Carnegie Mellon computer learns common sense through pictures, shows what it’s thinking

Never Ending Image Learner

Humans have a knack for making visual associations, but computers don’t have it so easy; we often have to tell them what they see. Carnegie Mellon’s recently launched Never Ending Image Learner (NEIL) supercomputer bucks that trend by forming those connections itself. Building on the university’s earlier NELL research, the 200-core cluster scours the internet for images and defines objects based on the common attributes that it finds. It knows that buildings are frequently tall, for example, and that ducks look like geese. While NEIL is occasionally prone to making mistakes, it’s also transparent — a public page lets you see what it’s learning, and you can suggest queries if you think there’s a gap in the system’s logic. The project could eventually lead to computers and robots with a much better understanding of the world around them, even if they never quite gain human-like perception.

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Via: TG Daily

Source: NEIL, Carnegie Mellon University

Can You Solve the 10 Hardest Logic Puzzles Ever Created?

Can You Solve the 10 Hardest Logic Puzzles Ever Created?

So you think you are clever, right? Then here is your chance to pit your brain against some of the world’s hardest logic puzzles ever created. After having created number puzzles like Calcudoku and Killer Sudoku for many years, I decided to try and find the most challenging ones out there. Every once in a while I added a new type of puzzle, until I ended up with a list of 10.

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Apple debuts Logic Pro X with redesigned interface, new Drummer feature

Apple debuts Logic Pro X with redesigned interface, new Drummer feature

Logic Pro faces some stiff competition from the likes of Pro Tools, but Apple’s hoping to bring a few more music professionals into its camp with a fairly major revision of the software. Available today for $200, Logic Pro X brings with it a whole new interface that Apple’s Phil Schiller says is “designed to streamline the process of creating professional quality music,” along with a number of new features. Those include Drummer, which draws on performances of some well-known session players and recording engineers to provide realistic drum tracks, as well as Waves Tune-style pitch editing with Flex Pitch, Track Stacks to collapse multiple tracks or create layered instruments, and the Arpeggiator MIDI plug-in. Also launching today is the free Logic Remote app for iPad, and a major update to the Main Stage live performance application (it will set you back $30). Additional details can be found in the press release after the break.

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Source: Apple

Apple Logic Pro X: A Whole New Look for Apple’s Music-Making Machine

Apple Logic Pro X: A Whole New Look for Apple's Music-Making Machine

Apple just announced a new version of its top-end music production software. It’s been four years since Apple updated its professional editing suite, so there’s a long list of upgrades in Logic Pro X. The improvements range from an overhauled interface to an iPad controller app to a new automatic drummer feature to help fill in your song when you can’t get a drummer into the studio. It’s available now for $200.

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The Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever (and How to Solve It)

It’s that strange time of year, the lull between Christmas and New Year, when you’re not really celebrating but not really working either. So, how about you wrap your brain around the world’s hardest logic puzzle to keep yourself amused? Y’know, just for fun. More »