While many of us were sleeping,Super Virgin (2012) SpaceX launched tons of supplies to the International Space Station for NASA.
Hitching a ride to the station aboard SpaceX's Dragon capsule is the Crew Interactive Mobile Companion, or CIMON -- a new artificial intelligence technology developed by a team of researchers from the European Space Agency, NASA, and IBM.
SEE ALSO: 8 perfect astronaut selfies for when you just need some spaceCIMON has a roughly spherical shape, with a childlike drawing of a face on the screen. It's a little... creepy looking.
The AI bot is designed to float around in the space station until an astronaut calls its name. Then, CIMON will navigate through microgravity in the direction of whoever is talking.
Researchers developed CIMON to assist anyone conducting experiments on station by uploading the procedures and guidance videos that can then be accessed to aid in the experiments.
When an astronaut asks a specific question, CIMON will be able to respond using the entire bank of knowledge stored in the cloud, researcher Christian Karrasch explained during a NASA press conference.
The whole point in these kinds of tools is to help make tasks easier for astronauts in space. Time in space is a precious commodity, so being able to have a tool, like CIMON, help you through basic tasks in a more efficient way could be incredibly useful, particularly on long-duration missions.
The module itself will be the first AI interface of its kind to operate in space when it reaches the space station on July 2.
And even though CIMON is designed to work with anyone, it has been trained to work best with German astronaut Alexander Gerst. He helped pick the language, accent, and face for the AI tool.
And if you’re already thinking about all of the ways this could go wrong -- we're thinking of you, Hal 3,000 -- Gerst was one step ahead of you.
According to researchers, the astronaut was particularly adamant about making sure CIMON had an off-switch -- this will ensure that CIMON is not recording every conversation on the space station.
Researchers also made sure to include two different operating modes for CIMON. One that only listens when addressed (e.g., “Hey CIMON”). The other passively records at all times, a function that could be particularly useful for time-intensive experiments.
Once at the orbiting laboratory, CIMON will coexist with astronauts for at least the next several months.
The tool is one of 50 experiments sent up to the station aboard the Dragon. Some of the other experiments focus on cancer cell research and crystalline structures.
Students' catchy long division song will be stuck in your head all dayThis line of lipsticks comes in tiny wineInfuriating video will make you hate Comcast even moreThe 'Westworld' cast didn't know WTF was going on eitherHow fans pay the price for the NBA's grueling scheduleInfuriating video will make you hate Comcast even moreThe polar vortex is here, but it's competing with global warming'Apocalypse' singer to perform national anthem at Trump inaugurationInfuriating video will make you hate Comcast even moreIndia was gripped by fictional girl, as its search trends for 2016 revealAmazon Prime Video arrives in Australia, but is it even worth it?5 ways to keep your holiday shopping secretMedium's year in review shows a tech industry hooked on 2016 politicsSilicon Valley heavyweights will be advising Donald TrumpWoman expertly trolls people who won't stop asking when she's having kidsInside the White House's firstSilicon Valley heavyweights will be advising Donald Trump'The Daily Show' tears into the media's coverage of Kanye and Trump'Superstore' Training Videos: Watch new digital episodes from NBCWoman expertly trolls people who won't stop asking when she's having kids Microsoft outage affects Bing, Copilot, DuckDuckGo, and ChatGPT US considers blacklisting CXMT to curb China’s chip progress · TechNode Diamond League Athletics Eugene 2024 livestream: Watch live athletics for free 'Doctor Who' and Ruby Sunday: Everything we know ByteDance dives into multi Man City vs. Man United 2024 livestream: Watch FA Cup Final for free China’s Fudan University launches AI app for visually impaired individuals · TechNode Does 'Furiosa' have an end China EV price war continues as BYD launches more cheaper cars · TechNode Spotify discontinues their weird Car Thing device Chinese couriers complain over new door Sony headphone deal: Get the ULT Wear headphones $21.99 off Amazon deals of the day: Polaroid Hi Can you trust Google AI search results? The internet is unconvinced. Why wind turbines thrive in Antarctica and colder places than Texas Bilibili expects to achieve operating profit in Q3 as more creators engage in live Li Auto shares plunge on bleak order forecast for first BEV · TechNode Chinese GenAI venture raises $14 million, claims itself akin to Sora · TechNode Peking University partners with local AI firm to “reproduce” Sora amid GenAI frenzy · TechNode Sony China refutes recent reports of smartphone withdrawal in China · TechNode
0.9642s , 10136.8515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Super Virgin (2012)】,Defense Information Network