Analysis: Tesla s humanoid robot might be Elon s dumbest idea yet thenextweb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thenextweb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
“Explain to me why the key sticks to me. It sticks to my neck, too," RN Joanna Overholt told Ohio lawmakers after an aluminum key failed to stick to her .
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Six Days in Fallujah is back, with Highwire Games as its new developer, Victura as its new publisher, and brand-new technology and direction to try and valorize a battle that its creators feel hasn’t gotten due attention (despite numerous books, documentaries, Fox News recreations, and even an opera that all center the perspectives of U.S. Marines).
Its return has not been warmly welcomed by everyone in the video game community. IGN’s Rebekah Valentine spoke with Arab and Iraqi game developers exhausted and infuriated by the game. U.S. military veterans John Phipps and Tristan Greene have also spoken out against the game’s revival.
Man arrested with assault-style rifle in connection with shots fire investigation
LPSO
and last updated 2021-03-17 16:45:25-04
A Broussard man has been arrested in connection with a Sunday shots fired investigation on Gustave Street in Broussard.
On Sunday, March 14, 2021 at approximately 10:15 PM officers were dispatched to a report of gunshots being fired in a neighborhood on Gustave Street.
Once on scene, officers located a man identified as 24-year-old Tristan Greene walking near a residence. Greene had a high-powered assault-style rifle (AR-10 .308 caliber) slung across his back, police say.
Greene was detained by officers. A search of the area revealed a spent .308 cartridge in the roadway, matching the live rounds located in the magazine of the gun that Greene was carrying.
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Would you buy a gun that decided when it was okay for you to pull the trigger? Three researchers in New York say the technology is workable, but on today’s Bearing Arms’ Cam & Co we take a closer look at their idea and some of the inherent issues that come with incorporating artificial intelligence into a firearm.
You can read the research paper produced by the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s Selmer Bringsjord, Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu, and Michael Giancola in its entirety here, but their basic idea is to incorporate AI technology into a smart gun that would determine when it’s ethical to pull the trigger. If the artificial intelligence doesn’t see a need for a gun to be used in a particular circumstance, then it would simply lock the firearm and render it useless to even authorized users.