TensorFlow is dead, long live TensorFlow! ☞ https://school.geekwall.in/p/S1bpTIVqE/tensorflow-is-dead-long-live-tensorflow
#tensorflow #deeplearning
Earlier this month, Congress introduced a resolution officially recognizing Nov. 24, 2018 as Small Business Saturday “to increase awareness of the value of locally owned small businesses and the impact of locally owned small businesses on the economy of the United States.”
This annual American Express campaign began on the Saturday after Thanksgiving in 2010 to support “local places that make our communities strong.”
For 60 years, we have supported and partnered with small businesses across the country to pioneer the future of space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research.
Our Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program funds the research, development and demonstration of innovative technologies that help address space exploration challenges and have significant potential for commercialization. In 2018, our program awarded 555 contracts to small businesses for a total of $180.1 million.
NASA works with small business Nanocomp Technologies Inc. of Merrimack, New Hampshire, to advance manufacturing of carbon nanotube composite materials.
Our investments in small businesses help equip future missions to the Moon, Mars and beyond by advancing our science and technology capabilities. They also benefit the U.S. economy. The SBIR/STTR program’s 2017 Economic Impact Report indicated a $2.74 return for every dollar spent on awards—money well spent!
Small businesses also contribute to scientific advances for the International Space Station as well as here on Earth. Pancopia, Inc. in Hampton, Virginia, developed an innovative, high-performance water recycling system to remove high levels of organic carbon and nitrogen in wastewater. Recycling water in space saves money on resupply and enables more Earth-independence and self-reliance. With the help of an SBIR award, Pancopia is also working on a similar system for public wastewater that has the potential to cut treatment expenses to less than half the current costs.
Small businesses also contribute to scientific advances for the International Space Station as well as here on Earth. Pancopia, Inc. in Hampton, Virginia, developed an innovative, high-performance water recycling system to remove high levels of organic carbon and nitrogen in wastewater. Recycling water in space saves money on resupply and enables more Earth-independence and self-reliance. With the help of an SBIR award, Pancopia is also working on a similar system for public wastewater that has the potential to cut treatment expenses to less than half the current costs.
When NASA went to the private sector to develop deformable mirror technology—a key component of starlight-blocking instruments—a small business in Berkeley, California, applied for research and development funding through SBIR to design extra-precision, segmented mirrors. This innovative approach for a small deformable mirror made up of many tiny hexagonal segments enables advanced control when paired with other optics.
Data collected by a telescope using the Iris AO deformable mirror can be used to determine if the target investigated in space is an exoplanet based on its orbit, and if the exoplanet has atmosphere using color spectrum imaging analysis. The Iris AO technology is currently being refined and prepared for inclusion in a future exoplanet mission.
Does your small business have a big idea? Your next opportunity to join our SBIR/STTR program starts on Jan. 7, 2019, when our next solicitation opens. We’ll be seeking new innovative ideas from small businesses and research institutions for research, development and demonstration of innovative technologies. Go to https://www.nasa.sbir.gov/ to learn more.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
SASE stands for a secure access service edge, and it is the next big thing in the enterprise networking industry. The technology category meets the WAN edge and network security into a cloud-based, as-a-service delivery form. As per Gartner, the union is steered by customer demands for scalability, flexibility, simplicity, low latency, and persistent security. Read More
“Sometimes you just have to love as if you’ve never been broken. Hold your own hand in the rain like it’s the most beautiful thing to do. Wake up one morning to the song of your heart and dance in the kitchen. And be grateful for a fresh day that has made you anew.”
— Juansen Dizon
Technology has advanced exponentially in the last decade. Apart from social media apps, better mobile phone cameras, quicker laptops, technology has resolved issues that could not be resolved a few years ago. One amongst these issues is access to high-quality, customized education for students.
Edtech apps have used Artificial Intelligence (AI), machine learning, big data, and linguistic communication process to revolutionise education over the last five years. All children are unique and have distinctive learning desires. On addressing these desires, the educational method can enable a positive development.
However, a tutor within the room cannot teach sixty categories in sixty alternative ways. With decent time, it will give qualitative feedback for a lot of complicated response formats like essays, long answers, and opinion articles, which can boost the overall learning curve.
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Researchers have found an effective target in the brain for electrical stimulation to improve mood in people suffering from depression. As reported in the journal Current Biology on November 29, stimulation of a brain region called the lateral orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) reliably produced acute improvement in mood in patients who suffered from depression at the start of the study.
Those effects were not seen in patients without mood symptoms, suggesting that the brain stimulation works to normalize activity in mood-related neural circuitry, the researchers say.
“Stimulation induced a pattern of activity in brain regions connected to OFC that was similar to patterns seen when patients naturally experienced positive mood states,” says Vikram Rao, of the University of California, San Francisco. “Our findings suggest that OFC is a promising new stimulation target for treatment of mood disorders.”
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