DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF by Maryanne Kane, Journalist
DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF
By Journalists Edward Kane & Maryanne Kane
PUFFER JACKET WITH BEER-POWERED COOLING SYSTEM
- London-based fashion designer Izzy Du and Tiger Beer have teamed-up to produce a puffer jacket that can cool you off by 40-degrees Fahrenheit in the hot temperatures of summer by the power of beer. Here's what we know:
- It's called the Tiger Summer Puffer
- The jacket is unique and such a counterintuitive remedy to cool off in the heat
- It's a puffer to wear to cool off in summer
- Will be unveiled at Paris Fashion Week
- It's bright orange with a network of hidden tubes filled with cold beer that is pumped throughout the jacket
- Looks like a normal puffer jacket but it's a form of personal air conditioning
- The beer tubes make contact with arteries close to the skin to cool the body fast
- Integrated cooling system is on the back of the jacket
- Powered by an internal breast pocket filled with icy Tiger beer that harvests its cold for a refreshing feel
- Tiger Beer says it's capable of cooling the body down by 41-degrees F
- The tech is similar to that used to cool astronauts in severe temperatures
- No word on when it will go on sale or how much it might cost
- Tons of interest from fashion experts saying this is the coolest and most innovative design they've seen in a long time.
TOYOTA USES AI TO FAST TRAIN ROBOTS
Source: TRI
- Toyota's Research Institute (TRI) is using generative AI to teach robots very new, difficult skills in hours, including 2-handed tasks like making eggs. It's a revolutionary approach to robot education and may prove to be an industry breakthrough. Here's what we know:
- TRI says it's using generative AI to teach robots very difficult tasks that require a great deal of dexterity and, until now, have been very difficult for robots to perform
- It's a move to create "Large Behavior Models" for robots that are similar to "Large Language Models" that underpin conversational AI
- The robots have learned 60 new tasks including pouring liquids and using tools
- To learn the new skills, the robots were fed data; it didn't require writing new code
- One of the key roboticists behind this is Russ Tedrake, TRI VP of Robotic Research & MIT's Toyota Professor of EE, ME & Computer Science
- He calls the pacing, rate and reliability of the robotic learning "simply amazing" and "so exciting"
- He says the robots are learning within a few hours from camera images, tactical sensing and learned representations
- They've learned 60 new skills so far
- The TRI team targets hundreds more by the end of this year and a thousand more in 2024.
ELON MUSK'S NEURALINK's 1st HUMAN CLINICAL TRIALS
Source: Stock
- Elon Musk's brain implant start-up Neuralink is set to start its 1st human clinical trials. Here's what we know:
- Neuralink, a controversial biotech startup, is recruiting participants for its first human clinical trials
- It's offering brain implants for patients with paralysis
- These are wireless Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI)
- Purpose is to see if the implant can help paralyzed people control external devices like a computer cursor or keyboard with their thoughts
- A robot will insert the brain chip into the area of the patient's brain that controls the intention to move
- The chip sends and records brain signals to an app
- These 1st human trials, according to Neuralink, have been approved by the FDA
- For the participants this will entail a 6-year study
- The technology connects the human brain to a computer via the chip
- Musk hopes this new technology, paired with advanced AI, will eventually treat brain diseases like dementia, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
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