Archive for February, 2020

Top 10 Strategic Technology Breakthroughs That Will Transform Our Lives – Analytics Insight

The world is surrounded by technology technology that makes our jobs easy, the technology that makes our commute easy, the technology that makes out communication easy and so on. Hence, such advancements have turned into a boon to our lives while easing out numerous works that would conventionally take a long time to complete. Now that we look back we see so many new technologies have taken over the world that its nearly impossible to enlist them at once. And how further advancements will impact our lives in new ways we cannot even imagine.

MIT has drafted a list of top 10 strategic technology breakthroughs that will revolutionize our lives in the coming years.

An internet based on quantum physics will soon enable inherently secure communication. A team led by Stephanie Wehner, at Delft University of Technology, is building a network connecting four cities in the Netherlands entirely by means of quantum technology. Messages sent over this network will be unhackable.

The Delft network will be the first to transmit information between cities using quantum techniques from end to end.The technology relies on a quantum behavior of atomic particles called entanglement. Entangled photons cant be covertly read without disrupting their content.

Heres a definition of a hopeless case: a child with a fatal disease so exceedingly rare that not only is there no treatment, theres not even anyone in a lab coat studying it. Too rare to care, goes the saying.

Thats about to change, thanks to new classes of drugs that can be tailored to a persons genes. If an extremely rare disease is caused by a specific DNA mistakeas several thousand aretheres now at least a fighting chance for a genetic fix through hyper-personalized medicine. One such case is that of Mila Makovec, a little girl suffering from a devastating illness caused by a unique genetic mutation, who got a drug manufactured just for her. Her case made the New England Journal of Medicine in October after doctors moved from a readout of her genetic error to treatment in just a year. They called the drug milasen, after her. The treatment hasnt cured Mila. But it seems to have stabilized her condition: it has reduced her seizures, and she has begun to stand and walk with assistance.

Milas treatment was possible because creating a gene medicine has never been faster or had a better chance of working. The new medicines might take the form of gene replacement, gene editing, or antisense (the type Mila received), a sort of molecular eraser, which erases or fixes erroneous genetic messages. What the treatments have in common is that they can be programmed, in digital fashion and with digital speed, to correct or compensate for inherited diseases, letter for DNA letter.

Last June Facebook unveiled a global digital currency called Libra. The idea triggered a backlash and Libra may never launch, at least not in the way it was originally envisioned. But its still made a difference: just days after Facebooks announcement, an official from the Peoples Bank of China implied that it would speed the development of its own digital currency in response. Now China is poised to become the first major economy to issue a digital version of its money, which it intends as a replacement for physical cash.

The first wave of a new class of anti-aging drugs has begun human testing. These drugs wont let you live longer (yet) but aim to treat specific ailments by slowing or reversing a fundamental process of aging.

The drugs are called senolyticsthey work by removing certain cells that accumulate as we age. Known as senescent cells, they can create low-level inflammation that suppresses normal mechanisms of cellular repair and creates a toxic environment for neighboring cells.

The universe of molecules that could be turned into potentially life-saving drugs is mind-boggling in size: researchers estimate the number at around 1060. Thats more than all the atoms in the solar system, offering virtually unlimited chemical possibilitiesif only chemists could find the worthwhile ones.

Now machine-learning tools can explore large databases of existing molecules and their properties, using the information to generate new possibilities. This AI enabled technology could make it faster and cheaper to discover new drug candidates.

Satellites that can beam a broadband connection to internet terminals. As long as these terminals have a clear view of the sky, they can deliver the internet to any nearby devices. SpaceX alone wants to send more than 4.5 times more satellites into orbit this decade than humans have ever launched since Sputnik.

These mega-constellations are feasible because we have learned how to build smaller satellites and launch them more cheaply. During the space shuttle era, launching a satellite into space cost roughly US$24,800 per pound. A small communications satellite that weighed four tons cost nearly $200 million to fly up.

Quantum computers store and process data in a way completely different from the ones were all used to. In theory, they could tackle certain classes of problems that even the most powerful classical supercomputer imaginable would take millennia to solve, like breaking todays cryptographic codes or simulating the precise behavior of molecules to help discover new drugs and materials.

There have been working quantum computers for several years, but its only under certain conditions that they outperform classical ones, and in October Google claimed the first such demonstration of quantum supremacy. A computer with 53 qubitsthe basic unit of quantum computationdid a calculation in a little over three minutes that, by Googles reckoning, would have taken the worlds biggest supercomputer 10,000 years, or 1.5 billion times as long. IBM challenged Googles claim, saying the speedup would be a thousandfold at best; even so, it was a milestone, and each additional qubit will make the computer twice as fast.

AI has a problem: in the quest to build more powerful algorithms, researchers are using ever greater amounts of data and computing power and relying on centralized cloud services. This not only generates alarming amounts of carbon emissions but also limits the speed and privacy of AI applications.

But a countertrend of tiny AI is changing that. Tech giants and academic researchers are working on new algorithms to shrink existing deep-learning models without losing their capabilities. Meanwhile, an emerging generation of specialized AI chips promises to pack more computational power into tighter physical spaces, and train and run AI on far less energy.

In 2020, the US government has a big task: collect data on the countrys 330 million residents while keeping their identities private. The data is released in statistical tables that policymakers and academics analyze when writing legislation or conducting research. By law, the Census Bureau must make sure that it cant lead back to any individuals.

But there are tricks to de-anonymize individuals, especially if the census data is combined with other public statistics.

So the Census Bureau injects inaccuracies, or noise, into the data. It might make some people younger and others older, or label some white people as black and vice versa while keeping the totals of each age or ethnic group the same. The more noise you inject, the harder the de-anonymization becomes.

Differential privacy is a mathematical technique that makes this process rigorous by measuring how much privacy increases when noise is added. The method is already used by Apple and Facebook to collect aggregate data without identifying particular users.

Ten days after Tropical Storm Imelda began flooding neighborhoods across the Houston area last September, a rapid-response research team announced that climate change almost certainly played a role.

The group, World Weather Attribution, had compared high-resolution computer simulations of worlds where climate change did and didnt occur. In the former, the world we live in, the severe storm was as much as 2.6 times more likelyand up to 28% more intense.

Earlier this decade, scientists were reluctant to link any specific event to climate change. But many more extreme-weather attribution studies have been done in the last few years, and rapidly improving tools and techniques have made them more reliable and convincing.

This has been made possible by a combination of advances. For one, the lengthening record of detailed satellite data is helping us understand natural systems. Also, increased computing power means scientists can create higher-resolution simulations and conduct many more virtual experiments.

These and other improvements have allowed scientists to state with increasing statistical certainty that yes, global warming is often fueling more dangerous weather events.

By disentangling the role of climate change from other factors, the studies are telling us what kinds of risks we need to prepare for, including how much flooding to expect and how severe heatwaves will get as global warming becomes worse. If we choose to listen, they can help us understand how to rebuild our cities and infrastructure for a climate-changed world.

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Top 10 Strategic Technology Breakthroughs That Will Transform Our Lives - Analytics Insight

Daily Buzz: The Importance of Web Accessibility – Associations Now

What's This? Associations Now Brand Connection provides opportunities for advertisers to connect with the Associations Now audience. All content is paid for by the advertiser. The Associations Now editorial staff is not involved in creating this content.

if youre in the midst of a website refresh, dont forget to put web accessibility on your list of priorities, writes DelCors Tom Jelen. Making your website accessible means designing it in a way that makes it usable for all people, whatever their hardware, software, language, location, or ability.

Not only is accessibility strategically important, but its also the right thing to do, Jelen argues. According to the World Bank, 15 percent of the worlds population, or 1 billion people, have some form of disability, making them more likely to experience adverse socioeconomic outcomes.

Your association can help lessen those adverse outcomes by ensuring that everyone can access your associations digital experience, Jelen says.

Striving for better web accessibility will also improve your contents performance, since good SEO practices go hand in hand with accessibility.

In the same way that persons with disabilities may require alternative text descriptions of images, easy-to-follow headings, and clear link titles, search engine spiders (the computer programs that index the web) need that information, too, Jelen says.

Beyond strategy, web accessibility may even be a legal requirement for your organization.

There is a growing legal consensus that if the Title III requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) apply to your association, you may be required to make your website accessible, Jelen says.

When it comes to advertising your products or services, word-of-mouth is extremely beneficial. According to Nielsens Global Trust in Advertising report from 2015, 83 percent of consumers completely or somewhat trust recommendations from people they know, and 66 percent said the same for reviews posted online.

We are simply more likely to trust someone we knowor even a stranger, so long as they dont work for whoever would benefit from our business, writes Chelsea Brasted of Association Success.

How can organizations take advantage? Generate word-of-mouth buzz with a well-placed member testimonial that showcases the impact of your organization. In the same vein, keep an eye out for positive reviews online. When you see one, help spread the word.

Pick out the real gems, have a conversation with the member who shared it, thank them, and then ask if you can publicize their experience more broadly, Brasted says.

Nonprofits doing advocacy for controversial issues may face online harassment. There are several ways to deal with it, writes Hannah Brennan in Beths Blog.

Have an emergency remote work plan? Work strategist Cali Williams Yost breaks down the steps to put one together in the Harvard Business Review.

Does diversity and inclusion training work? A recent post in the HR People + Strategy Blog explores its benefits and potential shortcomings.

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Daily Buzz: The Importance of Web Accessibility - Associations Now

Madrigal Singers to perform, Tapestry wins national award and more from Fox Chapel Area School District – TribLIVE

Friday, February 28, 2020 | 11:01 PM

Courtesy Fox Chapel Area High School

The Fox Chapel Area High School Madrigal Singers will perform a free concert with the Susquehanna University Choir and Chamber Singers on March 11. The concert will be at 7 p.m. at Faith United Methodist Church and is part of the Susquehanna University Choirs annual spring break tour. Admission is free and the concert is open to all. The church is at 261 West Chapel Ridge Road.

Magazine receives national award

Fox Chapel Area High Schools 2018-2019 literary arts magazine Tapestry received a national award. It was named a first-place winner in the magazine portion of the 2019 American Scholastic Press Associations Annual Contest/Review for Scholastic Yearbooks, Magazines and Newspapers.

The 2018-2019 student editors of Tapestry were 2019 graduates Noah Fritsch, Arnav Gupta, Emma Kazmierczak, Alyssa Melani, Demi Rymer, Seo Yeon Christina Wang and Chloe Yofan (editor-in-chief); current 2019-2020 seniors Claire Cummings, Gwendolyn Davison, Emma Lusk, Navjot Pabla and Olivia Tang; and current 2019-2020 juniors Molly Dean, Nora McDougall and Xavier Perry. The advisor is Fox Chapel Area High School English teacher Jessica Green.

Place in forensic tournament

Eight Fox Chapel Area High School students placed at the annual Michael Quinn Memorial Forensic Tournament.

The Public Forum Debate team of senior Boomba Nishikawa and sophomore Ian Mackey-Piccolo won first place. Another first-place award went to sophomore Alaina Kaslewicz in commentary. In policy debate, the team of senior Rajeev Godse and junior Jackson Romero won second place. The Public Forum Debate team of seniors J. Oliver Choo and Sina Shaikh was awarded third place. In the Lincoln Douglas Debate, sophomore Siddharth Yende won fifth place.

The tournament was Feb. 15 at West Allegheny High School with more than 280 students participating.

Induction planned

Five Fox Chapel Area High School and A.W. Beattie Career Center juniors will be inducted into the National Technical Honor Society (NTHS) this year.

The Fox Chapel Area students are Isaiah Charapp and Ashton Monroe for culinary arts, Matthew Ebel and Kevin Fornaser for automotive technology, and Matthew Sheeler for computer systems technology. The students will be inducted at an invitation-only induction ceremony at A.W. Beattie on April 7.

To be considered, students must maintain a grade-point average of 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale, have a grade of at least 93% in their career training programs, and miss no more than five days of school. Candidates also must have a clear disciplinary record and belong to a service organization or participate in an extracurricular activity.

The NTHS provides scholarships for ongoing education and works to improve the skilled workforce.

We have 800 students and we have 63 on that list to be inducted and they represent the best of their class, Beattie Student Ethics Coordinator and NTHS advisor Scott Scariot said. Im proud of them for how hard they work and how theyve met difficult standards to be nominated by their teachers for induction into the NTHS.

Shakespeare contest winners

Five Dorseyville Middle School students received honorable mentions as part of the 26th Annual Shakespeare Monologue & Scene Contest. Dorseyville Middle School eighth-graders Eric Pil, Liviya Rubin and Abraham White received honorable mentions in the Upper Division Monologue category. Seventh-graders Devon McDonald and Sophie Thorne received an honorable mention in the Lower Division Scene category.

The contest was in February at the Pittsburgh Public Theater with more than 1,000 students competing.

Students place in speech tournament

Several Fox Chapel Area High School students placed in the Pennsylvania High School Speech Leagues District 2 state championship-qualifying tournament.

The Policy Debate team of senior Rajeev Godse and junior Jackson Romero placed second; sophomore Siddharth Yende won second place in Lincoln Douglas Debate; and the team of senior Hanna Chen and junior Hannah Jahnke was awarded third place in duo interpretation.

All five of these students qualified to participate in the state tournament that will be March 13-14 at Bloomsburg University.

Six students will serveas alternates.

They are sophomore Alaina Kaslewicz, who won fifth place in commentary; seniors J. Oliver Choo and Sina Shaikh, who won sixth place in public forum debate; senior Angelique Uku, who placed sixth in prose interpretation; junior Suparna Agrawal, who won sixth place in extemporaneous speaking; and junior Anthony Nguyen, who placed sixth in Lincoln Douglas Debate.

The tournament was Feb. 22 at Pine-Richland High School with about 160 students participating.

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Madrigal Singers to perform, Tapestry wins national award and more from Fox Chapel Area School District - TribLIVE

LinkedIn is testing Snapchat-like stories because thats the world we live in now – The Verge

LinkedIn is a website thats effectively a mixture between an interactive resume and a college job fair, but that hasnt stopped it from aspiring to be a cooler, more social part of the internet. Its latest attempt? Snapchat-style stories, which the company announced it was testing internally to try out a new conversational format for business conversations.

According to Pete Davies, LinkedIns head of content products, the goal is to meet LinkedIn users where their voices are. Stories would offer a lighter, more casual way of interacting in the business-focused world that makes up LinkedIn, instead of the formal messaging and posting that makes up the bulk of interactions on the site. For example, Davies imagines that a company might use stories to share key moments from work events or tips and tricks that help us work smarter.

More cynically, one could view LinkedIn stories as similar to features like the companys video filters from 2018: a sad attempt at chasing the relevancy and popularity of social networking apps in an attempt to grow beyond its dull, corporate identity.

The original stories feature was first introduced by Snapchat all the way back in 2013, before Instagram shamelessly copied the idea and brought it to even higher heights of popularity in 2016. Other apps, including Facebook, WhatsApp, and YouTube, would soon follow, to the point where [thing] will now have stories became its own meme.

Technically, this isnt even LinkedIns first time dabbling in the social media story format: in 2018, it tested a similar feature called Student Voices that let college students post videos to a campus playlist that lived on top of the LinkedIn app.

But where the Student Voices feature was limited both in who could use it (college students) and what they could post (just videos, without the plethora of features that apps like Instagram offer), the new LinkedIn story feature sounds like it would be a much broader service.

Theres no guarantee that LinkedIn will actually launch stories to the broader public: right now, its just being tested internally, with plans for wider public tests in the coming months.

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LinkedIn is testing Snapchat-like stories because thats the world we live in now - The Verge

The Verge Guide to Instagram: how to show off your photos, GIFs, and videos – The Verge

Instagram is a social networking app with a difference: it concentrates primarily on images instead of words. Photos, visual art, and videos are all fair game for those who contribute to or browse Instagrams huge variety of posts. If youre tired of the constant sniping on Twitter and dont want anything to do with Facebook, Instagram (although admittedly owned by Facebook) is a good place to try.

In The Verge Guide to Instagram, we offer advice and tips for both beginners and experts. If youre just starting to experiment with the social network, we tell you how to get started with Instagram and how to find accounts to follow. If youre an experienced Instagrammer who wants to try some interesting and intricate features, we explain how to make face filters and seamless panoramas.

We will continue to add to this guide as we continue to explore Instagram and its possibilities. Enjoy!

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The Verge Guide to Instagram: how to show off your photos, GIFs, and videos - The Verge