Monthly Archives: March 2017

Exxon Mobil announces new oil discovery offshore Guyana – WorldOil (subscription)

Posted: March 31, 2017 at 7:33 am

Exxon Mobil affiliate Esso Exploration and Production Guyana Ltd. commenced drilling of the Snoek well on Feb. 22, 2017 and encountered 82 ft of high-quality, oil-bearing sandstone reservoirs. The well was safely drilled to 16,978 ft in 5,128 ft of water on March 18. The Snoek well is located in the southern portion of the Stabroek Block, approximately 5 mi to the southeast of the 2015 Liza-1 discovery.

Stena Carron drillship

Following completion of the Snoek well, the Stena Carron drillship has moved back to the Liza area to drill the Liza-4 well.

As we continue to evaluate the full potential of the broader Stabroek Block, we are also taking the necessary steps to ensure the safe, cost-efficient and responsible development of this world-class resource, which can provide long-term, sustainable benefits to the people of Guyana, said Steve Greenlee, president of Exxon Mobil Exploration Company.

The Stabroek Block is 6.6 million acres. Esso Exploration and Production Guyana Limited is operator and holds 45% interest in the Stabroek Block. Hess Guyana Exploration Ltd. holds 30% interest and CNOOC Nexen Petroleum Guyana Limited holds 25% interest.

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Insurer Citizens posts first loss since 2005 after $181M goes offshore – Palm Beach Post

Posted: at 7:33 am

State-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp. posted its first loss since 2005, $27.1 million, board members heard this week after more than six times that amount landed in the pockets of offshore firms for optional back-up coverage that covered no claims in a hurricane year.

It was little discussed at the meeting but available in financial records: The company shipped $181 million of its customers dollars offshore for private reinsurance, coverage that Citizens did not buy for most of its existence.

Without that spending, the company would have been comfortably in the black and could have added more money to its surplus.

A Citizens statement said, The loss comes despite minimal damage from Hurricane Matthew, the first major hurricane to impact Florida in 11 years.

Citizens officials preferred to focus instead on non-catastrophe claims they say are inflated by assignment of insurance benefits to a third party such as a roofer, or a contractor cleaning up water damage from a broken pipe. They seek state legislative action to curb what they call unsustainable abuses, especially when attorneys get involved.

The tragedy here is that the ultimate loser is the policyholder, board chairman Chris Gardner said. Higher insurance costs simply make it more difficult for more Floridians to own a home.

Citizens, which is backed by a surplus of more than $7 billion to help pay claims and a state catastrophe fund, spent nothing on private reinsurance as recently as five years ago. The $181 million went for back-up coverage to help avoid assessments to state insurance customers even after once-a-century megastorm, far worse than Hurricane Andrew. The chance of such a storm in any given year: 1 percent.

The surplus is like a savings account, a pot of money that can grow year to year in Florida to help cover claims without having to pay foreign companies. Citizens has a much bigger surplus than any private Florida-based insurer.

Private reinsurance, in contrast, involves yearly spending for coverage that lasts for short spans, such as 12 months. If coverage is not triggered by massive losses from rare storms, private reinsurers keep the money and negotiate a new bill for the next year.

Offshore reinsurance is common in the industry and helps make it possible for small private companies to offer coverage even if they have far less surplus or capital available in Florida than Citizens does. The question is whether it makes sense for Citizens, particularly when it contributes to an annual loss.

Much of the financial pinch at Citizens is related to its downsizing from 1.5 million customers several years ago to about 450,000 now, mostly through transfers to private insurers. Company president Barry Gilway has previously acknowledged we were not ready for a sudden drop in risk exposure with respect to the money it was sending offshore for reinsurance. Suddenly far fewer customers were paying premiums, but Citizens was still paying big dollars for offshore coverage.

A Citizens spokesman said private reinsurance was designed to help protect the surplus itself, by spreading some of the risk in the event of catastrophic storms. The companys offshore spending has been falling and is expected to drop to about $70 million this year, the spokesman said.

Many factors contributed to the annual loss. As Citizens has shrunk, a significant proportion of remaining customers are paying rates lower than private insurers want to charge them because state law caps Citizens rate increases at 10 percent a year.

That may help explain why as few as one of four Citizens customers are taking offers to switch to private insurers in 2017, reports prepared before the board meeting Wednesday show.

Thats about half the 48 percent who accepted offers in 2016, a further tumble from higher acceptance rates in past years.

Take the 41,628 mail offers from private insurers made to individual Citizens customers in February. Though consumers are automatically transferred unless they actively refuse the offers, only 11,017, or 26 percent, actually left.

Citizens collected $974 million in premiums in 2016 and reported claim losses of $346 million and expenses related to those claims of $167 million.

Without significant change in state law regarding assignment of benefits, Citizens will be forced to pass higher costs on to its customers, Gardner said. Several bills await action to get out committees about a third of the way through a two-month session.

Every year, we rely on standardized, accepted actuarial principles to set our rates, Gardner said Last year, the same principles that provided rate decreases to our customers in recent years translated into hikes for 84 percent of our policyholders. Without legislative changes, that trend will continue.

Citizens could avoid court costs by paying claims promptly, said Chip Merlin, president of Merlin Law Group with offices including Tampa and West Palm Beach.

Citizens management has its claims department take a tougher line to keep claims payments down so it can break even, Merlin said. Litigation goes up when claims are not paid.

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ITF arrests GOL Offshore vessel over unpaid wages – Splash 247

Posted: at 7:33 am

March 31st, 2017 Jason Jiang Asia, Offshore 0 comments

The International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) has arrested offshore supply vessel Malaviya Seven in Aberdeen on behalf of the ships crew in order to recover unpaid salaries.

The vessel, which is owned by Indian owner GOL Offshore, has been detained in Aberdeen since October 2016 after the crew members claimed they had been owed salaries for several months.

Malaviya Sevens sister vessel Malaviya Twenty was also detained in UK by ITF in June 2016 over a crew salary dispute. The 12 crew from that vessel recovered their salary in February under legal assistance from ITF.

To say that workers are owed $666,938.03 is in itself a scandal. The owners and the Indian flag state should hang their head in shame. Equally all those that could have brought the situation to an end months ago should reflect on their inactivity, said ITF UK and Ireland coordinator Ken Fleming.

My organisation the ITF will now deal aggressively with the situation. Should the company or the bank not come in on record by early next week we will apply to the courts to dispose of the vessel by way of a sale to recover the crew wages. The situation will not be allowed to drag unnecessarily, Fleming added.

According to ITF, the legal process is underway and could take 12 to 16 weeks. The vessel could ultimately be sold off if the claims are not settled.

Jason Jiang

Jason worked for a number of logistics firms following his English degree, then switched this hands-on experience to writing and has since become one the most prolific writers on the diverse China logistics industry writing for a host of titles including Supply Chain Asia, Cargo Facts and Air Cargo Week. Jasons access to the biggest shippers with business in China has proved an invaluable source of exclusives.

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SEAS: The Art Of Sound Perfection

Posted: at 7:31 am

During ISE 2017, NEC announced their NEC Infinity Board Video Conferencing, where SEAS delivers the sound. The Infinity Board is an all-in-one communication system with a high-end screen, camera and loudspeakers, perfect for conference calls, online classes etc.

NEC approached us and wanted to know if we would take on the challenge. Of course we did, and we are now the proud supplier of sound solution for the system. We have contributed with a High End full range 4-inch SEAS loudspeaker driver with ultra-low distortion. The driver is mounted in a solid MDF cabinet, and the resulting sound is clear and stable. This enables excellent speech intelligibility with no distractions.

The speakers are thoughtfully designed to give any listener in the room the equal high end sound experience.

Daniela Dexheimer, Product Manager Solutions at NEC Display Solutions Europe says: "We are very pleased with the successful launch of the NEC InfinityBoard which took place at ISE 2017 in Amsterdam. So far, the interest for the solution has been overwhelming and we believe that this new all-in-one communication platform is bound to meet the needs of customers out in the market place. Bringing together strong eco-partners to collaborate and create a new innovative solution like InfinityBoard is very encouraging. High quality components are key for such a sophisticated solution aimed to enhance the overall meeting experience. The high-end loudspeakers from SEAS was an easy choice since SEAS is constantly working to meet with the highest standards. The InfinityBoard is a best-in-class display solution designed for the modern meeting room and the new collaborative working and communication styles.

For more information on the NEC Infinity Board Conferencing system, visit NECs website here.

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Private island in the Philippines or a one-bed flat in Oxford? They cost the same… – The Oxford Times

Posted: at 7:30 am

Samung Island in the Philippines could be yours for 250,000. Picture: Private Islands Online

IMAGINE listening to the sound of waves crashing,with the sun beating down on your face as you lie back in the golden sand.

It may sound all like an idyllic holiday but it could also be your new home.

For the same price as a one-bedroom flat in East Oxford you could get a private island in the Philippines.

For 250,000 you could trade in your flat on Cowley Road for the Samung Island, which is less than 125 miles east of Manilla.

Samung Island in thePhilippines. Picture: Private Islands Online

The island has white sand beaches, green hills with coconut trees and is98.84 acres.

Flats above shops along the Cowley Road. Picture: Google Maps

The island lies in the path of the northwest trade winds ensuring a mild ocean climate. The monsoon season takes place from September to January.

If you want to trade in The Bullingdon and and The Cowley Retreat for crystal clear waters and palm trees, Private Islands Online is the gateway to your new home.

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The Road To Healing: Healthy Schools Create Healthy Communities – Northdallasgazette

Posted: at 7:28 am

Growing up as an immigrant in Hells Kitchen, on the West Side of New York City, the odds of Jaime Casap making it out of his hometown alive, much less being successful in life, were long.

Born in Argentina to a single mother, he wasnt exactly living the American Dream between the days spent on welfare and those in which he was either witnessing violence on the streets or attending the funeral of a friend. Casap, like millions of children trapped in communities of poverty and crime, needed a vehicle to get to a better life. He found the keys to that ride in education.

Casaps story is one of many stories of hope in the book Humanizing the Education Machine, co-authored by Bill Latham, CEO of MeTEOR Education (https://meteoreducation.com). Among other key themes, the book explores beating odds often created by a childs ZIP code in the American education system. Not only did Casap escape Hells Kitchen, he has gone on to become Googles Global Education Evangelist, where he has been a consummate advocate for leveling the playing field in communities through an education that leverages digital technologies.

It is no small task to set someone on a different path that comes from this kind of background. It takes a spirit of connection between students, faculty and teachers, and a shift in attitude to help other students overcome their ZIP codes. However, as changes begin in the schools, the entire community benefits from the transformation.

Gone are the days that schools are simply a place to go and receive content that prepares a student for life.

If school officials want to be relevant in a world that has rapidly moved from Gutenberg to Google, they will have to ask themselves what their value proposition will be in a content abundant world, Latham notes. They are going to have to transform their practices If they are going to continue to receive future permission from parents to educate their children.

Some of the keys to laddering up schools into thriving community schools are presented through the research and journey of the K-12 Mindshift team that produced the Humanize book. A few of the major themes the book explores are:

Setting cultures and strategies that align with the particular needs of learning communities. More than 15 million children in the United States are living below the poverty line, often told they dont have a chance. Latham points to the tremendous mindshare these students devote to basic needs, safety and security. Strategies that focus on their social and emotional literacy as well as resilience help such children persevere and emerge from such conditions with a brighter future. Working to re-engage social capital with teachers, parents and the community at large. The resources needed for transformative learning experiences for students are often found sitting on the sidelines in communities because of falling trust in the effectiveness of the schools current strategies. Schools must become intentional about engaging their community and giving them clear insight into how they are going to ensure students are succeeding. Understanding the direct connection between engaging learning experiences and the student having a hopeful view of the future. Because of the environment that they live in, many kids show up to school each day without a chance of learning a thing. Because they are homeless, their parents sell drugs or they are constantly faced with violence, their brains are on survival mode fight or flight. They are always on alert, thus the brain has shut down all non-essential functions like learning.

Teachers learn that kids bring their pain to class, Latham says. They also realize that nothing in their training prepares them for the pain. By understanding and embracing the relational role of the teachers, we will create a safe environment for their students, and begin to lay the foundation for a more resilient, hopeful learner as they emerge into their future.

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New director discusses CISR’s role in community | COMMENTARY – Renton Reporter

Posted: at 7:28 am

All students can learn and achieve at high levels if they are given the opportunity and the support they need. This belief is the foundation to the mission of Communities in Schools of Renton (CISR), which I am so honored to be a part of. As the new Executive Director, I know I am part of something really special in the Renton community where I have lived for the past 18 years a very generous community dedicated to supporting our youth.

I have a passion for equity and am committed to working toward fairness and opportunities for all. I look forward to utilizing my 12 years of non-profit leadership experience serving youth and families along with my Masters in Education with an emphasis in Transformational Leadership to help build the next generation of CISR.

Id like to share a little about what we do at CISR. We are part of the nations leading dropout prevention organization. We work in 8 Renton School District elementary schools, the 3 middle schools and Renton High School coordinating a comprehensive range of services to address the academic and non-academic needs of at-risk, economically disadvantaged students so they come to school ready to learn. Many of the students we serve are facing significant challenges both inside and outside of the classroom as 90% of them live in poverty.

This past month with my new team, Ive been thinking a lot about what can be and how we can deliver even more powerful results for our youth. At our Annual Benefit Dinner a couple weeks ago, I shared that through a collaborative development, we will build a bridge from the present to the future.

There are 3 interrelated areas which will guide our efforts.

The first being community engagement. We will increase the level of community awareness, involvement and advocacy to strengthen the collective impact within our community.

The second is resource development, which will be an intentional plan focused on increasing our awareness of opportunities and taking steps to engage and cultivate individuals and businesses who share our passion for this work.

Finally, we will ensure operational and strategic alignment in order to best support the changing student population and the community needs by being nimble and flexible to our service delivery model. Focusing on these 3 areas, will result in impact expansion. By formulating strategies to put this vision into action and by acting together in new and powerful ways we can have more of a collective impact for our students.

If youd like to learn more or just to chat, Id love to hear from you: jgreene@rentonwa.gov or 425.430.6656.

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Recycled Rockets Could Drop Costs, Speed Space Travel – New York Times

Posted: at 7:28 am


New York Times
Recycled Rockets Could Drop Costs, Speed Space Travel
New York Times
SpaceX launched a pre-flown rocket into space on Thursday. If the company can repeat it, this method could slash the price of space travel in the future. By NEETI UPADHYE and SUSAN JOAN ARCHER on Publish Date March 30, 2017. Photo by SpaceX.
Budget space travel could be in the starsDeutsche Welle
SpaceX Falcon-9 successfully launches & lands, could mark 'low-cost' era of space travelRT
SpaceX is About to Try Something "Potentially Revolutionary" in the History of Space TravelScienceAlert
Futurism -Daily Sabah -Stck Nws US
all 425 news articles »

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Lamar Smith on space travel, ‘good science’ and the Trumps – E&E News

Posted: at 7:28 am

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Hannah Northey, E&E News reporter

House Science, Space and Technology Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas) led a hearing on climate science yesterday. Photo courtesy of the Science, Space and Technology Committee.

Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas) says the federal government should be researching climate change.

But try pinning the chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee down on exactly what the government's role ought to be.

During a recent interview in his corner office in the Rayburn House Office Building, Smith blasted U.S. EPA's climate research as politically tainted and voiced support for President Trump's proposed budget cuts at agencies like NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that gather data on emissions, temperatures and clouds using satellites.

When pressed for what kind of work that left the federal government, the soft-spoken Texan said he supports research and development but only when it's not in direct competition with the private sector or tied to costly and ineffective regulations like EPA's Clean Power Plan.

"But we need to gather information, we need to gather data on climate change, absolutely," Smith said. "Do we need the satellites? Absolutely."

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As chairman of the House Science Committee, Smith, 69, has grown more vocal and aggressive as the world of politics and science collide under a Trump administration. At a hearing yesterday, Smith challenged the credibility of Science, the prestigious publication by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and traded barbs with ranking member Eddie Bernice Johnson, a Democrat who is also from Texas (Greenwire, March 29).

Smith, who is in his 16th term representing the San Antonio and Austin areas, recently chatted with E&E News about space travel, the Trump family, the role his committee will play as the president scraps Obama-era climate regulations and those controversial stories his committee is retweeting.

The House Science Committee recently retweeted a controversial Breitbart story denouncing a "global warming scare." Do you tweet?

I approve tweets.

You were recently at the White House for a bill signing. Did you chat with President Trump about science and technology?

No. I will say, the president wasn't the only one in the room I was eager to speak to ... last-minute entries for the bill signing were Melania Trump and Ivanka Trump, so he was sharing the limelight.

Should the federal government be studying climate change?

Absolutely ... in fact, I'd like us to increase our R&D [research and development] budgets in a lot of areas. That would be a part of the mix because I just think that if you're concerned about climate change, the best way to address it is through those technological innovations. There's a role for the federal government and a role for the private sector, and you want it to be collaborative, not competitive.

How and where should federal climate research take place?

In some R&D, again not when they're competing in the private sector. And then also, even when they're not competing with the private sector, I still think the government wastes too much money again trying to promulgate regulations that are inefficient and ineffective. But we need to gather information, we need to gather data on climate change, absolutely. Do we need the satellites? Absolutely.

But what about President Trump's proposed budget cuts?

A lot of those cuts are going to be reprioritizing some of the agency goals ... and let's stop throwing billions of dollars at regulations that are not going to be effective, that are not going to accomplish much.

What's on tap for the House Science Committee this year?

In the case of science, we want to make sure we're relying upon good science, honest science, not politically correct science to implement policies. ... [W]e're going, I think, to help agencies who in the past have been prone to using secret science ... be more open with us, their representatives."

In a couple years from now, we'll see the advent of space tourism. All it does is cost $250,000 and you can buy a ticket to ride up to 62 miles, lower Earth orbit. I actually want to do that I shouldn't be making fun of this get a certificate for being a junior astronaut. I'm going to start dropping hints pretty soon about needing a government CODEL [congressional delegation] going into lower Earth orbit so I and one Democrat on the committee can be two of the volunteer passengers without having to pay our half-million dollars jointly.

What role will the committee play as the White House scraps President Obama's climate legacy?

I think generally we expect to be supportive of [Trump's] initiatives and his view of science, and he's talked about R&D, as well. So I think generally we'll be supportive, but we're still going to conduct oversight regardless of who the administration is.

What about subpoenas?

I don't expect to need to issue near as many subpoenas with this administration as I did with the last. I think it was 25 with the last Congress.

What if they don't comply?

We have three choices if they don't, the same three choices that would apply to the object of any subpoena. We can invoke to hold them in contempt, we can file a lawsuit, and we can refer the next step to the AG [attorney general] for prosecution. I see one of those three happening, yes, and we're still thinking about which is the best way to proceed.

Are you trying to eliminate climate research?

I think we need the right kind of research.

How should we address climate change?

I think technology is the answer. That's what R&D is for, we don't know what the answer's going to be. Fifteen years ago, we hadn't heard of fracking.

Were you aware a nonprofit group, 314 Action, had targeted you as "anti-science"?

Targeting me? Oh, who knows, I hadn't heard.

What's your response to the March for Science planned for April 22?

They're exercising their First Amendment rights, they're exercising their right to free expression. I'm sure they will do it in the right way. But they could be so much more constructive if they would get behind the idea of technology leading the way to address climate change, rather than more regulations.

Reporters Christa Marshall and Hannah Hess contributed. This interview has been edited and condensed.

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Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas) says the federal government should be researching climate change. But try pinning the chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee down on exactly what the government's role ought to be.

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The Singularity Could Be Closer Than You Think – Inverse

Posted: at 7:27 am

Sci-fi depictions of the future would have us thinking of the singularity when A.I surpasses human intelligence as either a technological messiah or the apocalypse. Experts in the field hold varying opinions about just how good or bad, gradual or sudden it will be, but most agree that it will happen in the next hundred years and probably sooner.

Futurists like Ray Kurzweil, a computer scientist and Google director of engineering, are proponents of a hard singularity, the kind that will happen at particular date in time. Kurzweil has made 147 predictions since the Nineties about when the singularity will occur, his most recent being 2045. Hed previously predicted that artificial intelligence would achieve human levels of intelligence by 2029. Now hes set 2045 as the year when the singularity will happen, at which time he says we will multiply our effective intelligence a billionfold by merging with the intelligence we have created.

Kurzweil upholds a positive take on the singularity, championing the event as a way to overcome age-old human problems and magnify human intelligence, as he details in his 2005 book The Singularity is Near. [The singularity] will result from the merger of the vast knowledge embedded in our own brains with the vastly greater capacity, speed, and knowledge-sharing ability of our technology, he writes. The fifth epoch [when the singularity happens] will enable our human-machine civilization to transcend the human brains limitations of a mere hundred trillion extremely show connections.

Meanwhile, Masayoshi Son, CEO of Softbank Robotics, argues that the singularity will happen by 2047, when the 10,000 point IQ of a single computer chip far surpasses an IQ belonging to even the worlds most intelligent human beings.

For some people, the singularity is the moment in which we have an artificial super intelligence which has all the capabilities of the human mind, and is slightly better than the human mind, says Damien Scott, a graduate student at Stanford University in the schools of business and energy and earth sciences. But I think that is a big ask. That argument predicts that not only will the singularity software or other platform be smarter than people, but that it also will have the ability to improve itself, he explains. When you get into territory when the system is smarter than the smartest human, and you cant comprehend what it will do or what its objective is.

Thats the more classical version of the singularity, Scott says, the hard take on a particular moment that may never actually occur all at once. But then, theres another, softer take on the singularity, which seems to be more widely accepted.

Well start to see narrow artificial intelligence domains that keep getting better than the best human, Scott says. We already have calculators that can outperform any person, and within two to three years, the worlds best radiologist will be computer systems, he says. Rather than an all encompassing generalized intelligence thats better than humans at every single thing, Scott says the singularity will occur and is occurring piecemeal, across various fields of artificial intelligence.

Will it be self-aware or self-improving? Not necessarily, he says. But that might be the kind of creep of the singularity across a whole bunch of different domains: All these things getting better and better, as an overall a set of services that collectively surpass our collective human capabilities.

The gradual singularity is the kind Scott and others interviewed for this article predict happening, rather than a momentous event on a random afternoon 28 years from now.

The singularity is already happening, according to Aaron Frank, principal faculty at Singularity University, a technology learning center. Its a way of describing this rapid pace of change that the world is now experiencing, he says. The term singularity that I subscribe to is a term borrowed from physics to describe an environment in which no longer really understand much of whats happening around us. For example, the event horizon of a black hole is referred to as a singularity because the laws of physics dont apply there.

Youll see signatures of the singularity whenever youre surprised by certain technological events, Frank says. From image recognition to artificial chess or poker players outperforming humans, its not always quite clear why technology has come to function better than those who created it, even though people mostly know what to expect from it. But if you look inside these algorithms, theyre already far more complex than any one human can truly understand, he says. We used to think technology gave us total control and knowledge on whats happening, but now we no longer understand whats happening.

Its an exchange, Frank says: At the expense of total understanding, people are freed up to manage other tasks while AI takes care of the rest. If we can turn over the diagnosing of cancer to a machine learning algorithm, that frees up doctors to do other things like providing care to a patient, he says.

Echoing Franks perspective on the singularity, Ed Hesse, CEO at GridSingularity, a blockchain technology and smart contract developer, points to intelligence like Ethereum, a decentralized platform, run on a custom-made blockchain for smart contracts. Its a starting point, he says, another present day manifestation of the singularity. Once you have decentralized programs to facilitate all types of transactions and eradicate the middle man, the next level is AI and machine learning. Everything becomes one.

A platform like Ethereum can be used to find all kinds of patterns for specific purposes that people wouldnt have been able to see before, or on their own, Hesse explains. Open, yet secure, Ethereum elucidates generalized information that otherwise wouldnt have been made available.

At the moment, [because] AI is very domain specific, its not generally smart in any way, but can learn to do something particularly well, says Dr. Mark Sagar, CEO and founder of Soul Machines, an artificial intelligence company that creates emotionally responsive avatars. The way it holistically comes together into something that can actually control itself and be autonomous takes many different components. It makes sense that could happen by 2048.

So in the event of the singularity, be it sudden or gradual, will the hallmarks of human intelligence be preserved, in spite of AI thats smarter than us?A platform like Ethereum can be used to find all kinds of patterns for specific purposes that people wouldnt have been able to see before, or on their own, Hesse explains. Open, yet secure, Ethereum elucidates generalized information that otherwise wouldnt have been made available.

A lot of philosophers describe the essence of humanity as being able to feel emotions, says Scott. Theres a difference between experiencing emotions and understanding emotions. A machine might be able to understand emotions, based on indicators like facial recognition or language, but its inability to feel cognizant empathy would separate purely artificial intelligence from that which is human, he says.

There is a lot that we dont know about how the brain works, for example, so theres a lot that still has to be discovered and determined as keys to realizing the proper AI, says Sagar. He foresees the development of a digital biology, or a hybrid of biological and digital systems. Take Google for example. Its got better knowledge than any person on the planet general knowledge but no practical knowledge about dealing with the situation in front of you that would emerge.

Hence, humanizing AI is one of the key components to a true singularity, Sagar suggests. Having computers that are capable of embodied cognition and social learning will be very important to the socialization of machines, he says. Think about things like cooperation being the greatest force in human history. For us to cooperate with machines is one level, then for machines to cooperate with machines is another. It may well be that humans are always in there.

For machines to constructively cooperate with humans and other machines, humans would have to engineer an element of creativity into AI, Sagar says. And its possible, he adds: Where we start seeing machines create new ideas, the machines will be inventing new things.

One of the biggest obstacles here will remain human suspicion about smart computers, drawn from decades of dystopian fantasies. Yet Sagar says were already seeing breakthroughs in places like Japan, where home robots are part of peoples quotidien routine. Those machines are often anthropomorphized and socially integrated, with transparent capabilities and intentions that people accept gladly. Thats a hint of what the singularity can bring, he says: I think it will be an unprecedented time of cooperation and creativity.

Photos via Getty Images / Handout, Getty Images / Tomohiro Ohsumi, "I, Robot" from 20th Century Fox

Madison is a New York/Los Angeles-based journalist, with a specialty covering science, religion, cannabis, and other drugs.

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