This Kid is the Funniest Little Kid Ever!
His HEAD nearly Fall Off when Laughing At the New Caster.
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Gum disease, both in smokers and non-smokers, may be a warning sign of an increased risk of cancer. Imperial College London researchers found gum disease was linked to a higher chance of lung, kidney, pancreatic and blood cancers. Writing in Lancet Oncology, the team, who studied the health records of 50,000 men, said an immune system weakness could cause both illnesses. The British Dental Association stressed the need for regular check-ups. The majority of Britons are said to suffer from some sort of gum disease, caused by a persistent bacterial infection, and the problem is more common in people who smoke. However, the latest research suggests that, even in those who have never smoked, the presence of gum disease means a bigger risk of cancer. The Imperial College team analysed questionnaires and health information provided by US men from 1986 onwards. They found that those with a history of gum disease had a 14% higher chance of cancer compared with those with no history of g...
Steve Worswick has spent nine years refining the code behind the Mitsuku chatbot A chatbot called Mitsuku has won an annual contest to see if computers can convincingly imitate humans. The chatbot took top prize in the Loebner contest that puts the artificially intelligent programs through their paces. The contest involves the programs trying to convince judges they are human by answering questions put to them via an instant message system. Briton Steve Worswick who wrote Mitsuku won $4,000 (£2,500) for his creation. World knowledge Created by US businessman Hugh Loebner, the annual competition is an attempt to stage a real-world test of a question posed by mathematician Alan Turing in the 1950s. Turing suggested that if the responses a computer gave to a series of questions were as convincing as those from a human it could reasonably be said to be thinking. Mr Loebner has offered a prize of $100,000 (£62,000) for the computer program that meets Turing's standard for artifi...
The first computer built entirely with carbon nanotubes has been unveiled, opening the door to a new generation of digital devices. "Cedric" is only a basic prototype but could be developed into a machine which is smaller, faster and more efficient than today's silicon models. Nanotubes have long been touted as the heir to silicon's throne, but building a working computer has proven awkward. The breakthrough by Stanford University engineers is published in Nature. Cedric is the most complex carbon-based electronic system yet realised. So is it fast? Not at all. It might have been in 1955. Cedric's vital statistics *.1 bit processor *.Speed: 1 kHz *.178 transistors *.10-200 nanotubes per transistor *.2 billion carbon atoms *.Turing complete *.Multitasking The computer operates on just one bit of information, and can only count to 32. "In human terms, Cedric can count on his hands and sort the alphabet. But he is, in the full sense of the word, ...
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