FACEBOOK SELFIE HAS HELPED TO SOLVE A HARD MURDER CASE
A Facebook selfie has helped the Police in solving a murder case of a Canadian girl by name Brittney Gargol ,18, after it was uploaded by her friend.
Brittney Gargol, 18, was found dead near a landfill in March 2015 and an autopsy later revealed that she died of strangulation.
On Monday, Gargol's friend Cheyenne Rose Antoine, 21, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in Saskatoon Provincial Court in connection with the death. The Police immediately arrested Antoine after they found a Facebook selfie that showed her wearing the belt used to strangle her friend.
The described wide blue woven belt with a large buckle was found on a roadside next to Gargol’s body, and Antoine was seen wearing the same belt in a photo posted to her Facebook account just hours before the killing, according to the Saskatoon Star Phoenix.
Antoine posted on her friend's Facebook timeline (Brittney Gargol) “Where are you? Haven’t heard from you. Hope you made it home safe,” after Killing her.
Investigators got suspicious of her when she initially told them about spending time with the victim the night she died, but left her friend to visit her uncle. It was later revealed that her statement was false. Antoine later told investigators that she and Gargol partied with two men, who allegedly strangled the victim and put a gun to her head to help them. The second statement
was also proved false.
Investigators arrested Antoine last year after finding the selfie showing her wearing the same belt used to kill her friend as the Police had struggled to solve the case, but were able to put together enough evidence using the Facebook
photo, uploaded six hours before the murder.
“It’s quite remarkable how the police developed this information,” prosecutor Robin Ritter said Monday in court, adding that Antoine poses a threat to public safety. She “has issues … and because of those issues, she is dangerous,” the CBC reported.
At the moment this report was filled in, Antoine Cheyenne Rose is sentenced to Seven years Jail term.
TAKE A LOOK AT SOME WEIRDEST CONSUMER ELECTRONICS IN 2018
Every year technology freaks from around the world converge on Sin City for the International Consumer Electronics Show(CES) to get first looks at the near future of Gadgets and Gizmos Walking the floor of the expo center, you’re
surrounded by some truly incredible technologies that will certainly enhance our lives. Conversely, you can also come across some earnest Gadgets that ranges from unnecessary to downright terrifying.
Here are the collection of some of the most weirdest technologies from Consumer Electronics Show in 2018.
Robot Strippers
There are tons of corporate-sponsored parties and after-hours events that allow attendees to partake in some of them more leisure-focused offerings of Las Vegas. Most of these events entice party-goers with promises of access to big names in tech or with free food and drink. Others might go a little overboard with their PR stunts. This year, that honor (or shame) is
bestowed upon Sapphire Gentlemen’s Club and their creepy Orwellian robot strippers.
Unfortunately for everyone involved, these bots are
less Pris and Zhora from Blade Runner and more like a scintillating pair of gyrating fax machines. The website of Sapphire Las Vegas invited patrons to “Come watch sparks fly as the Robo Twins shake
their hardware and leave everyone wondering if
those double Ds are real or made in ‘Silicone’ Valley.” How charming.
However, it seems that the organizers of this
spectacle completely missed the point of these
particular robots. The artist who built the bots, Giles Walker, said that he was influenced by the increasing numbers of CCTV cameras which made him want to explore voyeurism and turn that on its head by making the cameras themselves “sexy.”
Weight-Loss Brain Zapper
Weight loss is a multi-billion dollar industry filled
with fads and endless gimmicks promising to not
only help you lose weight but to do it with the least
amount of effort from you. Usually, when a weight
loss product sounds too good to be true, it likely is.
This brings us to the second of CES’s absurd
technologies, the allegedly headache-inducing headset from Modius Health .
Image Credit: Modius Health
The plastic headset features two dangling electrodes that you attach to pads that you stick behind your ears. The headset is said to send electrical signals to your hypothalamus, the hypothesis being that stimulating the hypothalamus makes you want to eat
less.
The company’s website has a “science” section where it touts the results of a study. However, the study only included 15 people over the course of 16 weeks. Neuroscientist Sandra Aamodt, told The Verge, “I can say with confidence that they haven’t tested it carefully enough to prove that it does work. If someone approached the FDA for approval of a weight-loss drug based on evidence like this, they’d be laughed out of the building.”
Intimate Digital Art
This next product may not fall into the absurd
technologies category, but it could be penalized for
debuting at the wrong venue. Project ARTGASM
comes off more as an avant garde art exhibit than a
serious consumer product. The message behind the
tech is very sex positive, and there is definitely room in the market for it. But still, the idea of recording data from sexual experiences and turning it into a colorful laser-light-esque spectacle is not likely to appeal to everyone.
The tech is designed to work with the Lioness smart
vibrator to map data metrics like force, motion, and
temperature. That data is then converted into a
unique visual experience. The project may not attain iPhone-level success, but it is bound to open greater conversations about the role that developing technology will have in the future of sexuality.
$6,000 Smart Toilet
Generally, Japan is a much more technologically
forward-thinking nation than the United States, at
least in terms of everyday conveniences. The country has long had fancy high-tech toilets with enough features to confuse the typical Westerner not familiar with this level of decadence in the bathroom. Even so, it seems that the U.S.’s attempts to catch up may be a little more zealous than necessary.
Kohler has unveiled their Konnect suite of smart
bathroom products, featuring the Numi , an Amazon Alexa-compatible toilet that can lift the lid for you, play your favorite playlists from its built-in sound system, flush with a magic wave of the hand, and even track your bowel movements. Yes, in the age of constant hacking, someone thought it might be a good idea to upload your poop data to the cloud.
The basic Numi models start at $5,625 with more
advanced models costing up to $7,500 .
THE FIFTH LARGEST DIAMOND HAS JUST BEEN MINED IN LESOTHO
A 910-carat diamond, which is confirmed to be the world’s fifth largest diamond, has been mined in Lesotho.
The stone was discovered in Letseng mine by Gem Diamonds, a UK miner with operations in Botswana and Lesotho.
Clifford Elphick, Gem Diamonds’ chief executive, says the find is a “landmark discovery” and is the largest diamond ever mined by the company. Gem Diamonds shares rose 15% after news of the find.
This is just the latest find by Gem Diamonds. In Aug. 2006, the company mined “Lesotho Promise,” a 603-carat diamond in Letseng mine. At an auction in Antwerp, Belgium less than two months later, Lesotho Promise was sold for $12.3 million—around $20,000 per carat.
The Lesotho Promise
Analyststs say the newly discovered 910-carat diamond could be worth as much as $40 million.
Gem Diamonds will be hoping that its stone has better luck at auctions unlike the last big stone found in southern Africa. In Nov. 2015, Canadian mining company Lucara discovered a 1,110-carat diamond in Karowe mine in Botswana. The tennis ball-sized diamond, later named Lesedi La Rona, meaning ‘our light’ in Tswana, was the largest diamond discovered in more than a century. However, at a June 2016 auction, a sale failed to materialize as the highest bid for the stone was $61 million—$9 million less than the owner hoped to sell it for. It was eventually sold in Sept. 2017 for $53 million.
Lasedi la Rona
Before now, nine of the 10 largest diamonds ever discovered have been found in Africa: Four in South Africa, two each in Sierra Leone and the Democratic Republic of Congo and one in Botswana. But African countries have a difficult history with diamond mining, particularly in countries like Sierra Leone and DRC, where diamonds have been shown to help fund conflict in those countries and others. In South Africa, diamond mining once helped support the oppressive apartheid political system.
Lesotho Promise
162 PASSENGERS SURVIVE A FATAL AIR CRASH NEAR BLACK SEA
A fully-booked passenger plane came within yards of plunging into the Black Sea when it skidded off an icy runway while trying to land, The Sun UK reported.
Luckily, the jet's 162 passengers escaped when the wheels of their Pegasus Airlines flight was stuck into the freezing mud at Trabzon Airport in Turkey - leaving it dangling precariously off a coastal cliff.
Turkish officials said the cause of the accident was not yet known, and closed the airport overnight to conduct an investigation.
Dramatic photos appear to show smoke billowing from the cabin - but Trabzon Governer Yucel Yavuz said all 162 passengers and crew on board were evacuated safely.
Another snaps shows the plane - which left Turkish capital Ankara on Saturday night - stuck firmly in the mud as a solitary lighthouse illuminates the chilly water.
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT CRYPTO CURRENCY
In a matter of weeks in November 2017, bitcoin
surged from a fringe investment to a global sensation.
In mid-November, the price was around $3,000 for a
single bitcoin; on December 6, 2017, it surpassed
$19,000 . At the time of publication, the value was
hovering around $15,000.
Bitcoin is having a moment — really, it’s had a year.
No matter if you think it’s a bubble about to burst, or
hope your investments will pay back big in the long
run, there is one clear takeaway: Cryptocurrency is
changing the future of finance. What’s not yet clear is
how the technology behind bitcoin, and
cryptocurrencies like it, will alter our national and
global financial systems.
Back on the Blockchain
Bitcoin, like all cryptocurrencies, relies on a
technology called blockchain that makes its
transactions so secure that experts consider them to
be virtually unhackable. And because the transactions
are assured, the cost of verifying transactions is less
than in a central bank though, admittedly, the cost of
verifying bitcoin transactions has become fairly
expensive.
Cryptocurrency transactions happen directly between
individuals instead of through a bank. Every time a
person makes a transaction using a cryptocurrency —
for example, using funds stored in his or her crypto
wallet to send bitcoin to someone else — the
transaction is recorded on a digital ledger called a
blockchain. Every cryptocurrency has its own
blockchain, and computers doing complex math in a
large network maintain it.
Once users make a specific number of transactions
using a cryptocurrency, the computers group these
transactions into a “block.” In order to send a block,
adding transactions to the blockchain and winning a
monetary reward, a computer has to solve a complex
math problem called a cryptographic function.
Basically, the cryptographic equation is throwing a
pumpkin (the block) off a building and telling you
what the splatter pattern looked like. The only way
users can match the splatter pattern — and send the
block — is to hurl a bunch of pumpkins off a building
themselves. So people who “mine” cryptocurrency are
actually just using their computers to smash billions
of pumpkins in order to find the winning pumpkin
with the right splatter, which validates their block.
In other words, the first computer that can solve a
complex math problem gets to add its block of
transactions to the blockchain and receive a
monetary reward for doing so (this is what people
mean by “mining” crypto). Every computer in the
network adds the new block to its copy of the digital
ledger, and the process continues.
Although bitcoin was created to avoid centralized
banking and government money, the technology can
be used as a national, centrally banked currency. In
fact, the blockchain is so secure that it reduces the
cost of verifying transactions, so banks are already
looking into it, says David Yermack , chairman of the
finance department at New York University’s Stern
School of Business. In 50 years, Yermack says,
cryptocurrencies could be used as national
currencies.
Will Our Future Be In Bitcoin?
Bitcoin was created to work outside national
currencies, which is a draw to people who don’t trust
central banks, says Yermack.
Those who are hopeful about the rise of bitcoin may
have noticed its popularity in countries like
Zimbabwe and Venezuela, where it is being used as a
major means of exchange when government-issued
currencies have failed because of hyperinflation.
Bitcoin and other means of exchange have become
popular in these countries because transactions can
be performed on cell phones, and their value is more
stable than the hyper-inflated national currency.
But others believe that bitcoin is too riddled with
problems to be the cryptocurrency upon which the
future is built. First, it likely can’t be used on a
national scale because of how few transactions per
minute bitcoin supports. Bitcoin’s framework can
only make seven transactions per second, says Ari
Juels , computer science professor at Cornell
University who studies cryptography and computer
security. VISA’s credit card network, for comparison,
can handle 65,000 transactions per second .
Issues of privacy also stop it from becoming the
future of money, says Phillipa Ryan , commercial
equity lawyer and lecturer at the University of
Technology Sydney. “Bitcoin is problematic in that it
provides too much privacy and not enough privacy,”
says Juels. “Too much privacy in that it provides
enough to give criminals the opportunity to
perpetrate a lot of mischief, from ransomware to the
Silk Road. Not enough in that transactions are actually
traceable by pseudonym.”
Its value also fluctuates too much to provide a stable,
functional currency. Unlike traditional currencies,
which have a value that is set by the central banking
system, the value of bitcoin is driven by speculation
about its worth like a stock, says Yermack. So it
doesn’t make the cut as a currency. “Traditionally,
we think of money as a kind of means of exchange
and a store of value,” says Harold James , an
economic historian at Princeton. “[Bitcoin] is very
good at the means of exchange, but not very good at
the store of value.”
The future likely won’t be based on bitcoin.
That’s not to say that the future won’t be
based on other cryptocurrencies.
If you have a dollar bill, it’s pretty safe to assume it’s
worth about a candy bar from day to day. One
bitcoin, on the other hand, could be worth a candy
bar one day, a car the day after, then next to nothing
the day after that. It’s more like a stock than a stable
national currency. James says that, based on the
historical precedents he studies, bitcoin looks like the
highly unstable private currencies created in Eastern
Europe after the First World War. When speculation
about the value of bitcoin is substantially more than
its worth in the real world, bitcoin will burst, like the
stock market crashed.
Economists studying cryptocurrency and computer
security experts agree: The future likely won’t be
based on bitcoin. Of course, that’s not to say that the
future won’t be based on other cryptocurrencies.
In the meantime, bitcoin will remain as a grand test
of the blockchain technology, says Ryan. Its value will
continue to fluctuate, but Ryan is convinced it’s
already a bubble. “I think that bubble will burst. It’s
fun to watch though, it’s been a great ride,” says
Ryan. “When bitcoin finally fails, I think we will look
back on it as a really important, valuable experiment
in which more lessons will be learned than there will
be loss.”
A Shift In The Financial System
Bitcoin offers something groundbreaking, and a
growing number of national banks, including the
Federal Reserve, are interested in using blockchain
technology to power a centralized national
currency. Most experts agree that, in the future,
countries will turn to cryptocurrency, as money is
already moving from the physical to the digital realm.
So a method that secures digital transactions is a
necessary investment, and the blockchain technology
used in cryptocurrencies is a top contender.
“I think the whole idea is probably horrifying to the
bitcoin people, but it’s the ultimate harbinger of
success when the person you’re trying to defeat co-
opts your own plans and turns them against you,”
says Yermack. “The ultimate victory is where the
central bank co-opts their technology and makes it
the basis of their own operation. And I can see it
very clearly play out that way,” Yermack says.
“Monetary policy and financial stability — I think
those problems will be exactly the same in 50 years.”
But in 50 years, a nationally backed cryptocurrency
could replace the paper dollar, he says.
When it comes to the future of money,
cryptocurrency’s influence will be felt in its improved
ability to avoid technological problems like hacking, Ryan says. Based on the issues of cybersecurity
looming ahead, Ryan thinks that the blockchain will
be the technology to transform the money of the
future.
Blockchain could make its way into the mainstream
in two primary different ways. One option is to
switch from physical to digital currency. A dollar
would still be a dollar, but transactions would use
blockchain to make them more secure. The second
way would be to move your bank account from
something like CitiBank and transform it into an
account in the Federal Reserve itself. If all of a
nation’s money were centralized, it would make the
Federal Reserve more efficient at its job of stabilizing
and regulating the economy, says Christian Catalini ,
assistant professor at MIT’s Sloan School of
Management who studies the economics of
cryptocurrency.
Some institutions are beginning to try it. Estonia is
working to create an e-Residency program , and part
of their plan includes launching the estcoin, the
world’s first national cryptocurrency. The Bank of
England is working to create its own cryptocurrency
and has created an experimental cryptocurrency
framework called RSCoin that would use a centralized
system. To go crypto, the Bank of England would
create digital money as if it was printing physical
notes. For example, in 2017, there were 73.2 billion
British pounds in circulation . A British economy using
only cryptocurrency would have the same fixed
number of pounds, just represented by a digital
“coin” instead of a physical note. Since the value of
the British pound is based on how many are in
circulation, exchanging a physical note for a digital
one has no economic significance — that is, a pound
is still a pound, says Yermack. Like bitcoin, RSCoin
would use a public ledger and the cryptographic
system to distribute money.
In their paper on the RSCoin model, the authors write
that a cryptocurrency backed by a national bank
should help make cryptocurrency usable on a larger
scale, since the central bank could employ other
institutions to do the computations to verify
transactions. In a model with one central bank and
only 30 commercial banks, RSCoin could make 2,000
transactions per second — not quite up to VISA’s
speed, but certainly fast enough for British citizens to
move about their financial lives quickly and securely.
For a consumer, a centralized cryptocurrency won’t
change much, says Catalini. “[Consumers] will just
see cheaper prices in the denomination they’re
familiar with, and blockchain technology may be
used in the background to offer new or better types
of financial and payment services.” So with a
national cryptocurrency, bank fees would likely drop,
and money transfers would happen faster.
And with national cryptocurrencies, it will be more
difficult to conduct illegal activity. Even with the
anonymous ledgers used today, governments can
track users and financial information, says Aniket
Kate , a computer scientist at Purdue University. Since
all transactions on the blockchain are recorded on
every connected computer, it would be difficult to
hide financial indiscretions from the government,
Kate says.
Over the next fifty years, Yermack thinks that law-
abiding citizens, banks, and governments alike could
benefit from moving to some form of digital
currency. “There is a huge opportunity cost in not
making the central bank more efficient,” says
Yermack. “I think what you’re really going to need in
the long run is a reorganization of the branches of
government and probably more levels of political
control over the central bank.”
As countries creep closer to creating their own
cryptocurrency, they will have to decide just how
private they want transactions to be. Bitcoin’s famous
openness might not be so appealing for all
transactions — you might not like it if your neighbor
could see that you’re buying vibrators and cat food in
bulk (of course, you could also find all their weird
purchases). However, cryptocurrencies can protect
user privacy in varying degrees, Kate says; a future
system could inhibit your neighbor’s prying eyes.
But the issue of privacy is potentially more of a social
problem than a technical one. In Norway, all tax
records are public knowledge. In other parts of
Scandinavia, electronic banking is also on the public
record, says James. Citizens of Denmark, Sweden,
Norway, Greenland, and Iceland rarely use their
physical currencies, James says, making those
countries a microcosm for a possible future of digital-
only currency.
“The only question that seems to be open is: would it
be the kind of Scandinavian system we talked about,
where every transaction can be monitored [and] that
lends itself to a surveillance state?” James asks. “Or
will it be a kind of Bitcoin-like system, where there is
an anonymity built in?” As countries start to make
the switch to digital currencies, their societies, along
with the governments themselves and the economies
upon which all rely, will have to figure out how to
adapt.
WHATSAPP MESSENGER SERVICE NO LONGER COMPACTIBLE WITH SOME DEVICES STARTING JANUARY 1ST 2018
Starting from 1 January 2018, watsapp messenger service will no longer be available on any device running on Windows 8.0 OS (or older versions), BlackBerry OS or BlackBerry 10.
The Independent reports that the company made the announcement in an update to a blog post that was originally published in February 2016.
The company statement reads: “When we started WhatsApp in 2009, people’s use of mobile devices looked very different from today. The Apple App Store was only a few months old. About 70 percent of smartphones sold at the time had operating systems offered by BlackBerry and Nokia.
“Mobile operating systems offered by Google, Apple and Microsoft – which account for 99.5 percent of sales today – were on less than 25 percent of mobile devices sold at the time.”
The platforms that are being cut are unpopular, and have been for some time. The company ended support for Nokia Symbian S60 devices in June.
It is also planning to cut support for Nokia S40 devices on December 31, 2018 and phones running Android versions 2.3.7 and older on February 1, 2020.
Although these platforms are still supported, WhatsApp is no longer actively developing for them, which means some features could stop functioning at any moment.
The company added that: “While these mobile devices have been an important part of our story, they don’t offer the kind of capabilities we need to expand our app’s features in the future.
“This was a tough decision for us to make, but the right one in order to give people better ways to keep in touch with friends, family, and loved ones using WhatsApp.
“If you use one of these affected mobile devices, we recommend upgrading to a newer Android, iPhone, or Windows Phone."
previously it was reported that the global phone messaging platform, WhatsApp had shut down for more than thirty minutes on November 3, 2017.
The shutdown had created a lot of online hysteria as online communities are wondering what has gone wrong..
A GUIDED TOUR INTO WORLD'S LARGEST VOODOO MARKET.
Beninese
Deep inside the heart of West Africa,Vodou (Togo); Vodoun (Benin), or more familiarly, Voodoo (Haiti) is not only alive and well, but it is thriving.
Togo’s capital city of Lomé is the birthplace of the largest Voodoo market in the world – a kind of super supply store for fetishes, charms and anything else one might need for a ritual.
The Akodessewa Fetish Market, or Marche des Feticheurs, is a place where you can find anything from leopard heads and human skulls to Vodou (voodoo) priests who bless and create fetishes or predict the future and make medicines to heal whatever ails you.
Though many people think of Haiti as Voodoo’s biggest stronghold, the religion originated in West Africa. Vodoun is the official religion of neighboring Benin and is still the largest religion in the area, which is obvious given that the outdoor market’s location is in the heart of Togo’s capital.
Although the market is owned and run by Beninese. The Akodessewa Fetish Market is a mecca to local practitioners and they travel there from all over the African continent.
Many believers view the Marche des Feticheurs as a kind of hospital or pharmacy – it is the place you go when you either cannot afford traditional treatment or traditional treatment has failed you. Here you can find talismans and charms good for treating everything from the flu or infertility to removing the blackest of curses.
In the practice of Voodoo every single creature is potent and divine, whether alive or dead, and in the Akodessewa Fetish Market you may find them all – monkeys, alligators, goats, leopards, gazelles, and many, many more – in various stages of decay and stacked up in macabre piles for blocks.
The outdoor location doesn’t quite suppress the stench but at least the huge market is in the open air. It is a jarring place for tourists who are not used to the idea of animal sacrifice as part of worship or using pieces of the dead as talismans, but for locals who practice the religion, it is a treasure and a necessity.
Deep inside the heart of West Africa,Vodou (Togo); Vodoun (Benin), or more familiarly, Voodoo (Haiti) is not only alive and well, but it is thriving.
Togo’s capital city of Lomé is the birthplace of the largest Voodoo market in the world – a kind of super supply store for fetishes, charms and anything else one might need for a ritual.
The Akodessewa Fetish Market, or Marche des Feticheurs, is a place where you can find anything from leopard heads and human skulls to Vodou (voodoo) priests who bless and create fetishes or predict the future and make medicines to heal whatever ails you.
Though many people think of Haiti as Voodoo’s biggest stronghold, the religion originated in West Africa. Vodoun is the official religion of neighboring Benin and is still the largest religion in the area, which is obvious given that the outdoor market’s location is in the heart of Togo’s capital.
Although the market is owned and run by Beninese. The Akodessewa Fetish Market is a mecca to local practitioners and they travel there from all over the African continent.
Many believers view the Marche des Feticheurs as a kind of hospital or pharmacy – it is the place you go when you either cannot afford traditional treatment or traditional treatment has failed you. Here you can find talismans and charms good for treating everything from the flu or infertility to removing the blackest of curses.
In the practice of Voodoo every single creature is potent and divine, whether alive or dead, and in the Akodessewa Fetish Market you may find them all – monkeys, alligators, goats, leopards, gazelles, and many, many more – in various stages of decay and stacked up in macabre piles for blocks.
The outdoor location doesn’t quite suppress the stench but at least the huge market is in the open air. It is a jarring place for tourists who are not used to the idea of animal sacrifice as part of worship or using pieces of the dead as talismans, but for locals who practice the religion, it is a treasure and a necessity.
MASSIVE WITHDRAWAL OF FUNDS OUT OF GTBank BY NIGERIANS
Sequel to the court battle between the management Guaranty Trust Bank and the Industrialist Chief Innocent Chukwuma the Chairman of Innoson Group which led to the humiliating arrest of the latter at his residence in Savage Crescent G.R.A Enugu by Law Enforcement officers Attached to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC, over some Financial disagreement. This further led to the massive Transfer of funds from GTB to other Banks like UBA, Fidelity bank, First Bank, Diamond bank, Zenith Bank etc and closure of Bank accounts by Nigerians especially Business men and women of the IGBO extraction.
As at yesterday being the 20th day of December and today 21st of December 2017, over 18.5 Billion Naira have been moved to other Banks and over 20 Million GTB accounts have been closed following the campaign launch of #BoycottGtb on Twitter and other social media platforms. Thereby making the bank standing the risk of folding up.
To many Nigerians, this is a welcome move in solidarity on the premise of "A disservice to one is a disservice to all"
There is a revolution coming in Nigeria where Nigerians will unite as one to fight Injustice and irregularities in the political circle.
THE EVOLUTION AND CLASSES OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE...From the Simple programmed to Self Awareness.
With advances in computing power which includes machine language,neural networks, natural language processing, genetic algorithm and computational creativity, to name just a few. We seem to have discover that Artificial Intelligence is evolving or transforming from the simple programmed to self awareness machines. But before we can go further, it is important we know what an Artificial Intelligence or A.I(for short) is, the types of A.I, a look at where A.I is and the prospect of what it may become in the future.
WHAT IS AN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE ?
Artificial Intelligence according to John McCarthy is the science and engineering of making intelligent machines especially intelligent programs.
Artificial Intelligence is a way of making a computer, computer controlled robot or a software think intelligently in the same way Human beings think and react.
Therefore A. I is accomplished by studying how human brains think, learn, decide and work when engaged in problem solving using the outcomes of the study as a basis of developing intelligent softwares and systems.
Now we have an overview and the knowledge of what an Artificial Intelligence is, we can now proceed further to know the Classes and types of Artificial Intelligence and where we can classify them if we perceive and see them.
CLASSES OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
1) PURELY REACTIVE OR PROGRAMED A.I
This is the most basic form of A.I. it perceives it's environment and situation directly and acts on what it sees. It doesn't have a concept of the wider world. It can't form memories or draw on past experiences to affect current situations thereby making it a Specialist in a particular field or area.
Example of this class of A.I are
• IBM 's Deep Blue which beat Garry Kasparov at Chess
• Google's AlphaGo which won human Go Champions.
2) LIMITED MEMORY
As we go further up on the A.I evolutionary ladder, this type of A.I considers pieces of past information and add them to it's pre programmed representations of the world. It has just enough experience to make proper decisions and execute appropriate tasks. Examples of this class of A.I
• Self driving cars.
• Chatbots, Personal Digital assistants.
3) THEORY OF MIND
This type of A.I has the capacity to understand human thoughts and emotions which of course affect human behavior or character. This type of A.I which can comprehend feelings, motives, intentions, expectations and can interact Socially is yet to be built, but would likely be the next class of intelligent machines. Examples of this class of A.I are.
• C-3P0 and R2-D2 from the Star Wars universe.
• Sonny in the 2004 film I Robot.
4) SELF AWARENESS
These types of A.I can form representations about themselves which makes them an extension of the Theory of Mind A.I. They are aware of their internal states, can predict the feelings of others, make abstractions and inferences. They are the future generation of machines; Super intelligent, sentient and conscious. Examples of this class of A.I are.
• Ava in the 2015 movie Ex Machina
• Synths in the 2015 T.V series Humans
• Chappie in the 2016 movie Chappie
Over the week, the World Bank announced that loans will no longer be available for the implementation and execution of Fossil fuel based projects around the world.
This announcement was welcomed by climate change supporters who were present at Present at the Climate change held in Paris to curb against
fossil fuel-based energy, the World Bank President
made this announcement at the One Planet
summit called by French President Emmanuel
Macron. The bank, which provides loans to
developing countries to foster economic growth,
announced on December 12 that it will no longer
offer financial support for oil and gas exploration
after 2019.
During the summit, the bank released a statement
saying it “will no longer finance upstream oil and
gas,” citing a need to change in a “rapidly changing
world.” In 2015, the bank previously vowed to have
28% of its portfolio dedicated to climate action by
2020. The bank’s latest statement on fossil fuel
financing suggests that it is on course to achieve that goal.
This is yet another tragedy to the fossil fuel energy
industry, and a seemingly significant win for
environmental advocates. The economics surrounding the energy sector are increasingly making it more attractive and useful for entities to switch to renewable energy.
Across the world, it has become cheaper to build new renewable energy installations than to operate and maintain existing coal power plants.
The World Bank’s plan does lay out a caveat for
“exceptional circumstances,” saying that they will
consider “…financing upstream gas in the poorest
countries where there is a clear benefit in terms of
energy access for the poor and the project fits within
the countries’ Paris Agreement commitments.”
The Paris agreement is a major factor in the decision.
The One Earth summit was planned on the two-year
anniversary of the historic agreement, which was
looking uncertain after the President of the United
States, one of the major financial and influential
member nations, decided to withdraw . Even so, the
agreement looks to be thriving, even in the US, which
may reach the goals laid out in Paris against all odds.
WATER, NEVER A BEST REMEDY FOR HOT PEPPER CONSUMPTION
Do you know that Peppers play an integral role in spicing up foods. Do you also know that without peppers, food cannot taste good. In as much we recognize the role peppers play in making foods tasty, it is important for us to know that Hot peppers are loaded with capsaicin, which binds to pain receptors in the mouth?
Anyone who has ever wondered why eating certain spicy foods makes your mouth feel like it’s on fire should take a look at a new video released by the American Chemical Society, which explains the science behind some of the world’s most excruciating dishes.
The main culprit is a molecule called capsaicin, which is found in the tissue of a number of hot peppers – including the infamous ghost chili, as well as the all hottest Carolina reaper Pepper and Dry pepper – and binds to pain receptors in the mouth. This stimulates the brain into coordinating a response designed to get the invading substance out of the body as quickly as possible, by making the eyes stream, the nose run, and the sweat begin to pour. There’s even a scale to measure the intensity of this response, called the Scoville scale.
However, rather than waiting for the body to recover naturally, pepper-stricken diners can take matters into their own hands by seeking out a non-polar substance to dissolve the capsaicin in. Non-polar molecules are those which are not positively charged at one end and negatively charged at the other. Since capsaicin falls into this category, it can only be dissolved in other non-polar substances – of which water is not one. Milk, however, contains molecules such as fat and a protein called casein, which are ideal for removing capsaicin from the pain receptors in the mouth.
Obviously, you don’t have to be a scientist to know not to take a bite out of a hot chili, although by watching the video below, you’ll at least be able to understand the chemistry behind your pain the next time you eat something that’s just a little too fiery.
Anyone who has ever wondered why eating certain spicy foods makes your mouth feel like it’s on fire should take a look at a new video released by the American Chemical Society, which explains the science behind some of the world’s most excruciating dishes.
The main culprit is a molecule called capsaicin, which is found in the tissue of a number of hot peppers – including the infamous ghost chili, as well as the all hottest Carolina reaper Pepper and Dry pepper – and binds to pain receptors in the mouth. This stimulates the brain into coordinating a response designed to get the invading substance out of the body as quickly as possible, by making the eyes stream, the nose run, and the sweat begin to pour. There’s even a scale to measure the intensity of this response, called the Scoville scale.
However, rather than waiting for the body to recover naturally, pepper-stricken diners can take matters into their own hands by seeking out a non-polar substance to dissolve the capsaicin in. Non-polar molecules are those which are not positively charged at one end and negatively charged at the other. Since capsaicin falls into this category, it can only be dissolved in other non-polar substances – of which water is not one. Milk, however, contains molecules such as fat and a protein called casein, which are ideal for removing capsaicin from the pain receptors in the mouth.
Obviously, you don’t have to be a scientist to know not to take a bite out of a hot chili, although by watching the video below, you’ll at least be able to understand the chemistry behind your pain the next time you eat something that’s just a little too fiery.
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