Global Lords: I Have Information System

Chapter 630 424: Indigenous People Intervene, Prince Ayoub [Anti-Piracy Chapter]



Chapter 630 424: Indigenous People Intervene, Prince Ayoub [Anti-Piracy Chapter]

Sure, here is the translated text:

```html

The Milky Way Galaxy also has a supermassive black hole at its center.

Besides black holes formed by stellar collapses, evidence suggests that some supermassive black holes, with masses ranging from millions to billions of times that of the sun, may be lurking at the centers of galaxies and might have existed since the early universe. In so-called "active galaxies," the evidence of these supermassive black holes is quite spectacular. NASA points out that black holes at the centers of these galaxies are surrounded by an accretion disk, releasing extremely intense radiation across all bands. The central area of the Milky Way Galaxy also contains a black hole because we observe that the rotational speed of stars in that region is incredibly high, reaching 8% the speed of light, suggesting they are orbiting a very compact yet massive celestial object. Current estimates suggest that the black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy has a mass of about four million times that of the sun.

"Spaghettification" effect

Another piece of evidence proving the existence of black holes is called the "spaghettification" effect. You might wonder what this means, but if you ever get the chance to fall into a black hole, it will all become quite clear: under the extreme gravitational pull of a black hole, you would be stretched into a long, thin shape, like spaghetti. Although this won't actually happen to you, if a star comes too close to a black hole, this could be its fate. In October 2020, astronomers did indeed observe the flash of a star being consumed by a black hole. Fortunately, this "tragedy" occurred at a distance of 215 million light-years from us.

The photograph of a black hole

The first direct photograph of a black hole taken by humans.

So far, we have collected much indirect evidence of the existence of black holes, including radiation, gravitational waves, and gravitational effects on other celestial bodies, none of which can be explained by known other celestial bodies. But in April 2019, humanity finally obtained concrete evidence— the Event Horizon Telescope captured a direct photograph of the supermassive black hole at the center of the M87 Galaxy. The name of this telescope might be somewhat misleading; it is actually a network of telescopes scattered around the globe, rather than a single telescope. NASA notes that the more telescopes involved in capturing, the larger the space that can be captured and the higher the image quality. In the final photograph, we can clearly see a shadow created by a black hole with a mass of 6.5 billion times that of the sun and the accretion disk glowing an orange light surrounding the shadow. (Yezi)

On August 26th, IT Home reported that Tesla released the FSDBeta version 9.2 of its autonomous driving system on August 16th, but Elon Musk thought the latest version was not good enough and said that the Autopilot AI team was "working hard" on much-anticipated updates to the autonomous driving assistance system.

IT Home learned that Musk tweeted today about updates regarding FSDBeta, stating, "We need to release Beta 10 version, the timing should be next Friday."

He stated that FSDBeta 10 would have a completely retrained neural network system, requiring a few weeks for further adjustments and bug fixes, with public testing possible in about four weeks.

Related news:

Musk: Tesla's goal for its autonomous driving system is to be ten times safer than human driving

On August 26th, according to foreign media reports, on Wednesday, the U.S. local time, Tesla's Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk reiterated the company's ambitious goal in terms of "Full Self-Driving" (FSD), namely developing an assistance driving system that is about ten times safer than an ordinary human driver. When reaching such a level of safety, regulatory agencies are likely to allow the FSD to operate as an unmanned driving system on public roads.

Before making the above comment, Musk had commented on the just-released FSDBeta 9.2, stating that its actual performance was not good enough. He said, "FSDBeta 9.2 is actually not very resilient, but the Autopilot and AI teams are doing their best to improve it. We are trying to create a one-stop solution for highways and city streets, but this requires a lot of neural network retraining."

On the surface, Musk's comments do not sound particularly reassuring, and many FSDBeta users have also spoken out teasing him, posting numerous videos of the driver assistance system driving for extended periods without any human intervention required. In response, Musk reiterated the company's goal of developing a driver assistance system that is 1000% safer than human drivers.

Musk clarified: "By most standards, FSDBeta 9.2's performance is amazing, but our goal is to develop a driver assistance system that is 1000% safer than ordinary drivers."

This implies that Musk and the Tesla AI team have already realized that autonomous driving cars need to be much safer than human-driven cars to be accepted by a broader human population. Even if autonomous driving cars' safety level is twice that of human drivers, the number of casualties due to accidents would still be significantly reduced. Currently, the United States National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is investigating Tesla's Autopilot and FSD systems for potentially crashing vehicles.

For many years, Tesla's FSD and driver assistance driving system Autopilot have saved countless lives. In the first quarter of 2021, Tesla cars enabled with Autopilot averaged one accident per 4.19 million miles (6.74 million kilometers) traveled, while those without Autopilot but with active safety features averaged one accident per 2.05 million miles (3.30 million kilometers) traveled. In contrast, the NHTSA's latest data shows U.S. cars averaged one accident per 484,000 miles (780,000 kilometers) traveled.

Truly understanding just how advanced Tesla's Autopilot and FSDBeta are is quite challenging, especially when compared to the numerous other driver assistance features currently being developed by competitors. However, car disassembly expert Sandy Monroe recently tested Ford's BlueCruise system and compared it to FSD. He found that even though Ford claims BlueCruise is a "hands-free" autonomous driving solution in specific sections of the U.S. highways, Monroe quickly discovered that even during slight turns, this system required manual intervention.

Tracks of Tesla Autopilot and FSD in arcane wizardry exchange

Following the five-shore dragon's practice order, arranged in the order of Ping, Blue, Mate, Black, and Sand.

Ping Dragon is the most powerful dragon among the five-shore dragons. It is very intelligent. It detests and mixes with evil creatures, and likes gold coins and silver coins and the like. It tirelessly pursues, with the most potent Elemental Power, and can also use flame attacks.

Blue Dragon. The Blue Dragon is the second-largest. Can create mirages and control the power of the wind. Its intelligence is average.

Mate Dragon, some say the Mate Dragon is of low intelligence, but in my understanding, the Mate Dragon should have high intelligence. However, the Mate Dragon's size is smaller than the Ping and Blue Dragons. It is an orderly evil creature and is the most cunning dragon among the five-shore dragons. The Mate Dragon and one other dragon are the only ones naturally able to survive without decreasing combat power. It is good at deception and has high resistance to poison, with potent venom. Generally found in forests and jungles.

Black Dragon, the Black Dragon's size is smaller than the Ping and Blue Dragons but slightly larger than the Mate Dragon. Its intelligence is relatively low compared to the three dragons mentioned above (Some say its intelligence is slightly higher than the Mate Dragon. Of course, I'm saying it is slightly higher in the context of those who believe the Mate Dragon's intelligence is low, which I do not agree with). Detests and mixes with evil creatures, wielding shadow power. The most persistently destructive dragon among the five-shore dragons.

Sand Dragon. The Sand Dragon uses elemental power of ice. It is an orderly evil creature. It is the smallest among the five-shore dragons. Its intelligence is also the lowest among the five-shore dragons. Awakened to Dragon Language Magic the latest. A mature Sand Dragon's Magic Energy is roughly equivalent to that of a juvenile Ping Dragon (There are three age stages between juvenile and mature). Its intelligence is just slightly higher than a dragon hatchling, and an ordinary Sand Dragon can speak normally. But its intelligence is remarkably low. Other dragons vividly refer to Sand Dragons as "Sand Fools." Generally found in places like snowy mountains and ice fields.

The five-shore dragons are rather malevolent. Leaders of the malevolent faction. As age increases, the power gradually grows.

I love anti-theft, have great skin, good health, and wish-for-every-success. Thrilled and pleased.

Exhausted the results concluded the research. He found that the final result depends on the mass of the star. If the star is massive, for instance, having a mass reaching 20 times that of the sun, the star's dense core (solely the core's mass might be two to three times that of the sun) would continuously collapse until it forms a black hole. The collapse speed of a stellar core is astonishingly high, all within just


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.