Can a sex robot ever replace an actual human interaction?
Tech News
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While an extraordinary array of people could, without a valid reason, casually observe how often and how long their brothers-in-law spent on Spankbang, they wouldn’t be able to tell which particular lesbian dwarf facesitting video they had been watching, without a reasonable degree of certainty that a crime was being committed.
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Technology is allowing borders to become almost invisible, and more secure, without the need for additional walls or fences. But just because you can’t see them, doesn’t mean that they can’t see you.
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For those who’ve been living living under a rock lately, Elon Musk finally got around to giving us the Neuralink update he promised us on the Joe Rogan podcast last year. Now that we’ve all had time to digest it, what it has to say is a little terrifying.
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The eRosary’s beads are flawless, black agate and hematite, resembling nothing quite so much as a USB stick and symbolizing, “the ever enduring human faith.” It also has a step counter…
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While the promotional content mentions boring but practical applications like remote construction and oil rig inspections, we can only imagine what uses the hacker community is going to come up with for a dog-sized, semi-autonomous robot.
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Fancy flying to work in a taxi? Or stumbling into a cab after a heavy night out, only to find yourself nauseous, and in suspended several hundred feet above the ground? If you answered yes (and of course you did), you’re in luck, as it appears that the first flying cars are hovering into view, en route from the world of tomorrow.
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While the autonomous vehicle industry is booming, companies are experiencing growing pains. Car companies are looking to bypass operational errors and safety concerns to bring their vehicles to roadways across the world.
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“If reality was a video game, the graphics are great, the plot is terrible and the spawn time is really long,” Musk said at the E3 Computer and Video Game convention in June 2019.
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The world’s first 3D-printed neighborhood is set to begin construction within months. The concept is being brought to life via a collaboration between ICON, an Austin-based construction tech startup, New Story, a San Francisco-based housing nonprofit, and Fuseproject, a San Francisco-based design firm.