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Stadiums and tourism hotspots to test new 5G networks in £88 million scheme
Stadiums and tourism hotspots to test new 5G networks in £88 million scheme
A range of sporting venues and tourism hotspots across the UK are to be the settings for trials of new types of 5G mobile technology as part of an £88 million Government scheme. Nineteen projects and locations from around the country will host trials of Open RAN mobile tech, which enables different network providers’ equipment to work together to boost mobile coverage, rather than each only working with their own. The locations for the trials include urban centres in Glasgow, Cambridge, Liverpool, Bath, and the City of London, sporting and entertainment venues such as the Principality Stadium in Cardiff and Sunderland’s Stadium of Light, as well as the seaside resorts of Blackpool and Worthing. Whether you’re in a busy city centre or a rural village, a fast and reliable mobile connection is vital to staying in touch, accessing services and doing business Sir John Whittingdale The projects have been chosen via the Government’s Open Networks Ecosystem (ONE) Competition, which has looked for schemes to demonstrate new ways of building fast, dependable mobile networks in busy places. Data and digital infrastructure minister Sir John Whittingdale said: “Whether you’re in a busy city centre or a rural village, a fast and reliable mobile connection is vital to staying in touch, accessing services and doing business. “In order to secure that, we need to embrace a diverse and secure range of technology that will underpin the network. “The projects we’re backing today with £88 million in Government research and development investment will use innovative Open RAN solutions to make our mobile networks more adaptable and resilient, with future-proofed technology to support bringing lightning-fast connections across the country for many years to come.” The UK’s major mobile network operators – BT/EE, Three, Virgin Media O2, and Vodafone – have endorsed the Government’s plans around more open mobile networks as a way of boosting infrastructure resilience as well as competition. Hamish MacLeod, chief executive of industry body Mobile UK, said: “The development of open and interoperable RAN solutions is important to the UK’s mobile industry. “This announcement highlights Mobile UK’s member operators’ ongoing R&D trial and deployment programmes, helping progress solutions to realise ambitions to grow traffic over open RAN architecture.” Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live
2023-09-14 23:51
NBA 2K24 Best Jump Shot Settings: Current and Next Gen
NBA 2K24 Best Jump Shot Settings: Current and Next Gen
The NBA 2K24 best jump shot settings on Current and Next Gen require the Set Point Shot Timing Visual Cue and the Jump Shot Meter turned off.
2023-09-14 23:50
NBA 2K24 Sept. 14 Update 1.2 Patch Notes: Full List of Changes
NBA 2K24 Sept. 14 Update 1.2 Patch Notes: Full List of Changes
The NBA 2K24 Sept. 14 patch notes for update 1.2 delivered numerous changes to MyCAREER mode, including quest and progression updates.
2023-09-14 23:47
Chatbots ‘able to outperform most humans at creative thinking task’
Chatbots ‘able to outperform most humans at creative thinking task’
Bots such as ChatGPT may be able to outperform humans at certain creative thinking tasks, scientists believe. Researchers have found that artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots are capable of a skill known as divergent thinking – a spontaneous thought process or method used to generate creative ideas by exploring many possible solutions. When assessed with a type of divergent thinking exercise known as alternate uses tasks, which asks a person to think of as many uses as possible for a simple object, chatbots, on average, performed better than humans. However, the researchers also found that the best human ideas still matched or exceeded those that came from AI. Simone Grassini, associate professor in the department of psychosocial science at the University of Bergen, and Cognitive and Behavioural Neuroscience Lab at the University of Stavanger, in Norway, told the PA news agency: “Indeed, this is a remarkable type of ability that AI chatbots display. “The findings show that AI is better than most humans in creative thinking. The findings show that AI is better than most humans in creative thinking Prof Simone Grassini “But we should also remember that we used the divergent thinking task to measure creative thinking, that is, measuring a particular type of creative thinking and not creativity in general. “Our results show that, at least for now, the best humans still outperform the AI.” For the study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, Prof Grassini and her colleague Mika Koivisto, of the department of psychology at the University of Turku, in Turku, Finland, assigned alternate uses tasks for four objects – a rope, a box, a pencil and a candle – to 256 human volunteers and three AI chatbots – ChatGPT3, ChatGPT4, and Copy.Ai. The responses were rated on semantic distance – looking at how closely related the response was to the object’s original use – and creativity. The team said that on average, chatbot-generated responses scored significantly higher than the human responses for both semantic distance and creativity. The best human response outperformed each chatbot’s best response in seven out of eight scoring categories – however responses from people had a higher proportion of poor-quality ideas, the researchers added. Prof Grassini said: “Playing around with ChatGPT, I noticed that some of the answers given by the chatbot displayed a good level of creativity. “I knew that the chatbot would have performed well, but I think it performed even better than what I expected.” The researchers said that while their work highlights the potential of AI as a tool to enhance creativity, it also underscores the unique and complex nature of human creativity that may be difficult to fully replicate or surpass with AI technology. Prof Grassini said: “It is still to be established whether these capabilities of AI will translate directly on AI systems, replacing human jobs that require creative thinking. “I prefer to think that AI will be helping humans to improve their capacity.” Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live Information Commissioner urges people to share data to protect at-risk children Long-form video content is here to stay, says YouTube UK boss Robotic dog brought into survey historic Cold War weapons testing facilities
2023-09-14 23:26
The Wild History of the Tale That Created the Modern Vampire (And No, It's Not ‘Dracula’)
The Wild History of the Tale That Created the Modern Vampire (And No, It's Not ‘Dracula’)
‘The Vampyre’ is largely forgotten today, but it upended centuries of vampiric lore 80 years before Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’—and from its spooky beginnings to its scandalous misattribution, its history was as dramatic as fiction.
2023-09-14 23:24
Princess Peach: Showtime!, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, F-ZERO 99 and More Announced in Latest Nintendo Direct
Princess Peach: Showtime!, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, F-ZERO 99 and More Announced in Latest Nintendo Direct
REDMOND, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 14, 2023--
2023-09-14 23:23
Toshiba Showcases Cutting-Edge Solutions and Sponsors Grocery Research Speakeasy Event at Groceryshop 2023
Toshiba Showcases Cutting-Edge Solutions and Sponsors Grocery Research Speakeasy Event at Groceryshop 2023
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 14, 2023--
2023-09-14 23:20
Nasa boss says he believes in aliens during UFO hearings
Nasa boss says he believes in aliens during UFO hearings
Nasa’s chief says he believes that aliens are real and waiting to be found. Bill Nelson was speaking after the publication of a report by a panel assembled to look into Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs), the official names for UFOs, or unexplained objects spotted in the sky. That report found that while some UAPs remain unexplained, more data is found to understand where they have come from. Mr Nelson said that his “personal answer” is that there are vast numbers of inhabited planets throughout the universe. “With the James Webb [telescope] looking at the exoplanets, we are now beginning to discover, and somewhere out there we will discover, another medium-sized stony planet around a medium-sized sun or star at just the right distance... that has carbon, that will have a habitable atmosphere,” he said. “If you ask me do I believe there’s life in a universe that is so vast that it’s hard for me to comprehend how big it is, my personal answer is yes. But I asked some of our scientists: What is the mathematical probability that there is life out there in the universe? And if you calculate in billions of stars in billions of galaxies that there’s replicated in what I just said, another stony planet, the answer was ‘at least a trillion’. That’s from our scientists.” Read More Watch live: Nasa announces findings of long-awaited UFO study We cannot yet explain mysterious sightings in the sky, Nasa panel says Nasa’s UFO study team reveals first ever report: Live updates
2023-09-14 22:54
Innovex is pleased to announce the appointment of Bonnie Black to its Board of Directors
Innovex is pleased to announce the appointment of Bonnie Black to its Board of Directors
HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 14, 2023--
2023-09-14 22:52
US alleges Google got rich because people stick with search defaults
US alleges Google got rich because people stick with search defaults
By Diane Bartz WASHINGTON The Justice Department will press its argument Thursday that Google sought to strike agreements
2023-09-14 22:46
Microsoft Facing Formal EU Complaint Over Teams Video App
Microsoft Facing Formal EU Complaint Over Teams Video App
Microsoft Corp.’s attempt at avoiding deeper European Union scrutiny of its Teams video-conferencing app fell flat with the
2023-09-14 22:45
New Research Findings Reveal Doubling of Dissatisfaction for Current Hospital/EHR-based and Homegrown Laboratory Information Systems
New Research Findings Reveal Doubling of Dissatisfaction for Current Hospital/EHR-based and Homegrown Laboratory Information Systems
SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 14, 2023--
2023-09-14 22:28
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