Unbound: No 196

Instagram is starting to let some creators make AI versions of themselves
By Jay Peters | The Verge

Instagram’s new “AI Studio” will let creators make AI chatbot versions of themselves, and Meta is starting to roll it out as an “early test” in the US, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced on his broadcast channel on Thursday.

As part of the test, “you might start seeing AIs from your favorite creators and interest-based AIs in the coming weeks on Instagram,” according to Zuckerberg. “These will primarily show up in messaging for now, and will be clearly labeled as AI.”

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Cryptographers Are Discovering New Rules for Quantum Encryption
by Wired | Wired.com

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

THE ORIGINAL VERSION of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine.

Say you want to send a private message, cast a secret vote, or sign a document securely. If you do any of these tasks on a computer, you’re relying on encryption to keep your data safe. That encryption needs to withstand attacks from code breakers with their own computers, so modern encryption methods rely on assumptions about what mathematical problems are hard for computers to solve.

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How Quantum Will Change Everything in Forthcoming Years
by Prathima | Analytics Insight

DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is using a sophisticated cooling system to keep qubits – the heart of quantum computers – cold enough for scientists to study them for use in quantum computers. Image courtesy of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Quantum computing is now at its early stage, and its evolution is a new epoch that will bring about changes across the domains of life. Quantum computers, however, do not operate like classical computers, which use binary cycles of 0 and 1, known as bits. Still, they use the principles of quantum mechanics to solve very complex computations.

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🌙 NASA - Best Photo from Last Week
Two Years Since Webb’s First Images: Celebrating with the Penguin and the Egg

The distorted spiral galaxy at center, the Penguin, and the compact elliptical at left, the Egg, are locked in an active embrace. This near- and mid-infrared image combines data from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument), and marks the telescope’s second year of science. Webb’s view shows that their interaction is marked by a glow of scattered stars represented in blue. Known jointly as Arp 142, the galaxies made their first pass by one another between 25 and 75 million years ago, causing “fireworks,” or new star formation, in the Penguin. The galaxies are approximately the same mass, which is why one hasn’t consumed the other. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

To celebrate the second science anniversary of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, the team has released a near- and mid-infrared image on July 12, 2024, of two interacting galaxies: The Penguin and the Egg.

Webb specializes in capturing infrared light – which is beyond what our own eyes can see – allowing us to view and study these two galaxies, collectively known as Arp 142. Their ongoing interaction was set in motion between 25 and 75 million years ago, when the Penguin (individually cataloged as NGC 2936) and the Egg (NGC 2937) completed their first pass. They will go on to shimmy and sway, completing several additional loops before merging into a single galaxy hundreds of millions of years from now.

Learn more about the Penguin and the Egg.

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

Text Credit: NASA Webb Mission Team


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