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WWW.COMPUTERWORLD.COMOpenAI is thinking about building its own browserOpenAI is reportedly thinking about developing its own browser with the aim of challenging Googles dominance in the market, according to The Information. The new browser would have built-in support for Chat GPT and Open AIs search engine Search GPT.OpenAI representatives have apparently held talks with developers from Conde Nast, Redfin, Eventbrite, and Priceline, but so far no agreements have been signed.Shares of Googles parent company Alphabet declined on the Nasdaq exchange after the browser plans became public, Reutersreported.0 Comments 0 Shares 27 Views
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WWW.COMPUTERWORLD.COMWindows 11 will soon be available on Meta Quest 3 headsetsMeta Quest 3 and Quest 3S headset owners will soongainaccesstothe full capabilities of Windows 11 in mixed reality, Microsoft announced at itsIgnite conferencethis week.Users will be ableto access a local Windows PC or Windows 365 Cloud PC in seconds, Microsoft said in ablog post, providing access to a private, high-quality, multiple-monitor workstation.Although its already possible to cast a PC desktop to a Quest device, the update should make the process simpler.Microsoft has been working with Meta to bring its apps to the mixed-reality headsets fora while.Last year,the companylaunched several Microsoft 365 appson Quest devices, with web versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint,as well asMesh 3D environments in Microsoft Teams. At its Build conference in May, Microsoft also announced Windows volumetric apps in a developer previewthat promise to bring 3D content from Windows apps into mixed reality.Meta is the market leader, with Quest headsets accounting for 74% of global AR and VR headset shipments, according todata from Counterpoint Research.At the same time, Microsoft has rolled back its own virtual and mixed reality plans,recentlyannouncing it willdiscontinueits HoloLens 2 headset, with no sign of plans for new version in the works.The number of devices sold globallyfell in the second quarter of 2024, according to IDC analysts, down 28% year on year. However, IDC predicts the total number of devices sold will grow from 6.7 million units in 2024 to 22.9 million in 2028 as cheaper devices come to market.Using a Quest headset as a private, large or multi-monitor setup makes sense from a productivity persective, said Avi Greengart, founder of research firm Technsponential. Accesstoall of Windowsrather than just a browser and select Windows 365 appsaddsa lot of utility.Large virtual monitors are a key use case for investing in head-mounted displays, whether thats a mainstream headset like the Quest 3, a high-end spatial computing platform like the Apple Vision Pro, or a pair of display glasses from XREAL that plug into your phone or laptop, said Greengart.Severalhardware constrains limit the use of Quest devices for work tasks,includingdisplay resolution and field of view (the amount of the observable virtual world visible with the device), andthe discomfort ofwearing a headset for extended periods.Metas Quest 3 and 3S devices are more comfortable than Apples Vision Pro, but lack the high resolution of the more expensive device.Greengart added that somepeopleparticularly older usersmightstruggle to focus on small text at a headsets fixed distance focal length. Those that require vision correction lenses inside the headset can find the edges of the display distorted, he said.I love working in VR, but compared to a physical multi-monitor setup,it isnt quite as productive and it gives me a headache, said Greengart. That said, Ive been covering this space for years, and each iteration gets better.0 Comments 0 Shares 26 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMThe Download: how OpenAI tests its models, and the ethics of uterus transplantsThis is todays edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of whats going on in the world of technology.How OpenAI stress-tests its large language modelsOpenAI has lifted the lid (just a crack) on its safety-testing processes. It has put out two papers describing how it stress-tests its powerful large language models to try to identify potential harmful or otherwise unwanted behavior, an approach known as red-teaming.The first paper describes how OpenAI directs an extensive network of human testers outside the company to vet the behavior of its models before they are released. The second presents a new way to automate parts of the testing process, using a large language model like GPT-4 to come up with novel ways to bypass its own guardrails. MIT Technology Review got an exclusive preview of the work.Will Douglas HeavenWho should get a uterus transplant? Experts arent sure.Over 135 uterus transplants have been performed globally in the last decade, resulting in the births of over 50 healthy babies. The surgery has had profound consequences for these familiesthe recipients would not have been able to experience pregnancy any other way.But legal and ethical questions continue to surround the procedure, which is still considered experimental. Who should be offered a uterus transplant? Could the procedure ever be offered to transgender women? And if so, who should pay for these surgeries?Read the full story.Jessica HamzelouThis story is from The Checkup, our weekly newsletter about the latest in biotech and health.Sign upto receive it in your inbox every Thursday.The must-readsIve combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.1 OpenAI may launch a web browserWhich would be a full-frontal assault on Google (The Information$)+The Google browser break-up is an answer in search of a question. (FT$)+OpenAI accidentally deleted potential evidence in a training data lawsuit.(The Verge)2 Border militias are ready to help with Trumps deportation plansRegardless of whether theyre asked to or not. (Wired$)+Trumps administration plans to radically curb the powers of the federal agency that protects unions.(WP$)3 Russia hit Ukraine with a new type of missileHeres what we know about it so far. (The Guardian)4 Microsoft is about to turn 50And its every bit as relevant and powerful as its ever been. (Wired$)5 China has overtaken Germany in industrial robot adoptionSouth Korea, however, remains streets ahead of both of them. (Reuters$)+Three reasons robots are about to become way more useful.(MIT Technology Review)6 The irresistible rise of cozy techOur devices, social media and now AI are encouraging us to keep looking inward. (New Yorker$)+Inside the cozy but creepy world of VR sleep rooms.(MIT Technology Review)7 Churchgoers in a Swiss city have been spilling their secrets to AI Jesus And theyre mostly really enjoying it. Watch out, priests. (The Guardian)8 A French startup wants to make fuel out of thin airThen use it to fuel ships and airplanes. (IEEE Spectrum)+Everything you need to know about alternative jet fuels.(MIT Technology Review)9 WhatsApp is going to start transcribing voice messagesThis seems a good compromise to bridge peoples different communication preferences. (The Verge)10 Want a new phone? You should consider second-handIts better for the planetand your wallet. (Vox)Quote of the dayNope. 100% not true.Jeff Bezos fires back at Elon Musks claim that he was telling everyone that Trump would lose pre-election in a rare post onX.The big storyThis chemist is reimagining the discovery of materials using AI and automationDEREK SHAPTONOctober 2021Aln Aspuru-Guzik, a Mexico Cityborn, Toronto-based chemist, has devoted much of his life to contemplating worst-case scenarios. What if climate change proceeds as expected, or gets significantly worse? Could we quickly come up with the materials well need to cheaply capture carbon, or make batteries from something other than costly lithium?Materials discoverythe science of creating and developing useful new substancesoften moves at a frustratingly slow pace. The typical trial-and-error approach takes an average of two decades, making it too expensive and risky for most companies to pursue.Aspuru-Guziks objectivewhich he shares with a growing number of computer-savvy chemistsis to shrink that interval to a matter of months or years. And advances in AI, robotics, and computing are bringing new life to his vision.Read the full story.Simon LewsenWe can still have nice thingsA place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet em at me.)+ Do you struggle with a lack of confidence?Heres howto take up a bit more space.+ Theserecipeswill ensure you have a delicious Thanksgiving next week.+ Its impossible not to dream of lazy sunny days while gazing atQuentin Monges work.+ Tom Jones x Disturbed =very funny.0 Comments 0 Shares 24 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMWho should get a uterus transplant? Experts arent sure.This article first appeared in The Checkup,MIT Technology Reviewsweekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first,sign up here.Earlier this year, a boy in Sweden celebrated his 10th birthday. Reproductive scientists and doctors marked the occasion too. This little boys birth had been special. He was the first person to be born from a transplanted uterus.The boy was born in 2014 after his mother, a 35-year-old woman who had been born without a uterus, received a donated uterus from a 61-year-old close family friend. At the time, she was one of only 11 women who had undergone the experimental procedure.A decade on, over 135 uterus transplants have been performed globally, resulting in the births of over 50 healthy babies. The surgery has had profound consequences for these familiesthe recipients would not have been able to experience pregnancy any other way.But legal and ethical questions continue to surround the procedure, which is still considered experimental. Who should be offered a uterus transplant? Could the procedure ever be offered to transgender women? And if so, who should pay for these surgeries?These issues were raised at a recent virtual event run by Progress Educational Trust, a UK-based charity that aims to provide information to the public on genomics and infertility. One of the speakers was Mats Brnnstrm, who led the team at the University of Gothenburg that performed the first successful transplant.For Brnnstrm, the story of uterus transplantation begins in 1998. While traveling in Australia, he said, he met a 27-year-old woman called Angela, who longed to be pregnant but lacked a functional uterus. She suggested to Brnnstrm that her mother could donate hers. I was amazed I hadnt thought of it before, he said.According to Brnnstrm, around 1 in 500 women experience infertility due to whats known as absolute uterine factor infertility, or AUFI, meaning they do not have a functional uterus. Uterus transplants could offer them a way to get pregnant.His meeting with Angela kick-started a research project that started in mice and eventually moved on to pigs, sheep, and baboons. Brnnstrms team started performing uterus transplants in women as part of a small clinical trial in 2012. In that trial, all the donors were living, and in many cases they were the mothers or aunts of the recipients.The surgeries ended up being more complicated than he had anticipated, said Brnnstrm. The operation to remove a donors uterus was expected to take between three and four hours. It ended up taking between eight and 11 hours.In that first trial, Brnnstrms team transplanted uteruses into nine women, each of whom had IVF to create and store embryos beforehand. The woman who was the first to give birth had IVF over a 12-month period, which ended six months before her surgery. It took a little over 10 hours to remove the uterus from the donor, and just under five hours to stitch it into the recipient.The recipient started getting her period 43 days after her transplant. Doctors transferred one of her embryos into the uterus a year after her surgery. Three weeks later, a pregnancy test confirmed she was pregnant.At 31 weeks, she was admitted to hospital with preeclampsia, a serious medical condition that can develop during pregnancy, and her baby was delivered by C-section 16 hours later. She was discharged from hospital after three days, although the baby spent 16 days in the hospitals neonatal unit.Despite those difficulties, her story is considered a success. Other uterus recipients have also experienced pregnancy complications, and some have had surgical complications. And all transplant recipients must adhere to a regimen of immunosuppressant drugs, which can have side effects.The uteruses arent intended to last forever, either. Surgeons remove them once the recipients have completed their families, often after one or two children. The removal is also a significant operation.Given all that, uterus transplants are not to be taken lightly. And there are other paths to parenthood. Some ethicists are concerned that in pursuing uterus transplantation as a fertility treatment, we might reinforce ideas that define a womans value in terms of her reproductive potential, Natasha Hammond-Browning, a legal scholar at Cardiff University in Wales, said at the event. There is debate around whether we should be giving greater preference to adoption, to surrogacy, and to supporting children who already exist and who need care, she said.We also need to consider whether there is a right to gestate, and if there is, who has that right, said Hammond-Browning. And these concerns need to be balanced with the importance of reproductive autonomythe idea that people have the right to decide and control their own reproductive efforts.Further questions remain over whether uterus transplants might ever be an option for trans women, who not only lack a uterus but also have a different pelvic anatomy. I asked the speakers if the surgery might ever be feasible. They werent hugely optimistic that it would, at least in the near future.I personally think that the transgender community have been given false hope for responsible transplantation in the near future, was the response of J. Richard Smith of Imperial College London, who co-led the first uterus transplant performed in the UK. Even cisgender women who have needed surgery to create neovaginas arent eligible for the uterus transplants his team are offering as part of a clinical study. They have an altered vaginal microbiome that appears to increase the risk of miscarriage, he said.There is a huge amount of work to be done before this work can be translated to the transgender community, Smith said. Brnnstrm agreed but added that he thinks the surgery will be available at some pointjust after a lot more research.And then there are the legal and ethical questions, none of which have easy answers. Hammond-Browning pointed out that clinical teams would first need to determine what the goal of such an operation would be. Is it about reproduction or gender realignment, for example? And how might that goal influence decisions over who should get a donated uterus, and why?Considering only 135 human uterus transplants have ever been carried out, we still have a lot to learn about the best way to perform them. (For context, more than 25,000 kidney transplants were carried out in 2023 in the US alone.) Researchers are still figuring out how uteruses from deceased donors differ from those of living ones, and how to minimize complications in young, healthy women. Since that little boy was born 10 years ago, only 50 other children have been born in a similar way. Its still early days.Now read the rest of The CheckupRead more from MIT Technology ReviewThe first birth following the transplantation of a uterus from a dead donor happened in 2017. A team in Brazil transferred the uterus of a 45-year-old donor, who had died from a brain hemorrhage, to a 32-year-old recipient born without a uterus.Researchers are working on artificial wombsbiobags designed to care for premature babies. They have been tested on lambs and piglets. Now FDA advisors are figuring out how to move the technology into human trials.An alternative type of artificial womb is being used to grow mouse embryos. Jacob Hanna at the Weizmann Institute of Science and his colleagues say theyve been able to grow embryos in this environment for 11 or 12 daysaround half the animals gestational period.Research is underway to develop new fertility options for transgender men. Some of these men are put off by existing approaches, which tend to involve pausing hormone therapy and undergoing potentially distressing procedures.From around the webPeople on Ozempic, Wegovy, and similar drugs are losing their appetite for sugary, ultraprocessed foods. The food industry will have to adapt. (TIL Nestl has already started a line of frozen meals targeted at people on these weight-loss drugs.) (The New York Times Magazine)People who have a history of obesity can find it harder to lose weight. That might be because the fat cells in our bodies seem to remember that history and have an altered response to food. (The Guardian)Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took leave as chairman of Childrens Health Defense, a nonprofit known for spreading doubt about vaccines, to run for US president last year. But he is still involved in legal cases filed by the group. And several of its cases remain open, including ones against the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes of Healthall agencies Kennedy would lead if his nomination for head of Health and Human Services is confirmed. (STAT)Researchers are among the millions of new users of Bluesky, a social media alternative to X (formerly known as Twitter). There is this pent-up demand among scientists for what is essentially the old Twitter, says one researcher who found that the number of influential scientists using the platform doubled between August and November. (Science)Since 2016, a team of around 100 scientists have been working to catalogue the 37 trillion or so cells in the human body. This week, the Human Cell Atlas published a collection of studies that represents a significant first step toward that goalincluding maps of cells in the nervous system, lungs, heart, gut, and immune system. (Nature)0 Comments 0 Shares 24 Views
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APPLEINSIDER.COMSave $300 on Apple's 1TB M4 Pro 14-inch MacBook Pro this weekendA trio of retailers are fighting for your money, by offering the 1TB 14-inch MacBook Pro with an upgraded M4 Pro chip at $300 off the list price.Grab weekend savings on the 14-inch MacBook Pro - Image credit: AppleThe M4 Pro update to the 14-inch MacBook Pro has made it an extremely viable option for anyone who wants to work on the move. It's so attractive that three major online retailers have the same offer.Amazon is offering the upgraded M4 Pro 14-inch MacBook Pro, complete with its 14-core CPU and 20-core GPU, 14.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR display, 24GB of unified memory and 1TB of storage at $2,099. That's $300 or 13% off the list price of $2,399. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Comments 0 Shares 27 Views
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APPLEINSIDER.COMiPhone 17 Slim probably won't have a telephoto cameraThe rumored iPhone 17 Slim won't have a telephoto camera on the back, with a report insisting it will still be a Pro-level feature in 2025.Renders of what the iPhone 17 Slim could look likeThe iPhone 17 Slim is thought to include quite a few impressive features, but it won't be a Pro-grade device. That means it won't be getting a telephoto camera at all.In a report from TheElec about LG Innotek investing 375.9 billion won ($267.4 million) into new camera module facilities, it discusses the target market for the modules. It reveals that the modules will be destined for the iPhone 17 generation, Apple's 2025 smartphone line. Rumor Score: Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Comments 0 Shares 26 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMPuzzle Tirana - tower design by NOA reflects Albanian capitals rapid transformation archetypal village house stacked in a diz...Puzzle Tirana - tower design by NOA reflects Albanian capitals rapid transformation archetypal village house stacked in a dizzying vertical composition:https://www.e-architect.com/albania/puzzle-tirana-building#Tirana #building #Albania #architecture #tower0 Comments 0 Shares 3 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMLishui Airport building design by MAD Architects in Zhejiang province, China integrating architecture with the surrounding nat...Lishui Airport building design by MAD Architects in Zhejiang province, China integrating architecture with the surrounding natural landscape:https://www.e-architect.com/china/lishui-airport-building-design#Lishui #Airport #building #MADArchitects #architecture #China0 Comments 0 Shares 3 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COM6 Ways AECOM Is Upping Its Game With Their Design of the New LA Clippers ArenaThe Intuit Dome isnt just the Clippers new homeits a sustainability icon! Its grid shell is a marvel of design, inspired by a basketball net, using 100% outdoor air and glowing with LED magic. Learn more about its groundbreaking features here https://bit.ly/3Of9h5JThe Intuit Dome is one of the sporting worlds most sustainable facilities, thanks in large part to its translucent, breathable shell.0 Comments 0 Shares 3 Views