and immediately you see the Internet of the battlefield ... all of it, right on your eyeball.""
  •  
    article about future of Computers
  •  
    NPR report on Physics of the Future
Tristen H

Artificial Intelligence [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] - 1 views

  •  
    "Artificial intelligence (AI) would be the possession of intelligence, or the exercise of thought, by machines such as computers."
  •  
    "While we don't know what thought or intelligence is, essentially, and while we're very far from agreed on what things do and don't have it, almost everyone agrees that humans think, and agrees with Descartes that our intelligence is amply manifest in our speech. Along these lines, Alan Turing suggested that if computers showed human level conversational abilities we should, by that, be amply assured of their intelligence. Turing proposed a specific conversational test for human-level intelligence, the "Turing test" it has come to be called. Turing himself characterizes this test in terms of an "imitation game"" This seems to be a wonderful source, and I feel that it is reliable because it is an official academic resource, reviewed by many. I plan on using this fantastic source for general information, and specifically the bit I quoted for determining exactly what qualifies as an artificial intelligence. Many computers are considered "thoughtful" but what truly defines AI I play to learn from Turing's Test; an experiment developed by Alan Turing (another facet I would consider researching)
William B

Medical physicists: preparing for change - MedicalPhysicsWeb - 1 views

  •  
    a new direction we need to look at in Medicine. 
  •  
    I think this website will be a great reference through out this project. It provides us with a descriptive overview of the current medical technology available to the public, as well as a glimpse of the technological possibilities that may be part of our future. This source appears to be reliable because it is a medical website. The author also includes citations throughout the article to prove the information is correct.
Hunter Hayes

Google driverless car - 1 views

  •  
    i don't believe this will work in the long run "The Google driverless car is a project by Google that involves developing technology for autonomous cars. The software powering Google's cars is called Google Chauffeur.[2] Lettering on the side of each car identifies it as a "self-driving car." The project is currently being led by Google engineer Sebastian Thrun, director of the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and co-inventor of Google Street View. Thrun's team at Stanford created the robotic vehicle Stanley which won the 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge and its US$2 million prize from the United States Department of Defense.[3] The team developing the system consisted of 15 engineers working for Google, including Chris Urmson, Mike Montemerlo, and Anthony Levandowski who had worked on the DARPA Grand and Urban Challenges.[4]"
  •  
    The Google driverless car is a project by Google that involves developing technology for autonomous cars
Hunter Hayes

The Future of Medicine Is Now - 0 views

  •  
    "Surgeons at Boston Children's Hospital have developed a way to help children born with half a heart to essentially grow a whole one-by marshaling the body's natural capacity to heal and develop." This site shows some current prototypes of ideas that Kaku predicted in his book. It shows us that there are medical advancements, which we thought were not possible until much farther into the future, functioning almost flawlessly in our current society. This website will be a valuable resource in this project because it explains multiple advancements that have been made in the last few years and will be perfected in the near future. This article comes from a website that we know is reliable from previous research.
  •  
    In our era of instant gratification, the world of medicine seems like an outlier. The path from a promising discovery to an effective treatment often takes a decade or more.But from that process-of fits and starts, progress and setbacks and finally more progress-grow the insights and advances that change the course of medicine.
Ben Tinsman

Economic Powers in Fifteen Years - 2 views

  •  
    This site provides some insight on the economic powers of the world in the near future. We can use the more recent predictions to more accurately estimate the economic state of the future.
Jill Schenck

The Deep-Space Suit - 0 views

  •  
    This article is useful because it explores the profound advantages of modern space technology. Several factors limit the depth of space exploration for humans. Astronauts would be able to travel further if they had better space suits. A single fault in any type of space suit is fatal, as the vast climate of space is so much different from the atmosphere of Earth and therefore completely nonsupporting of a human without full insulation and protection. High-tech space suits could not only provide better comfort to astronauts, but they could also provide more convenience and productivity, resulting in higher overall performance. Not only could improved, futuristic spacesuits enable astronauts to support themselves for an extended period of time, enabling them to travel further distances, newer technology might even be able to bring humans to places that have been far too hostile to travel before-- like Mars.
mason chin

Timeline to the Future - 0 views

  •  
    This website shows you two different ideas of a timeline from 2015 all the way to 2100. It gave us a basic understanding of what might be to come before 2100, so we can accurately make predictions on what the future may hold. The page itself may not seem to look very reliable, but the website the information is from is a newsletter completely based on predictions of the future. By knowing what may come before the twenty-second century, we are able to see into the future clearly. This project is to understand the future of our civilization "Will the year 2100 bring disaster or salvation?"
Jack S

What It Is and How It Works - 0 views

  •  
    I think that this is a great site for learning more about nanotechnology and what it does. It is a government website, so all of the facts are going to be true. There are facts on this site from how big a nanometer is to what nanotechnology can be put to use for. Just from reading the website over once I have already learned so much more about nanotechnology. I think this is a source that will be very helpful in the future.
Joey Parker

What Is the Future of Computers? - 0 views

  •  
    "Many scientists believe the exponential growth in computing power leads inevitably to a future moment when computers will attain human-level intelligence: an event known as the "singularity"." I find this site very useful because it gives insight from many different perspectives about different possibilities for the future of the computer. It talks about how computers will possibly be capable of out thinking humans. On the contrary, the source talks about how computers may not be capable of outperforming humans. I believe this source is reliable because it contains quotes from many respected scientists, including Michio Kaku.
Joey Parker

What Will Computers Look Like in 30 Years? - 0 views

  •  
    "What will computers look like in 30 years? Trick question. You won't see them at all." This source is insightful because it predicts the possibility of micro-sized computer chips being in one's body. I will use this site to help me with my themes of the future computer. This site is reliable because it correlates with many other predictions that have been made.
Josh Turner

Cognitive Computing - 0 views

  •  
    "Rather than being programmed to anticipate every possible answer or action needed to perform a function or set of tasks, cognitive computing systems are trained using artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning algorithms to sense, predict, infer and, in some ways, think." This source provides a method for the bottom-up approach to AI, which is letting the computer learn like an infant instead of teaching it how to respond to certain cases. Cognitive computing will most likely be mentioned in our project when we talk about the technological singularity. This article is trustworthy because it is written by IBM, one of the world innovators in technology and computing.
« First ‹ Previous 81 - 100 of 119 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page