laitimes

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

author:Artificial Intelligence Industry Chain Alliance

1. University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

Researchers at the University of Toronto have developed an interactive robot called "Stargazer", which can recognize the instructions given to it by the user and complete the corresponding shooting action through the robot's arm, and its appearance allows some video creators who can't ask the camera team to shoot more dynamic videos with the help of the robot. It is reported that the robot is also connected to ChatGPT-3, the user's instructions are recorded by the wireless line microphone, and sent to the speech recognition software Microsoft Azure Speech-to-Text, the transcribed text will be sent to the GPT-3 program along with custom prompts, so as to understand what kind of action the user wants the camera to perform, such as using high-angle shooting or more compact framing.

2, Xiaomi car changes again: former Magna executive Huang Zhenyu takes over the supply chain

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

According to reports, Xiaomi Auto recently announced a number of high-level job adjustments. Among them, Huang Zhenyu, vice president of the automotive department, is also the general manager of the supply chain department of the automotive department, reporting to Lei Jun, CEO of the automotive department.

Huang Zhenyu, a general Xiaomi hired from the auto parts industry, was a former vice president of Magna China, a global supplier. It is understood that during his time at Magna, Huang Zhenyu participated in the production of the first model of the joint venture between BAIC New Energy and Magna, and has rich experience in supply chain control.

3. MIT's new fluid simulation tool is expected to allow robots to manipulate fluid objects

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

FluidLab, a new simulation tool developed by researchers at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, enhances the robot's ability to learn complex fluid manipulation tasks, such as making latte art, ice cream, and even manipulating air, a virtual environment that models solids, liquids, and gases, and even elastic, plastic, rigid objects, Newtonian and non-Newtonian liquids, and smoke and air. to provide robots with a range of complex fluid handling challenges. At the heart of FluidLab is FluidEngine, an easy-to-use physics simulator that seamlessly calculates and simulates various materials and their interactions, while harnessing the power of graphics processing units (GPUs) to speed up processing, meaning simulators can incorporate physics knowledge into more realistic models of the physical world to learn and plan robotic tasks more effectively.

4. Wi-Fi 7 domestic standards are about to land

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

A few days ago, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology officially issued a public solicitation of opinions on the Notice of the State Radio Office on the Technical Requirements and Test Methods for Approval of New Models of Wireless LAN Devices Using the IEEE 802.11be Technical Standard (Draft for Comments). Wi-Fi 7-related standards are expected to land soon.

In fact, many mobile phones and routers have announced support for Wi-Fi 7 and have used this as a selling point, such as the Xiaomi 13 series, which claims to download 1GB of movies in 2.9 seconds.

Wi-Fi 7 is about to land; University of Toronto "Stargazer" interactive robot

statement

The material of this article comes from the Internet, the artificial intelligence industry chain alliance (union) collated and edited, does not represent the position of the artificial intelligence industry chain alliance (union), please indicate, if it involves the copyright of the work, please contact us to delete or do relevant processing!

Editor: Zero