Group of researchers at MIT presented a paper about 2 softwares that will revolutionise the way we think about knitting. The softwares will help to design and knit garments even if you are a complete newbie. It embraces artificial intelligence to recognise and extract patterns from photos and create your own knitwear by combining those patterns together and ending it with your own unique touch.
New studies and inventions in engineered timber have paved the road for the world’s first wooden skyscrapers to emerge within a decade. According to Centre for Natural Material Innovation this will announce the start of the sustainable wooden cities, helping to reverse emissions from constructions industry.
Researchers of Samsung AI Center in Moscow created a system that can produce lifelike video from just a single snapshot of a person’s face
In the not too distant future people will be fighting for water access as new paper suggests. "Water wars" can raise because of catastrophic climate changes and steady increase in the world population. Keep in mind that the world population is currently growing by approximately 74 million people per year
How can you increase your profit? It turns out that women in leadership roles can add up to 6% to your net margin, research shows.
NEO, an open source blockchain company announced that it had received funding up to $100 million to aid its plan to build a digital smart economy.
Google Arts & Culture has just launched an application that composes poems using artificial intelligence. The application is called "Poem Portraits" and has been developed by code writer Ross Goodwin and artist Es Devlin.
One of the scientists behind the black hole picture explains why it matters. “This is a real breakthrough,” said Doeleman, a senior research fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). “I think this image could rank up there with those other images because we’re seeing something we never thought we could see.”
A new cancer "vaccine" that cured up to 97 percent of tumors in mice will soon be tested in humans for the first time
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign developed tiny brain sensors that can measure pressure and temperature.
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