Exotec raises $90 million to bring robotics and automation to more warehouses

The birth of the smartphone can be traced back to 1993 when IBM developed the Simon Personal Communicator.

has been built to solve some of the critical issues with the Wankel engine by turning it inside out.Three curved sides on the rotor serve as pistons and compress the air and fuel as it rotates inside the chamber

Exotec raises $90 million to bring robotics and automation to more warehouses

 Study abstract:Removing optical and atmospheric blur from galaxy images significantly improves galaxy shape measurements for weak gravitational lensing and galaxy evolution studies.The produced blurry images may obscure the shapes of astronomical objects and cause measurement errors.The AI tool also enables faster and more accurate image processing by utilizing computational power to sift through image data.

Exotec raises $90 million to bring robotics and automation to more warehouses

This ill-posed linear inverse problem is usually solved with deconvolution algorithms enhanced by regularisation priors or deep learning.We characterize the time-performance trade-off of several methods for galaxies of differing brightness levels.

Exotec raises $90 million to bring robotics and automation to more warehouses

scientists from Northwestern University and Tsinghua University may have found a solution to this vexing problem.

We introduce a so-called physics-informed deep learning approach to the Point Spread Function (PSF) deconvolution problem in galaxy surveys.Facial recognition company Clearview AI has conducted nearly one million searches for the US police and has amassed a database of 30 billion images taken from social media platforms.

The BBC says the company has been fined many times in Australia and Europe for breaking privacy laws.Advocates for civil rights want independent experts to review the algorithm and for police forces that use Clearview to disclose when they use it.

“Clearview is a private company that makes face prints of people based on their photos online without their consent.“We don’t want to be testifying about the algorithm’s accuracy… because the investigators are using other methods to verify it.

Jason Rodriguezon Google+

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