Vgak How artificial intelligences will see us
This kind of thing is bad if you don ;t want a war to start: last week, two Iranian fighter jets fired their machine guns at an American Predator drone in international airspace. The attack was kept quiet until right now. CNN reports that the drone was unarmed and conducting routine maritime surveillance
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stanley cup uk 8221; and that it was not hit by Iranian fire. Whether or not the Pentagon is telling the truth about the drone mission is questionable
stanley usa 鈥攖here every reason to suspect it was snooping around Iranian assets. We don ;t fly these things to photograph fish. It also uncertain whether Iran missed on purpose鈥攊t had to imagine missing a Predator drone, which isn ;t capable of any kind of evasive maneuvering comparable to a fighter. Washington is not happy: It doesn ;t matter, they fired on us, says one unnamed US intelligence officer. The US has asked Iran for an explanation but hasn ;t heard back, which is just kind of sad and embarrassing. [CNN] airplanesDronesIran Xymu HP Gets Real Underminey In Response To Dell Going Private
One of the biggest evolutionary hurdles for life on Earth was the jump from single-celled to multi-cellular organisms 8230;or at least, that what we thought. Scientists set out to replicate this evolutionary leap in laboratory conditions. It took them two months. There almost certainly wasn ;t one single leap to multicellularity, and scientists suspect there were about twenty distinct instances in which single-celled organisms evolved into multicellular creatures. But since the most recent documented case of this happened 200 million years ago, it difficult for us to
botella stanley say a lot about its specific mechanisms. But now, thanks to researchers at the University of Minnesota, there now been a 21st multicellular evolution. The researchers took brewer yeast, a single-celled organism often used in lab experiments. They placed the yeast in a liquid and, at the end of each day, centrifuged t
stanley water jug he various yeast cultures. They then took the yeast that settled at the bottom of the container and used that for the next day experiments. The heavier yeast would tend to sink to the bottom, which means the scientists were artificially selecting for yeast that would clump together with other cells. After 60 days and 350 generations, all ten of the yeast cultures had evolved into what the researchers dub a 8220 nowflake form. But these weren ;t di
stanley thermos fferent yeast organisms clumping together all the cells in these snowflakes shared i