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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web 2 place · 12/30/2021 04:40 EDT

Wild theory says the Big Bang wasn’t the beginning

The prevailing theory on the origin of our universe goes like this: about 13.7 billion years ago a single particle exploded. The resultant blast created an ever-expanding universe that, eventually, became home to the planet we call Earth. The Big Bang theory first appeared in a scientific paper in 1931. Physicist Georges Lemaitre is credited with its creation. And the bulk of our assumptions about the universe and its rate... Read more

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The Next Web
Baptiste Monnet @ The Next Web 3 place · 12/30/2021 02:00 EDT

Step-by-step: How to grow a company culture

Your employees’ relationships with their work environment are just as meaningful as their home environment when it comes to mental health. Improving the work environment means improving productivity, retention, and growth — it’s as simple as that. So, let’s optimize the corporate mission statement and revitalize the communal ethos. Let’s open communication channels of transparent optimism and patience. Just kidding. If you try searching for “improving company culture,” you are... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/29/2021 14:49 EDT

Delusional Elon Musk claims Tesla Robot will be ‘like C3PO or R2D2’

Elon Musk made some wildly bold claims on the Lex Fridman podcast yesterday. While he’s certainly no stranger to sensationalism, it’s clear now that the line between trolling humanity and getting-high-off-his-own supply is blurrier than ever for the world’s richest man. He’s now claiming that the Tesla Robot could be an “incredible buddy like C3PO or R2D2” and that it will be able to “develop a personality over time that... Read more

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The Next Web
Cate Lawrence @ The Next Web · 12/29/2021 11:00 EDT

How supply chain delays stalled new advancements in mobility through 2021

Have you experienced a shortage of particular foods in the grocery store or been waiting ages for that car you ordered at Christmas last year? Well, it’s been a year of spectacular woes in all things supply chain, impacting consumers, manufacturers, and transporters. Let’s look at the highlights:  Suez Canal blockage  In March, a 400-meter cargo ship called Ever Given wedged itself in the Suez Canal for nearly a week... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web 2 place · 12/29/2021 06:00 EDT

The AI stories that made us smile in 2021 — and 5 that made us cry

AI had a memorable 2021, although not always for the best reasons. The field unleashed an arousing blend of breakthroughs, applications, and ideas — but also discharged a steady stream of bigotry, BS, and big tech barbarity. At Neural, we aspire to be like Fox News in its prime: fair and balanced. In this equitable spirit, we’ve compiled an even mix of AI’s best and worst of 2021. Without further... Read more

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The Next Web
Juraj Holub @ The Next Web 2 place · 12/29/2021 02:00 EDT

How to run a great hybrid meeting (Hint: It involves emojis)

Nine out of ten organizations will be combining remote and on-site working in the post-pandemic future of work. That’s what the latest McKinsey research says. This new model will dramatically change the way we function and the way we meet. Getting meetings right will be imperative for any business leader — whether they run a startup or big corporation — to create an inclusive and productive environment where people can... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web 1 place · 12/28/2021 16:48 EDT

How should NASA break the news if it discovers alien life in 2022?

The recent launch of the James Webb space telescope has the science world abuzz with dreams of cosmic breakthroughs in our understanding of the universe. Scientists hope it’ll help us gaze back in time to the universe’s origin, explain the mysteries of dark matter, and find definitive proof of ET. Each of those results would be among the greatest scientific accomplishments in human history. But the aliens one might have... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 13:29 EDT

China’s new AI policy doesn’t prevent it from building autonomous weapons

The People’s Republic of China recently published a “position paper” detailing the nation’s views on military AI regulation. Having thoroughly perused it, we’ve come to the following conclusion: it’s gibberish. Up front: The first thing you want to know when a global superpower releases official government documentation detailing its views on the use of artificial intelligence for military applications is whether the signatory intends to develop lethal autonomous weapons systems... Read more

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The Next Web
Cate Lawrence @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 11:00 EDT

Ebikes sped from zero to critical mass worldwide in 2021

If there’s one segment in the mobility sector that did spectacularly well in 2021, it had to be ebikes. This year we saw investments in ebikes explode. Many companies used the funding for R&D and market expansion. We also saw legal and infrastructural amendments in the US, UK, and EU to promote ebike ownership, and a series of new business models. Let’s take a look: Notable ebike investments in 2021... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 09:41 EDT

Is Einstein’s theory of gravity still relevant — we put it to its toughest test yet

For more than 100 years, Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity has been our best description of how the force of gravity acts throughout the Universe. General relativity is not only very accurate but ask any astrophysicist about the theory and they’ll probably also describe it as “beautiful”. But it has a dark side too: a fundamental conflict with our other great physical theory, quantum mechanics. General relativity works extremely... Read more

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The Next Web
Madison Schott @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 09:21 EDT

3 signs analytics engineering is the job for you

This article was originally published here.  I’ve been seeing more and more job postings for analytics engineers in recent months. Every company wants someone that has both data analytics and software engineering skills. It’s the best bang for their buck in hiring one person. I first became an analytics engineer 6 months ago, after working for 2 years as a data engineer. And I’ve never looked back. I’m glad I... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 05:59 EDT

We ranked 3 types of EV batteries to find the most efficient and sustainable one

Amidst the booming influx of electric vehicles worldwide, automakers and tech companies have been focusing on optimizing the most vital and expensive part of EVs: the batteries. They aren’t all alike, and manufacturers use a range of different kinds of batteries. So we’ve decided to select and rank the three most prominent (or promising) battery types: lithium, solid-state, and sodium-ion batteries. We’ll compare the batteries using four criteria: safety, energy... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 05:51 EDT

2021 was a big year for physics: We finally peeked beyond the Standard Model

If you ask a physicist like me to explain how the world works, my lazy answer might be: “It follows the Standard Model.” The Standard Model explains the fundamental physics of how the universe works. It has endured over 50 trips around the Sun despite experimental physicists constantly probing for cracks in the model’s foundations. With few exceptions, it has stood up to this scrutiny, passing experimental test after experimental... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 05:32 EDT

Physicists working with Microsoft think the universe is a self-learning computer

A team of theoretical physicists working with Microsoft today published an amazing pre-print research paper describing the universe as a self-learning system of evolutionary laws. In other words: We live inside a computer that learns. The big idea: Bostrom’s Simulation Argument has been a hot topic in science circles lately. We published “What if you’re living in a simulation, but there’s no computer” recently to posit a different theory, but... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/28/2021 02:40 EDT

Theoretical physicists think humans are screwing up the universe’s plan

The universe started with a Big Bang. Everything that was ever going to be anything was compacted into a tiny ball of whatever-ness and then it exploded outward and the universe begin expanding. At least, that’s one way of looking at it. But emergent new theories and ages-old philosophical assertions are beginning to find a foothold in cutting-edge quantum physics research. And it’s beginning to look more and more like... Read more

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The Next Web
Rihards Piks @ The Next Web 2 place · 12/28/2021 02:00 EDT

I secured a $100K pre-seed investment in 30 min with nothing but an idea

It was my first time pitching a VC investor. I had settled on the couch of my living room, ready for a video call with someone I had never met in person. I had a business idea and a team to pull it off. He had the money and interest in early-stage startups. Fingers crossed it’s a match! The call was short and to the point. We spoke about my... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/27/2021 15:14 EDT

NASA takes a $10B gamble on Webb – what could go wrong?

The James Webb space telescope was successfully launched over the weekend. The $10B honeycomb array, which will serve as the spiritual successor to Hubble, is now on its way to Lagrange point two. There, it’ll sit in orbit a million miles away from the planet it was built on. ✅ Milestone achieved. @NASAWebb is safely in space, powered on, and communicating with ground controllers. The space telescope is now on... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web · 12/27/2021 11:00 EDT

AI took control of my life — and introduced me to my future cyborg self

Artificial intelligence has entered all our lives, but few people have embraced it as firmly as I. Over the past year, I’ve tried to embed AI into every aspect of my futile existence. I envisioned creating a cyborg in a real-life sci-fi story, in which I’d play the parts of both Frankenstein and his monster. And if that didn’t work out, surely the algorithms would be adequate replacements for my... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 12/27/2021 10:57 EDT

How to get started exploring the universe from your desk

This article is part of a series explaining how readers can learn the skills to take part in activities that academics love doing as part of their work. By far my favourite thing about my job as an astronomer is those rare moments when I get to see beautiful distant galaxies, whose light left them millions to billions of years ago. It’s a combination of pure awe and scientific curiosity... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 12/27/2021 09:50 EDT

How the laws of physics could prevent AI from gaining sentience

A renowned theoretical computer science expert recently released an astonishing physics pre-print paper that tosses fuel on the fiery debate over… whether humans could use wormholes to traverse the universe or not. Don’t worry, I’ll explain what this has to do with self-aware robots in due course. Fun with physics First, however, let’s lay the foundation for our speculation with a quick glance at this all-new wormhole theory. The pre-print... Read more

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