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šŸ¤Æ AI Predicts What Countries Look Like in the Year 5000

Also: Google Launches Groundbreaking AI Project

(Total read time: 4 minutes)

Good morning. Itā€™s Wednesday, July 5th, we hope you enjoyed your Independence Day yesterday and woke up without a major hangover šŸ˜„

Letā€™s get to it! Today weā€™re covering Stability AIā€™s CEO who claims there will be (almost) no programmers anymore in 5 years, Google launching Gemini a serious competitor to ChatGPT, and AI predicts what countries look like in the year 5000 šŸ¤Æ, and much more.

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šŸš€ BIG TECH & STARTUPS

Emad Mostaque, founder and CEO of Stability AI, has a provocative prediction as artificial intelligence (AI) increasingly transforms our world: "There will be no programmers in five years." Indeed, the futuristic CEO seems to envision a near-future shaped by the capabilities of AI. Stability AI is the company behind Stable Diffusion, the worldā€™s most popular open-source image generator.

Google is embarking on an exhilarating venture with the introduction of Gemini, a groundbreaking project that has the potential to revolutionize the AI industry. With an aim to surpass existing AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini operates under the vision of tackling various data and tasks without relying on specialized models. It promises to generate unparalleled content that goes beyond the confines of its training data, marking a significant leap in the field of AI.

šŸ§‘ā€šŸš€ SCIENCE & FUTURISTIC TECHNOLOGY

Deciphering ancient languages and texts has been a challenge for archaeologists for generations. Now, researchers are using artificial intelligence to quickly translate ancient texts and languages into Englishā€”including ancient Cuneiform and Egyptian hieroglyphs. In a new Oxford Academic report, a group of AI developers details how they were able to use natural language processing (NLP) to translate cuneiform tablets from Akkadian into English.

A new AI tool that could help doctors assess the early signs of dementia and Alzheimerā€™s more quickly and efficiently, has been developed by researchers at the University of Sheffield. The system, known as CognoSpeak, uses a virtual agent displayed on a screen to engage a patient in a conversation. It asks memory-probing questions inspired by those used in outpatient consultations and conducts cognitive tests, such as picture descriptions and verbal fluency tests.

šŸ§  MISCELLANEOUS

AI, or music that contains AI-created elements is absolutely eligible for entry and for consideration for Grammy nomination. Period,ā€ Harvey Mason, CEO of The Recording Academy told The Associated Press. ā€œWhatā€™s not going to happen is we are not going to give a Grammy or Grammy nomination to the AI portion.ā€

The predictions have been shared by the YouTube channel AI Imaginary World, which asked the technology-driven know-it-all to quite literally predict the future. Unfortunately, we won't be around to see how accurate the AI is with its predictions, but we can at least see how the world develops over the next few decades.

Solar scientists are using deepfake AI images to unravel the mysteries of the sun's atmosphere. For more than 80 years, solar physicists have been trying to understand how and why the upper reaches of the sun's atmosphere (the corona) are unexpectedly hotter than the layers closer to the surface. To solve this, researcher Luke McMullan from Northumbria University trained an AI machine learning algorithm.

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