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mikhail-miguel

Dubverse - Easily dub videos & reach more people with a click of a button (dubverse.ai). - 0 views

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    Dubverse: Easily dub videos & reach more people with a click of a button (dubverse.ai).
jack0394855

How AllVoiceLab Changed the Way I Work With Voice: A Creator's Story - 0 views

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    - Confessions of a Voice-Challenged Creator: How I Stopped Worrying and Let AI Talk For Me - Let's be honest: Creating content with voice used to feel like filming a Marvel movie - fun in theory, financially traumatic in practice.
mikhail-miguel

Translate.video - Translate.video helps in video translation, captioning, subtitle tran... - 0 views

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    Translate.video: Translate.video helps in video translation, captioning, subtitle translation, dubbing, Artificial Intelligence voice-over, recording, and transcript generation (translate.video). Translate.video: Translates videos using Artificial Intelligence to 75+ languages with just 1-click (translate.video).
frank smith

Memristor minds: The future of artificial intelligence - tech - 08 July 2009 - New Scie... - 0 views

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    EVER had the feeling something is missing? If so, you're in good company. Dmitri Mendeleev did in 1869 when he noticed four gaps in his periodic table. They turned out to be the undiscovered elements scandium, gallium, technetium and germanium. Paul Dirac did in 1929 when he looked deep into the quantum-mechanical equation he had formulated to describe the electron. Besides the electron, he saw something else that looked rather like it, but different. It was only in 1932, when the electron's antimatter sibling, the positron, was sighted in cosmic rays that such a thing was found to exist. In 1971, Leon Chua had that feeling. A young electronics engineer with a penchant for mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, he was fascinated by the fact that electronics had no rigorous mathematical foundation. So like any diligent scientist, he set about trying to derive one. And he found something missing: a fourth basic circuit element besides the standard trio of resistor, capacitor and inductor. Chua dubbed it the "memristor". The only problem was that as far as Chua or anyone else could see, memristors did not actually exist. Except that they do.
Aasemoon =)

HRP-4C Dances Thanks to AIST's Choreonoid Software - 0 views

  • Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) has detailed the software used to make their robot dance (see some nice photos over at Pink Tentacle) in a recent press release.  The software, dubbed Choreonoid (Choreography and Humanoid), is similar to conventional computer animation software.  Users create key poses and the software automatically interpolates the motion between them.  What makes the software unique is that it also corrects the poses if they are mechanically unstable, such as modifying the position of the feet and waist, allowing anyone to create motions compatible with the ZMP balancing method.  This is especially important for robots like the HRP-4C, where complicated motions could easily cause it to fall over.
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