Her name is Kavya Kopparapu and she’s a 16-year-old high school junior. She just might be a South Asian-American Bill Gates in the making.
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Channel your inner #WonderWoman and discover your coding powers! https://goo.gl/n0TMGq
Latest Nat & Friends showcases a selection of web based experiments exploring sound and music (plus a couple of Google assistant easter eggs):
Music is a fun way to explore technologies like coding, VR, and machine learning. Here are a few musical demos and experiments that you can play with – created by musicians, coders, and some friends at Google.
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Back in the day, movies started with a cartoon. Learn the secrets of the Red Planet in these animated 60 second chunks.
Watch two galaxies collide billions of years from now in this high-definition visualization.
Wait for the dark of the waning Moon next weekend to take in this 4K tour of our constant celestial companion.
Watch graceful dances in the Sun’s atmosphere in this series of videos created by our 24/7 Sun-sentinel, the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO).
Crank up the volume and learn about NASA science for this short video about some of our science missions, featuring a track by Fall Out Boy.
Follow an asteroid from its humble origins to its upcoming encounter with our spacecraft in this stunning visualization.
Join Apollo mission pilots as they fly—and even crash—during daring practice runs for landing on the Moon.
Join the crew of Apollo 8 as they become the first human beings to see the Earth rise over the surface of the Moon.
Watch a musical, whimsical recreation of the 2005 Huygens probe descent to Titan, Saturn’s giant moon.
Our Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio provides a steady stream of fresh videos for your summer viewing pleasure. Come back often and enjoy.
Read the full version of this article on the web HERE.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
Strange Beast, una especie de mini capítulo de “Black Mirror” sobre el futuro inmediato y el tema de mezclar realidad con realidad virtual/aumentada.
Se pueden activar subtítulos.
Following the announcement of ARCore, Google Creative Lab have released a site featuring various projects using the framework ranging from drawing in mid-air, portals, and strange characters popping up:
AR Experiments is a site that features work by coders who are experimenting with augmented reality in exciting ways. These experiments use various tools like ARCore, an SDK that lets Android developers create awesome AR experiences. We’re featuring some of our favorite projects here to help inspire more coders to imagine what could be made with AR.
At the moment, these projects are compatible with Android Nougat devices such as the Pixel and Samsung S8 but rollout for other devices is happening.
You can explore the set of experiments here
A teenager managed to develop an app that can help diagnose a diabetes-related condition affecting her grandfather.
Kavya Kopparapu’s grandfather lives in India, where there aren’t enough ophthalmologists to help diagnose all of those who could be affected by diabetic retinopathy.
DR is the world’s leading cause of vision loss in people age 20 to 65, according to the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, which estimated that 50% of people with diabetes are undiagnosed.
But in the absence of proper doctors, “computers could be used in their place,” Kopparapu, 16, said in a TEDx talk on artificial intelligence.
Alongside her brother and another classmate, she invented Eyeagnosis, a smartphone app that can photograph patients’ eyes and match them to a database of 34,000 retinal scans collected from the National Institute of Health. Read more (8/8/17)
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Installation from Shawn Hunt and Microsoft Vancouver combines 3D Printing, robotics, Hololens Mixed Reality and indigenous symbolism:
The Raven, the ultimate trickster, has become a cyborg. In this Creative Collab, Shawn Hunt moves away from engaging with the handmade; exploring authenticity and our expectations of what it means to be indigenous through the removal of the hand-carved surface. The work Transformation Mask, features Microsoft HoloLens, creating an experiential sculpture piece that engages with mixed reality.
In this work, the mask appropriates the traditional aspects of metamorphosis with the transformation from bird mask to human, yet in this adaptation the human mask has been altered, upgraded, and merged with the machine. Incorporating aspects of technology, sound and space, each part of the work reflects Hunt’s interest in how we understand and identify with the term indigenous.
This work presents a new trajectory for engagement and exploration of First Nations practice; one that points towards technology and innovation as aspects that expand traditional practices and open new avenues for interpretation.
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