Thứ Sáu, 30 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 30 2017

Workout motivation workout motivation music for female fitness Training 😍

For more infomation >> Workout motivation - Workout motivation music for female fitness training 😍 - Duration: 34:03.

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How to Draw Ice Cream Coloring Pages for Kids Songs Learn Drawing Art Colours for Children education - Duration: 10:49.

How to Draw Ice Cream Coloring Pages for Kids Songs Learn Drawing Art Colours for Children education

For more infomation >> How to Draw Ice Cream Coloring Pages for Kids Songs Learn Drawing Art Colours for Children education - Duration: 10:49.

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Jamul residents blaming Hollywood Casino for increase in crashes - Duration: 1:40.

For more infomation >> Jamul residents blaming Hollywood Casino for increase in crashes - Duration: 1:40.

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Ray Kurzweil | Our Brain Is a Blueprint for the Master Algorithm | Singularity Hub - Duration: 7:50.

(calming instrumental music)

- Well I think actually there are some basic principles

to how human thinking works.

My last book, "How to Create a Mind",

which came out in 2012,

which resulted in me being recruited to Google,

I practiced those ideas, talked about

how human neocortex works,

it's outgrowth of a thesis

I have had actually for 50 years

because I wrote a paper

when I was 14 or 15 in 1962,

and won a science contest to Westinghouse Talent Search.

Now the intel inside this talent got to be present content

and I described human thinking as consisting

of modules of neurons,

each module can recognize a pattern,

and the basis of human thinking is pattern recognition.

And those patterns are actually sequential.

And they're in one direction.

And I gave a lot of evidence for this.

For example, try to recite the alphabet.

Now, most of you can do that fast.

Okay well, recite it backwards.

You probably can't do that,

unless you learned that as a new sequence.

It's a pretty trivial transformation,

and yet we can't do it.

So we have different hints as to how the human brain works.

In recent years, it's been

an explosion of neuroscience evidence.

For example, the European brain reverse engineering project

has identified modules of about 100 neurons each,

and since the neocortex has 30 billion neurons,

that means 300 million modules,

and they all are pretty much the same.

They have the same structure,

the same organization within them.

And there's no plasticity, no change,

within that module for your entire life.

Despite the idea that your brain

is constantly rewiring itself.

There is plasticity, constant rewiring between the modules,

and each module is recognizing a pattern.

We can see the axons coming in from other modules

that are feeding the sequential input

that represents the pattern, that this module will learn.

So it's a hierarchy of patterns.

This pattern is based on a hierarchy

of patterns and the modules below it.

And each one of those has input

from modules below it, and it's a very elaborate hierarchy.

And biology, biological evolution evolved

this hierarchical structure in the brain,

so that it can understand and learn

the hierarchical structure of the world,

because the world is organized hierarchically.

The neocortex emerged 200 million years ago in mammals;

only mammals have a neocortex.

And it was a thin structure, the neocortex

means new rind, and there was about.

In the first mammals, which were rodents,

it was about the size of a postage stamp,

and just as thin as a postage stamp,

and it wrapped around the walnut-sized brains

of these early mammals,

but it was capable of a new type of thinking.

You could invent new behaviors,

non-mammalian animals, like reptiles,

that didn't have a neocortex, couldn't do that.

They have fixed behaviors.

Didn't help them that much actually

because the environment changed very slowly

and could take 50 thousand years for there

to be an environmental change that would require

a new behavior, and over the 13 thousand years,

these non-mammalian animals could evolve

using normal Darwinian evolution, a new fixed behavior.

But then something happened 65 million years ago.

It was a sudden catastrophic change to the environment;

we call it the crustacean extinction event,

and that's when mammals overtook their ecological niche.

That's when the neocortex actually showed its capability.

And then biological evolution then grew it.

Mammals now, instead of being just little rodents,

got bigger, their brains got bigger, at an even faster pace,

taking up a larger fraction of their body.

And the neocortex got bigger even faster than that

and developed these curvatures and folds.

If you look at a primate brain,

it's got these characteristic curvatures,

so it now takes up 80% of the brain.

Then something else happened, two million years ago.

If your remember, two million years ago,

we were walking around; we didn't have these big foreheads.

So humanoids came along with a big forehead.

And that houses the frontal cortex.

And up until recently, it was said

"Well, the frontal cortex does

"such qualitatively different things,

"it must be organized differently.

"It must have a different method, a different algorithm."

I make the case, and I think the neuroscientists

coming around to this view,

it really was just an additional quantity of neocortex.

Well, so what did we do with that additional quantity?

Well, we were already doing a very good job

of being primates, so we put it at the top

of the neocortical hierarchy.

So this hierarchy that I mentioned now got bigger.

As you go up the hierarchy,

things get more general, more intelligent, more abstract.

The very bottom, I can tell that that's a straight line.

At the top, I can tell

that's funny, that's ironic, she's pretty.

So that additional hierarchy

that we got two million years ago

was the enabling factor for us to invent

language, and art, and science, and music.

Every human culture we every discovered has music.

No primate or any other animal has music.

That came from this additional neocortex.

And I make the case in my book, "How to Create a Mind",

what the algorithm is, of each of these modules.

They all have the same algorithm.

So a lot of people like to say,

"Oh, the brain is so complex,

"it's the most complex thing in the universe";

that may be true, but it has a regular repeating structure.

Each of these 300 million modules is basically the same.

Now they self-organize into these hierarchies,

and each module discovers a pattern,

and learns it, remembers it, and can recognize it,

even in a different context, so it's very good at metaphor.

And I describe my thesis on how this works

as we continue doing more brain reverse engineering,

we will refine that model,

but I've been working with this model,

and we find that it can in fact master things

like language, not yet at human levels,

but doing still some impressive things.

We look beyond, for example, for things like jeopardy,

which itself was pretty sophisticated.

So there is kind of a master algorithm,

at least I have a proposal for one.

These deep neural nets,

which there's tremendous excitement about,

which is a little bit different from the model I have,

but they have done remarkable things.

I mean, they won the Go Championship,

and they can recognize images as I mentioned,

better than humans, and can drive cars.

And that's actually pretty simple.

You can read about deep neural nets,

the algorithm is again, a repeating structure

that's not that complicated.

So the mathematics of thinking,

I think is being understood,

but I would not claim that we understand it fully.

But we're getting more and more hints

as we learn more and more about the human brain.

For more infomation >> Ray Kurzweil | Our Brain Is a Blueprint for the Master Algorithm | Singularity Hub - Duration: 7:50.

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NASA Leads Demo for Drone Traffic Management Tech - Duration: 1:49.

The future of drones is out of sight

We're testing an automated drone traffic system

That is safe and efficient

We call this UTM

UTM is the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Traffic Management

UTM uses cloud computing, AI and automation

The latest UTM tests took place at six sites over three weeks

They focused on flying beyond visual line of sight

Simulating a variety of scenarios

Search and rescue

Infrastructure surveys

Railway inspections

Package delivery

Our UTM work inspires collaboration between government, industry and universities

Test partners supplied drones, pilots and platform services

The next UTM demo starts later this year over moderately populated areas

Our research continues through 2019

All results go to the Federal Aviation Administration to implement the system

For more infomation >> NASA Leads Demo for Drone Traffic Management Tech - Duration: 1:49.

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Indoor Playground Family Fun Play Area Nursery Rhymes Finger Family song For Bad Kids - Duration: 2:04.

Indoor Playground Family Fun Play Area Nursery Rhymes Finger Family song For Bad Kids

For more infomation >> Indoor Playground Family Fun Play Area Nursery Rhymes Finger Family song For Bad Kids - Duration: 2:04.

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For Glory Fun #3 Who Said I Need Mario? Peach Vs Bowser (Smash 4) - Duration: 2:45.

For Glory Fun #3 Who Said I Need Mario? Peach Vs Bowser (Smash 4)

For Glory Fun #3 Who Said I Need Mario? Peach Vs Bowser (Smash 4)

For more infomation >> For Glory Fun #3 Who Said I Need Mario? Peach Vs Bowser (Smash 4) - Duration: 2:45.

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Social Media Weekly Roundup: New Targeting Options for FB Ads, YouTube Studio, & More - Duration: 2:17.

For more infomation >> Social Media Weekly Roundup: New Targeting Options for FB Ads, YouTube Studio, & More - Duration: 2:17.

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Advantage: humans, but for how long? - Duration: 1:53.

Tomorrow's construction worker at work on the roof of Empa,

the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Testing and Research.

Here is someone at work welding together a formwork

of more than 20,000 small wire elements.

Later the structure will be filled with a concrete mixture.

No scaffolding is required.

This saves material and time.

Usually, there's a long chain: The architect designs something,

makes a drawing, and hands it over to the construction planner.

He makes his own drawings.

Then, the project is moved to the construction site.

The plans are read and implemented by craftsmen.

With our procedure, the design drawings

are also the manufacturing drawings.

Hence, the project reaches the construction site

quicker and more efficiently.

The robot can build more than just horizontal and vertical walls.

This also allows individual shapes.

This is the result of four years of research at the Swiss Federal

Institute of Technology in Zurich lab for digital construction.

What concrete works best and won't run out of the wireframe?

How do the statics change with curved walls and ceiling modules?

So far the tests run better than expected.

Eight weeks were scheduled for the work on the test construction site.

But the robot made it in four.

This process generates very little waste.

We apply material directly on the spot,

digitally and robotically controlled.

We assume that a new building culture will emerge,

once building processes change.

Our built environment will change.

Currently, humans still have two advantages over this construction robot:

Creativity, and the ability to improvise demanded by the construction industry.

For more infomation >> Advantage: humans, but for how long? - Duration: 1:53.

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Jodie gets grounded for escape from the Safari - Duration: 0:13.

You are grounded.

For more infomation >> Jodie gets grounded for escape from the Safari - Duration: 0:13.

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13 First Alert Weather for June 30 2017 - Duration: 2:27.

For more infomation >> 13 First Alert Weather for June 30 2017 - Duration: 2:27.

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Striking summer balance: Maintaining healthy schedule for kids - Duration: 4:18.

For more infomation >> Striking summer balance: Maintaining healthy schedule for kids - Duration: 4:18.

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Best Roads in Mulgimaa for Drift Racing - Duration: 23:09.

For more infomation >> Best Roads in Mulgimaa for Drift Racing - Duration: 23:09.

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For Tourism ISHIKAWA - Duration: 4:59.

For more infomation >> For Tourism ISHIKAWA - Duration: 4:59.

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How To Get More Facebook Fans For Your Facebook Business Page - Duration: 2:27.

For more infomation >> How To Get More Facebook Fans For Your Facebook Business Page - Duration: 2:27.

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Marc-William Attié's message for EMEA Champions Cup - Duration: 1:12.

For more infomation >> Marc-William Attié's message for EMEA Champions Cup - Duration: 1:12.

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Has JAY-Z admitted to cheating on Beyoncé? New album apologises for 'Becky womanising' - Duration: 3:05.

Has JAY-Z admitted to cheating on Beyoncé? New album apologises for 'Becky womanising'

SHOCK: JAY-Z appears to have admitted to cheating on his wife. The star accused her husband of cheating with Becky with the good hair on the song Sorry, while she lashed out at him on Dont Hurt Yourself.

And now, JAY-Z – who has changed his name to all caps and brought back the hyphen, by the way – has seemingly admitted to his infidelity on his new album.

The 47-year-old has dropped 4:44 on Tidal, and the albums title track is an apology to his wife Beyoncé.

CONFESSIONS: The lyrics on the new album hear the rapper apologise for womanising.

Superstar Beyonce   Superstar Beyonce flaunts her incredible curves       Beyonce looks amazing in red latex on her Formation World Tour  .

JAY-Z He raps: I apologise, often womanise, took my child to be born to see through a womans eyes, took for these natural twins to believe in miracles. Jay goes on: And if my children knew, I dont even know what I would do, if they aint look at me the same, I would probably die with all this shame.

You did what with who? What good is a menage-a-trois when you have a soulmate, you risk that for Blue? And the notorious Becky gets a mention on Family Feud, with Jay rapping: Leave me alone, Becky. As if hearing the confession isnt titillating enough, fans will be able to see Mr Z belt out the lyrics in a V Festival worldwide exclusive when he performs 4:44 live this summer.

LYRICS: Jay compared himself to Eric Benet, who is rumoured to have cheated on Halle Berry.

Beyoncés blooming pregnancy pictures   See Beyoncés blooming pregnancy pictures leaving Roc Nations SVP Lenny S birthday party.       Beyoncé has a beautiful pregnancy glow as she leaves a party in Hollywood  .

The hip-hop legend, real name Shawn Carter, also references the infamous Met Gala lift brawl with his sister-in-law Solange Knowles.

On Kill Jay Z, the dad-of-three is heard saying: You egg Solange on knowing all along all you had to say was you was wrong.

You almost went Eric Benet let the baddest girl in the world get away, I dont even know what to say, n**** never go Eric Benet. Benet was married to Halle Berry in the early noughties, but they split after two years of marriage amid rumours of cheating.

FAMILY MAN: Jay claims his kids made him see the error of his ways.

BUNDLES OF JOY: Beyoncé has just given birth to twins. Despite all the drama surrounding Lemonade, the Knowles-Carter clan seem happier than ever. Bey and Jay have welcomed twins, whose names have yet to be officially confirmed.

The couple, who have been married since 2008, are also parents to five-year-old daughter Blue Ivy. Jay Z is headlining V Festival on August 19 and 20, where he will be performing tracks from 4:44 for the first time live.

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