KI auf dem 37C3: Zwischen Golem-Angst und der Drei-Tage-Woche

Auf dem diesjährigen Kongress des CCC lief praktisch immer irgendwo ein Vortrag zum Thema KI. Doch wie sollen Hacker und Gesellschaft damit umgehen? Eine Analyse von Friedhelm Greis (KI, CCC)

Auf dem diesjährigen Kongress des CCC lief praktisch immer irgendwo ein Vortrag zum Thema KI. Doch wie sollen Hacker und Gesellschaft damit umgehen? Eine Analyse von Friedhelm Greis (KI, CCC)

KI, Security, Homeoffice: 2023 war für Chefs von Devs “megaintensiv”

Der Golem.de-Newsletter für CTOs und IT-Entscheider blickt im Jahresrückblick auf die wichtigsten Themen und meistgelesenen Ausgaben zurück. Ein Newsletter-Beitrag von Daniel Ziegener (Chefs von Devs, Softwareentwicklung)

Der Golem.de-Newsletter für CTOs und IT-Entscheider blickt im Jahresrückblick auf die wichtigsten Themen und meistgelesenen Ausgaben zurück. Ein Newsletter-Beitrag von Daniel Ziegener (Chefs von Devs, Softwareentwicklung)

(g+) Vier Monate Honeypot: Hält die IT-Recruiting-Plattform, was sie verspricht?

Für die Mitarbeitersuche gibt es HR-Abteilungen – und IT-Recruiter, die einiges an Provision nehmen. Bei Honeypot hingegen “bewerben sich Firmen bei dir”. Mmh. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Rene Koch (Recruiting, Wirtschaft)

Für die Mitarbeitersuche gibt es HR-Abteilungen - und IT-Recruiter, die einiges an Provision nehmen. Bei Honeypot hingegen "bewerben sich Firmen bei dir". Mmh. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Rene Koch (Recruiting, Wirtschaft)

Unternehmen, Projekte, Produkte: Was 2023 geschlossen und eingestellt wurde

Das Jahr endet mit der gestrichenen Umweltprämie. In den zwölf Monaten zuvor ist Windows 8.1 obsolet geworden und ein U-Boot implodiert. Golem.de blickt zurück. Von Oliver Nickel (Wirtschaft, Windows)

Das Jahr endet mit der gestrichenen Umweltprämie. In den zwölf Monaten zuvor ist Windows 8.1 obsolet geworden und ein U-Boot implodiert. Golem.de blickt zurück. Von Oliver Nickel (Wirtschaft, Windows)

SpaceX launches two rockets—three hours apart—to close out a record year

This was the shortest time between orbital launches at Cape Canaveral since 1966.

SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket lifted off Thursday night from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Enlarge / SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket lifted off Thursday night from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (credit: SpaceX)

It seems like SpaceX did everything this year but launch 100 times.

On Thursday night, the launch company sent two more rockets into orbit from Florida. One was a Falcon Heavy, the world's most powerful rocket in commercial service, carrying the US military's X-37B spaceplane from a launch pad at NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 8:07 pm EST (01:07 UTC). Less than three hours later, at 11:01 pm EST (04:01 UTC), SpaceX's workhorse Falcon 9 launcher took off a few miles to the south with a payload of 23 Starlink Internet satellites.

The Falcon Heavy's two side boosters and the Falcon 9's first stage landed back on Earth for reuse.

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These scientists explored the good vibrations of the bundengan and didgeridoo

Their relatively simple construction produces some surprisingly complicated physics.

Indonesian performers onstage with one playing a bundengan

Enlarge / The bundengan (left) began as a combined shelter/instrument for duck hunters but it is now often played onstage. (credit: Utrezz0707/CC BY-SA 4.0)

There's rarely time to write about every cool science-y story that comes our way. So this year, we're once again running a special Twelve Days of Christmas series of posts, highlighting one science story that fell through the cracks in 2020, each day from December 25 through January 5. Today: the surprisingly complex physics of two simply constructed instruments: the Indonesian bundengan and the Australian Aboriginal didgeridoo (or didjeridu).

The bundengan is a rare, endangered instrument from Indonesia that can imitate the sound of metallic gongs and cow-hide drums (kendangs) in a traditional gamelan ensemble. The didgeridoo is an iconic instrument associated with Australian Aboriginal culture that produces a single, low-pitched droning note that can be continuously sustained by skilled players. Both instruments are a topic of scientific interest because their relatively simple construction produces some surprisingly complicated physics. Two recent studies into their acoustical properties were featured at an early December meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, held in Sydney, Australia, in conjunction with the Australian Acoustical Society.

The bundengan originated with Indonesian duck hunters as protection from rain and other adverse conditions while in the field, doubling as a musical instrument to pass the time. It's a half-dome structure woven out of bamboo splits to form a lattice grid, crisscrossed at the top to form the dome. That dome is then coated with layers of bamboo sheaths held in place with sugar palm fibers. Musicians typically sit cross-legged inside the dome-shaped resonator and pluck the strings and bars to play. The strings produce metallic sounds while the plates inside generate percussive drum-like sounds.

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Terramaster brings Intel Alder Lake-N chips to its 2-bay and 4-bay NAS systems

I recently replaced an aging QNAP TS-251 network-attached storage system with a new Asustor AS5402T. And while I shouldn’t be surprised that my new NAS is significantly faster, it’s been a long time since I’ve upgraded hardware and n…

I recently replaced an aging QNAP TS-251 network-attached storage system with a new Asustor AS5402T. And while I shouldn’t be surprised that my new NAS is significantly faster, it’s been a long time since I’ve upgraded hardware and noticed as much of an improvement as I’ve seen by jumping from a system with a 2013-era […]

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This bird is like a GPS for honey

The honeyguide recognizes calls made by different human groups.

A bird perched on a wall in front of an urban backdrop.

Enlarge / A greater honeyguide (credit: Keabetswe Maposa)

With all the technological advances humans have made, it may seem like we’ve lost touch with nature—but not all of us have. People in some parts of Africa use a guide more effective than any GPS system when it comes to finding beeswax and honey. This is not a gizmo, but a bird.

The Greater Honeyguide (highly appropriate name), Indicator indicator (even more appropriate scientific name), knows where all the beehives are because it eats beeswax. The Hadza people of Tanzania and Yao people of Mozambique realized this long ago. Hadza and Yao honey hunters have formed a unique relationship with this bird species by making distinct calls, and the honeyguide reciprocates with its own calls, leading them to a hive.

Because the Hadza and Yao calls differ, zoologist Claire Spottiswoode of the University of Cambridge and anthropologist Brian Wood of UCLA wanted to find out if the birds respond generically to human calls, or are attuned to their local humans. They found that the birds are much more likely to respond to a local call, meaning that they have learned to recognize that call.

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Sipeed Longan Pi3H is a Raspberry Pi Zero-sized board with full-sized Ethernet, USB, and HDMI ports

The Sipeed Longan Pi3H is a tiny coimputer that measures just 65 x 31mm (2.6″ x 1.2″), making it about the same size and shape as a Raspberry Pi Zero. But while the latest Raspberry Pi Zero model has micro USB and mini HDMI ports, Sipeed&#…

The Sipeed Longan Pi3H is a tiny coimputer that measures just 65 x 31mm (2.6″ x 1.2″), making it about the same size and shape as a Raspberry Pi Zero. But while the latest Raspberry Pi Zero model has micro USB and mini HDMI ports, Sipeed’s Pi3H has full-sized USB and HDMI ports… and even a full-sized […]

The post Sipeed Longan Pi3H is a Raspberry Pi Zero-sized board with full-sized Ethernet, USB, and HDMI ports appeared first on Liliputing.

AI-created “virtual influencers” are stealing business from humans

Brands are turning to hyper-realistic, AI-generated influencers for promotions.

digital influencer

Enlarge / Aitana Lopez, an AI-generated influencer, has convinced many social media users she is real. (credit: FT montage/TheClueless/GettyImages)

Pink-haired Aitana Lopez is followed by more than 200,000 people on social media. She posts selfies from concerts and her bedroom, while tagging brands such as hair care line Olaplex and lingerie giant Victoria’s Secret.

Brands have paid about $1,000 a post for her to promote their products on social media—despite the fact that she is entirely fictional.

Aitana is a “virtual influencer” created using artificial intelligence tools, one of the hundreds of digital avatars that have broken into the growing $21 billion content creator economy.

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