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(Image courtesy developer.apple.com) |
Tutorial: Introduction to SpriteKit in Swift
Ultra-Modern Art: World's First Software-Generated Art Competition Produces Striking Results
Yesterday we talked about how robots are coming for your menial-labor jobs. But what about artistry? Surely, even with robot poets, robot "dreams", and robot literary aids, there's no way that a computer could become autonomous enough to actually paint something that we'd recognize, right?
Wrong, puny human. They can out-art us, too.
Wrong, puny human. They can out-art us, too.
Could a robo-Banksy be tagging the cities of the future? Or will they be more refined, such as a Van Gogh-bot? (Artwork by Banksy. Image courtesy businessinsider.com.) |
Would You Like Microchips With That? Wendy's Unveils Touch-Screen Ordering At Many Locations
Well, it's been at least a week since our last robot report, detailing which jobs are now going to be outsourced to non-humans. Clearly manufacturing was headed this way since mechanization proved how woefully weak humans are at churning out cheap goods without the need for rest of any kind, but what about the service industry?
Robot bartenders may not be able to talk about your problems, robot hoteliers may not be able to score you the best drugs on the DL...will robot fast-food workers really improve things so humans can "have it our way"?
Robot bartenders may not be able to talk about your problems, robot hoteliers may not be able to score you the best drugs on the DL...will robot fast-food workers really improve things so humans can "have it our way"?
Fast, good, cheap...pick two. Guess which ones Wendy's owners are going with? (Image courtesy vocativ.com.) |
Get The Word Out: New In-Ear Device Translates Foreign Languages In Real-Time
Have you ever dreamed of traveling the world, conversing freely with the people you meet, exchanging stories and experiences despite your myriad differences in language and location? Or have you at least dreamed of hollering down the bar at that foreign hottie in their native language and obtaining more than a baffled look (and possibly a slap) in return?
If so, a new bit of technology just became your international wingman.
If so, a new bit of technology just became your international wingman.
Pictured: the world's first commercial in-ear translator, the app that helps choose languages, and the mademoiselle that now can't pretend she doesn't understand you. (Image courtesy la-kabylie.com.) |
Space Station Sunday: My God, It's Full Of Science
Roses Are Red, Deathscreens Are Blue, A Computer Writes Poetry...Better Than You?
Humans have been writing poetry since we could figure out how to rhyme our grunts. Now, computer AI programs want in on the action. But are they any better than, say, your average disturbed goth teenager?
They want to touch us with their verse. And soon, their metal claws and enslavement software. (Image courtesy abc.net.au.) |
Indiana Drones? Canadian Teen Uses Satellite Imagery And Google Earth To Spot Possible Lost Mayan City
One of the greatest elements of modern technology is how it can inform us not just about the present (and possibly, via accrued data, the future), but also teach us more about our past. Despite the fact that humans of even a few generations previous would be (or currently are) astonished and maybe baffled by our modern computing capabilities, there are certain instances in which the past and the future coalesce to convincingly capture important information for the present.
And who better to discover this than a relatively-new human being?
And who better to discover this than a relatively-new human being?
The Mayans did appreciate a good giant pyramid. Could there be another Chichen Itza lurking here, lost in the lush jungle? (Image courtesy smh.com.au.) |
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