This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through January 13)

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This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through January 13)


OpenAI’s New App Store Could Turn ChatGPT Into an Everything App
Lauren Goode | Wired
“OpenAI calls these apps GPTs. By some measures they are already popular: OpenAI claims that more than 3 million users have created custom versions of ChatGPT since it became possible in November. They are likely to multiply even faster now that pretty much anyone can create and publish a GPT on the web, after verifying their profile by making their name visible or linking it to a legitimate website.”

US SEC Approves Bitcoin ETFs in Watershed for Crypto Market
Hannah Lang and Suzanne McGee | Reuters
“A decade in the making, the ETFs are a game-changer for bitcoin, offering investors exposure to the world’s largest cryptocurrency without directly holding it. They provide a major boost for a crypto industry beset by scandals. The Securities and Exchange Commission said it approved 11 applications, including from BlackRock, Ark Investments/21Shares, Fidelity, Invesco and VanEck, despite warnings from some officials and investor advocates that the products carried risks.”

Quantum Computing Startup Says It Will Beat IBM to Error Correction
John Timmer | Ars Technica
“It’s probably a measure of quantum computing’s progress that, while this road map seems optimistic and aggressive, it doesn’t seem completely ludicrous. A few years ago, logical qubits were a theoretical construct; their basics have now been demonstrated. Two companies already have hardware with over 1,000 qubits. Quera might face challenges—many companies in this space have found that their tech has failed to scale as expected. But the field as a whole appears to be moving steadily toward making logical qubits a reality.”

Toyota’s Robots Are Learning to Do Housework—By Copying Humans
Will Knight | Wired
“Having robots learn to do things for themselves has proven challenging because of the complexity and variability of the physical world and human environments, and the difficulty of obtaining enough training data to teach them to cope with all eventualities. There are signs that this could be changing. The dramatic improvements we’ve seen in AI chatbots over the past year or so have prompted many roboticists to wonder if similar leaps might be attainable in their own field. The algorithms that have given us impressive chatbots and image generators are also already helping robots learn more efficiently.”

The Hubless Electric Motorcycle With Sci-Fi Style and a Great Name
Tim Stevens | The Verge
“‘We came to a conclusion that we would need to move the motor outside of the main chassis, out of the body of the motorcycle,’ [Verge Motorcycles CTO Marko Lehtimäki] said. So they decided to try something different by putting the motor inside the rear wheel. In-wheel electric motors are not exactly rare. In fact, they’re common in the e-bike scene, found on options like the VanMoof S4 or the Bird Bike. The TS Ultra’s motor, though, is something different. It’s a hubless ring design, which means you can put your hand right through the center of the wheel.”

This ‘Self-Eating’ Rocket Consumes Its Own Body for Fuel
Passant Rabie | Gizmodo
“The engine uses high-density polyethylene plastic tubing as fuel, which burns with the main propellants: liquid propane and gaseous oxygen. As the rocket launches to orbit, it burns the plastic tubing, which is fed into the engine’s combustion chamber, until it is no more. Since it requires less propellant packed from Earth, the rocket has more room to carry payloads to space compared to other vehicles of similar mass.”

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