tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 8, 2024 6:00pm-6:15pm CEST
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the ukraine's when the also signed stops october 26th on dw, the dw new years live in from berlin. tonight is real, stepping up, it's offensive in 11 on troops and move in to the south west as the is really military says that it likely killed a hezbollah commander. seeing as the militant groups next leader also coming up and to north american scientists share the nobel prize for physics. their work helped lee the foundations for today's advances in artificial intelligence. the i bring coffee, it's good to have you with this is real, says a hezbollah,
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a leader who was seen as a possible future head of the militia, was likely killed in an air strike on a route last week. hush him soft cd was the air. a parent to hezbollah is a 3 decade ruler, assigned us while the who was killed and in his really attack last month. meanwhile, is real, has ramped up. it's ground defensive against hezbollah, deploying a force division of troops in southern, let her know what you thought. i don't get a separate development in a televised speech, hezbollah leader or deputy leader rather named cassandra said that he supports attempts to secure a truce with his real without mentioning the end of the war in gaza. as a precondition as below has been targeting is real with rockets since october of last year in an attempt to draw a resources away from gaza. as well after a one year of word causes health authority, which is controlled by how mazda says nearly $42000.00 people have been killed. at
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least 21 died in the latest is really air strikes on the duration refugee camp in central gossip among them. 5 children, israel's prime minister, inches, his forces will achieve victory over her moss, which carried out the october 7th terror attacks. this is where the 10 move of family can home, but only for no. there's this one of thousands of tents near the beach and send to a gaza. there were forced to leave the re is home in northern garza last october. i must admit, attends from gaza approved to the attack. so then is there any communities is where every time you did with an air offensive and play to a ground invasion of these, how, how spend up to saddam and the grandchildren has been on the move for the past 12 months? like tens of thousands of other postings in gaza. we were displaced by the foaming
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wherever we went. they were mess because we would leave one place struck by tragedy need to arrive. it's another place where a new bombing on a folded every place, we fled to became another scene of devastation. to con, pay myself. they sold shelter and several schools in northern garza then flipped south to central garza to cost of $200.00 units and back to the center. then lung, the almost 90 percent of calls us 2 point. 2000000 people for security displaced by board of the family is now dispersed across garza. as he says she never expected to end up living and attend. they have no income and depend on age and charity. the children no longer have schooling and help as much as they can learn about them. now instead of carrying school bags, they carry walter really with when i see my children or other children do this a lot, but i feel the pain deeply we. i do love that are membership form. a few of
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a strikes is a constant. both have lost 2 family members and such attacks of these says she goes to assistant and is tried, you know, stuck tobar laws related work in the shop. at midnight. we were screaming and was not knowing who had died or who had survived between the flemish and the customer by mooning, they told us we couldn't say good bye to our loved ones. because the bodies were in such a terrible state took with us just one dash, well as i saw 5 lucky so i never got to say good bye to my sister who her children in the home. yeah, we buried them all about about 11 children. the county, a 5 women, the men got it and that's just like the loss of my sister and her family has affected me deep. lisa galandes, the show me comes over. sure. and she'll get that she's special ed the and how long does she of testing it for you? do you guys talk to a better assistant, tim?
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how about the same uh i lost my brother and his daughters when their tent was bombed, near the unreal warehouses. especially i do, but now to model protege i am they were all killed. the son was injured by shrapnel . the so the yeah. the front another yeah. i mean the front, the whole. yeah. for that event i buried my brother in rafa. and on the same day sled with my family, him a little bit to show that this is you may never be allowed to return to a home in northern garza, the war has not only distort best areas of the territories, but has also effectively divided it into north and south, the return of displaced people to the north is part of the seas for negotiations, which have sofa failure to return to someone if possible. i have a boy and 2 girls in the know, and i just want to hug them. if the most important thing is to hold my children again, i won't get her last long. have nobody else. i'm afraid i will die before i get to
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embrace my son and daughters. well, well, i miss them so much to be filled with me. i called bri. i don't know, it makes me feel sick because i'm far away from them now. but i cannot go. no, no. it is a simple embrace. but why is because i was no stranger to, we're in the past. this is the longest, it's people have endured such unremitting biden's, death and destruction with no and insight would utilize the e mail the hallway joins me now from the roots green for the 1st time. no mention from hezbollah, of a cease fire in the war and gauze as a precondition for a truce in lebanon, and talk to me how significant is this? it was in his speech. he gave it to him about that. but i think what's really important seats, the main intention of this speech was to show that this is paula is or gives the
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impression that his bullet is still strong. it was really a defiant and to a very confident speech. and he was talking about resisting and persisting, he was talking about that his bullet re create more displaced people in northern israel psychiatry and somehow. busy the wall goal or really mean it's on, you know, say like the escalated dissertation level to maybe in order to get it is raised to begin spec to the border. now, the 2nd month, it is one that with the new public face of his folder, it should not, in person is saying that this, the county was going to have more displaced. people use it, they had losses. would it be the beginning of the war? and you said maybe the most striking to striking sentence, it says it's all about home screens for a so a very,
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very defined speech. we know that 3 human agencies say that they are worried that the same tactics used by is really garza are now being repeated in 11 on what do you see us? yeah, that's exactly what the set today is the. i mean they gave me exactly. so i'd be like there was a w, which on whose face the warranty that we'd have with the cheering hesitations when new diseases and never known because of the for example, very current situation, sufficient, those where the could be looking for refuge and we didn't have the word sort organization who's wanting to say like all this in fields, a band of and the selves all the life stuff. i've been to the results that leads to a crisis in the food supply. when i talk to some of the records and some of them are harmless, they were very concerned about this piece that lives behind the elements of the life stuff they left behind. it's not only about their life years 5 inches. they
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also talk very much about what they left behind and a lot of that is to do was liberal in each 6 years. journalist can remember hard with the ladies from b route. tonight's kareem, thank you for to north american scientists and one this year is nobel prize for physics. they were honored for their pioneering work on artificial intelligence and machine learning back in the 1980s, john hop field and jeffrey hampton set the stage for today's artificial intelligence. by using physics to identify patterns and information, their work now allows machines to mimic learning and remembering functions that were previously thought to be the sole province of organic brains. at a tech conference last year in memphis size, the differences are smaller than you might think. we're just the machine, we're wonderful, incredibly complicated machine,
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but we just to be your own that i'm, is there a reason why i was official on your own? i shouldn't be able to do everything we can do. modern artificial neural networks are structured on the to recipients ground breaking ideas in the field of statistical physics. their models allowed machines to start making apparently intuitive leaps through association. we're identifying similar elements and systems like humans can. that's radically changed. for instance, cancer diagnosis. you can trade in artificial networks on which a no, no, to be tumors, images that, you know, does the products you trade the networks. and then it can be very fast and efficient, finding this in images. and it can work much more quickly or to assist the doctor and much more certain in the diagnosis. and medical imaging is just one area where the research has had a huge impact. hey, i know also plays key roles and fields as diverse as large language models.
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particle physics at miss buick and climate modeling. and predicting the structure of proteins. the physics prize this year goes for research that has changed and continues to change the world as we know it. this is what i'm here. the studio now is my colleague matthew award ages from dw science semester. let's talk about who this award is going to. i understand it's awarded to the god father of a i tell us about him. yeah. so jeffrey hinton has been described as a good father. i get described as things when he went other awards. and a few years ago, he went to cheering award for his work and i, i with 2 others. so that will collectively describe that way. his, his co award a john help field has not been described as that, but he's certainly a trial blazer in the field as well. he started it in terms of the research that won this award in 1992. we just had created
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a network called the hop food network. yeah. and the best way to sort of describe it is if you think of you brian, it's got new runs. it's got sign up says connecting those new runs and a new network of an artificial variety replaces neutrons with no, it's nice connect up. in this case it was able to be fed a lot of information of image right, or time that information. and then when it was fed, a distorted or incomplete image, similar to one that was already in there, was able to churn out the most likely image that you were trying to the is correct . yes. right. and then which is what app. ryan stood. jeffrey hinge and then built on that with what but he lives it did in the 19 eighties and since then it has been in his right to erase it on to the point that now we have well where we find ourselves now with i, i being part of our common pilots, we talk about it all the time and finding new ways of how it might serve out how spacious. i know i hinton is a name that if you follow a guy you'll be familiar with. and he acknowledgement when he received the prize or
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when it was announced, he also issued a warning about his own work. tell me about that because it's not the 1st time he's issued a warning and it was something oh sorry, that was acknowledged by the nobel committee that decided on the civil and it has a great amount of potential to serve humanities, interest that also safety and ethical concerns that we should all take, like give responsibility for hinson himself. as he point out has said he's concerned about what might happen if we lose control of this technology that we have develop. he is said that it will be like an industrial revolution, but instead of the muscle of humanity being replaced by machines, it will be the intellect of humanity being replaced by machine. so there is a lot of promise. there is a lot of potential consequence. his point is that we need to be very careful about how we proceed forward, and to do so with god ramos to do so with structure around the way that we pursue this technology. and what impact is there work already having?
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i mean, is it all about a i well, i guess it depends on how you define i in this case, but some good examples that, that come to mind are in health care. and so you get an x ray, you're not sure what's wrong with you. a doctor might take a look at it and have a pretty good idea of what it is. i is already being used to and analyze imagery in health care settings to be able to identify treatments. right? but human all i'm on, you'll be able to detect me in astro physics. we're trying to look at galaxies and styles at a quite a while. i mean, when we get the image right, it might be fuzzy when we run it through an eye. we can start to identify with stars and galaxies. my bank, we talk a lot about asteroids. the european space agency is launched a rocket to try and investigate what happens with ones nearby. we can use it to determine the trajectory of the asteroids that we don't know about this new. yeah. can do a lot that humans can do. maybe a little better. we just don't want to sell that to. that will be right now. so i may have to thank you. like are you watching the news? i'll be back at the top of the hour with more world news. so i hope to see you then
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