Jun Li
š¤ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And you wouldn't need any terrestrial anything but the dish.
So the new TV or the new internet could just be AI data centers in space.
Okay.
So, I mean, I hope everyone enjoyed the news.
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Okay, so I'm gonna move on to the official AI and science, science, science story and discussion point.
And that is AI-assisted iterative experiment learning cycles find brighter materials.
And this could be faster water alerts and cleaner scans.
So...
Scientists have used AI-guided lab workflows to find brighter glow materials, fluorescents, with fewer trial and error steps.
These materials are called covalent organic frameworks or COS.
Think of them as tiny sponges that can light up or grab specific molecules.
So why should you care?
This kind of faster, smarter lab work can turn into cheaper water tests, clearer medical scans, longer lasting phone and home sensors, and lower energy bills from more efficient lighting.
So the question for us isn't the algorithm.
It's which everyday wind shows up first, how soon, and how we'll know it's real.
So what's interesting about this paper that was released on Archive, but also in Nature, which is a journal, and PubMed, which is an NIH site as well.
And so...
What they've essentially done is they've used their AI models to go through this iterative testing.