Currently, the number of Internet users in Turkmenistan is more than three million (3,127,599) people. Such data is provided by the Agency "Turkmenaragatnashyk".
The national anti-virus program “Milli One”, developed and launched by specialists of the Turkmenaragatnashyk Agency, is in demand abroad. According to the Agency, orders for the purchase of this program are currently being received.
Today Ameca is one of the most advanced robots in the world. Android with
artificial intelligence stands out for its huge capabilities, which increasingly
resemble human ones. Recently, he again made headlines on social networks,
firstly, because he was thinking about the future of humanity, and secondly,
because he starred in a video where he reacts to his image in the mirror for the first
time.
The President of Turkmenistan proposed creating the Central Asian Council
on New Technologies, noting that the countries of the region have great
potential for innovative growth, the best scientific schools and technological
developments.
China has announced its plans to create "three to five industrial clusters" using metaverses - virtual
worlds where digital avatars can interact with each other as in real life.
Polish startup Nevomo has developed technology that allows trains to take off and
float above the rails at high speed. The testing ground for the world's first MagRail
train was a 720-meter railway track in Nowa Sazzyn in Poland, Themayor reports.
According to the developers, such trains will potentially be able to travel at speeds
of up to 550 km/h.
In Hangzhou (China), where the XIX Asian Summer Games will be held from September 23 to October 8,
new amenities have appeared for residents and guests of the city. In particular, benches have been
installed in parks and squares where you can charge your gadgets wirelessly or wirelessly. People's Daily
writes about this.
At the Large Hadron Collider, physicists for the first time managed to observe neutrinos — one of the smallest and most mysterious particles that pass through all matter in the world, practically without interacting with it in any way. The "trapped" particles will help scientists better understand the fundamental laws of nature and figure out how the universe came into being.