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HPC-AI Advisory Council and PC Cluster Consortium to Host 1st Annual Japan Conference
January 25, 2021 GMT
SUNNYVALE, Calif. & TOKYO (BUSINESS WIRE) Jan 25, 2021
The for community benefit HPC-AI Advisory Council (HPCAIAC) in collaboration with Japan’s PC Cluster Consortium (PCCC) today announced the inauguralJapan Conferencewill take place on 26 January, 2021. Both the HPCAIAC’s first collaboration and conference in Japan, the jointly hosted sessions will be held virtually from 14:00-17:00 (JST) combining thought leadership and immersive sessions across HPC and AI domains and disciplines - the innovative research, techniques, tools and technologies that fuel economies, productivity and progress globally.
Remember Camil Marinescu Bach, Dediu și Schubert, în stagiunea online a Filarmonicii „George Enescu – Radio România Cultural
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Remember Camil Marinescu Bach, Dediu și Schubert, în stagiunea online a Filarmonicii „George Enescu
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In 1970, a Japanese roboticist named Masahiro Mori described what he called the uncanny valley - a point on a graph relating human affinity for a machine to its likeness of humans themselves, where human affinity plummets as the likeness becomes nearly indistinguishable from ourselves. As robots become more humanlike, our fondness for them increases.
But when machines reach a point where they look so much like us that we can barely tell they re different from us, Mori postulated that we ll feel repulsed instead of affectionate. Since we haven t been able to produce robots that are nearly indistinguishable from humans yet, it s somewhat difficult to know whether Mori is correct. However, with a new empathetic humanoid robot, researchers at the Bristol Robotics Laboratory in the UK have brought us a step closer to the rim of the uncanny valley.