Twitch, YouTube Influencers Are Becoming Video Game Publishers
Influencers in the video-game industry are evolving from playing games to making them. Over the weekend, One True
2023-06-13 22:58
Everything You Need to Know to Start Grilling With Cedar Planks
A basic cedar wood plank is one the easiest ways to upgrade your grilling game.
2023-06-13 22:30
First Heat Wave This Year Declared in London and Across UK
Maximum temperatures in several regions of the UK have reached the official threshold for a heat wave, according
2023-06-13 22:23
AI creates gallery of world leaders as babies and Trump and Johnson look alarmingly cute
Artificial intelligence has been used to generate images showing some of the most controversial world leaders as babies and the results are strangely sweet. In recent years, AI has come to the fore as one of the most powerful and perhaps terrifying new types of technology we have ever seen. It has the ability to learn via data and produce results based on the information it is fed. One person has now used the technology to produce images of different world leaders as babies. On Instagram, a user named Planet AI explained they asked “AI to Draw World Leaders as Babies” and the results were pretty surprising. Included in the images were Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, the French President, Emmanuel Macron, the UK’s former PM Boris Johnson and the former US president Donald Trump. Remarkably, the AI-generated image managed to make the war-mongering Russian leader Vladimir Putin appear relatively sweet and innocent. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter In the comments, people certainly had some thoughts about the images AI had come up with. Someone commented: “Kim Jong Un did not change.” Another said: “I'm finding it really funny that Pope Francis is still in his pope clothes. Makes me think of a baby running the Catholic church.” “Putin is so sweet and Obama also,” another argued. On Twitter, another person wrote: “Joe Biden looks so old that even his baby version looks about 60 years old!” While AI technology can be used for relatively harmless entertainment purposes, one woman discovered how powerful it can be after claiming she “lost her job to AI” and had to apply for the job to train it. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-13 22:20
Apple Downgrade Pushes Bullish Analyst Ratings to 2-Year Low
Even as Apple Inc.’s shares have powered their way to a fresh record high, worries over cooling demand
2023-06-13 21:56
Billionaire Forrest Calls Musk a ‘Muppet’ Over Fuel Cell Doubts
Andrew Forrest, the Australian billionaire betting much of the fortune he made in iron-ore mining on green power,
2023-06-13 21:18
A white dwarf star is currently transforming into a giant ‘cosmic diamond’
A white dwarf star is undergoing the process of turning into a “cosmic diamond” as it begins to crystalise. The lullaby “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” talks about stars in the sky looking like diamonds, but for one specific type of star, that observation is truer than for others. Astronomers have observed that when a specific type of dead star starts to cool, it begins to crystalise and harden. An international team of astronomers, led by Alexander Venner of the University of Southern Queensland in Australia, have explained in a new paper Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society how a white dwarf star around 104 light-years away is doing just that. They noticed that the star, composed primarily of carbon and metallic oxygen, has a temperature-mass profile that suggests its centre is hardening into a dense “cosmic diamond” made of crystallised carbon and oxygen. The study explained: "In this work we present the discovery of a new Sirius-like quadruple system at 32 parsecs distance, composed of a crystallizing white dwarf companion to the previously known triple HD 190412.” Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter It continued: “By virtue of its association with these main sequence companions, this is the first crystallizing white dwarf whose total age can be externally constrained, a fact that we make use of by attempting to empirically measure a cooling delay caused by core crystallization in the white dwarf.” All stars eventually die out when they run out of energy. Of those that have a mass of less than around eight times that of the Sun, the vast majority will form a white dwarf star. The matter of a white dwarf star is highly compressed and as they gradually cool, they evolve into a black dwarf star when they lose heat and crystalise. Scientists’ calculations estimate the process takes around a quadrillion years (one million billion years) to complete, though the signs that the process is occurring can be identified by experts. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-13 21:16
Millennial Money: How to use ChatGPT to plan your next trip
Artificial intelligence chatbots like ChatGPT offer a novel way to research travel plans
2023-06-13 20:48
Diablo IV makes $666m less than a week after its launch
Blizzard Entertainment has declared 'Diablo IV' its "fastest-selling" title of all time.
2023-06-13 20:28
UK Watchdog Bans Water Company Advert Over Pollution Record
The UK’s advertising regulator banned an advert by Anglian Water Group Ltd. because it didn’t reflect an environmental
2023-06-13 19:54
A Simple Tool to Unlock Trillions of Dollars in Clean-Energy Investments
Solar and wind power are the cheapest sources of energy in most of the world. And, yet, there
2023-06-13 19:48
A Greenwashing Lawsuit Against Delta Aims to Set a Precedent
As tranquil instrumental music plays over gauzy images of nature, a woman’s voice-over begins. “Isn’t it a paradox,”
2023-06-13 19:46