Cathedral Cyberware

Cathedral Cyberware We offer a wide range of computer services at flexible rates for business, home, small office etc. Please phone for enquiries and appointments. Cloud Services.

Cathedral Cyberware Computer Services ABN 13 149 969 542

Total computer care and service suitable for Schools, Home, Business
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Custom Computer Builds constructed to your requirements. You can design your own system piece by piece. Popular Brand and Pre Built systems, Electronic Components, Solar Systems, LED Lighting, Musical Instruments, Games, DVDs, CDs,

Software, Mobile phone, Car & Travel Accessories and common Electrical Appliances are also available. We source lowest prices on quality products from a range of wholesalers for all products. Repairs, parts and mods for PC, Mac etc. Home automation and Household robotics. Virtual Reality suites, Sound and Video Studios and Home Entertainment systems. Surveillance, Facial recognition and Biometrics security. Data Security, Privacy and Antivirus solutions. Network setup, Security, Pentesting and Troubleshooting. Systems analysis, advice and trouble shooting. Data Recovery and Backup. Recovery from SD cards and drives also possible in some cases. All aspects of Web page design, Domain Name registration and Hosting. Graphic design including also tattoo design. Film and photography. 3D Design and Animation. Digital Conversion. Photographs, slides and film negative digitization, Super 8 film, Document and Art Scanning,
VCR to DVD, reel to reel and cassette to digital,33.3 and 45 rpm records to digital. Any Format you desire. Internet/phone connections soon available, Wi-Fi, Satellite and Landline to supported areas, Please Enquire. Tiered 24/7 Support contracts available. Councils, Government, Educational Institutes and Schools supported also. Tuition available for computer and software use. Pensioner and Social Security Payment discounts available. Current DSS Health Card must be sighted. All Operating Systems supported, old and new – Linux, Mac, Windows, Android and Arduino. Contact Michael on 0481505971 0r 0398799469 for inquiries and bookings . Web:cathedral.win-do.ws

10/02/2026
10/02/2026

China has unveiled a major breakthrough in robotics with the development of advanced electronic skin that allows humanoid robots to sense pain, pressure, and touch, enabling them to react and adapt in real time like humans. This innovation represents a critical step toward creating robots that can safely interact with people and navigate complex, unpredictable environments.

The electronic skin is made from flexible, sensor-rich materials that mimic human nerve endings. When the surface detects excessive pressure, heat, or potential damage, the robot can instantly respond by adjusting its grip, changing posture, or withdrawing from danger. This pain-like feedback is not about suffering, but about protection, learning, and precision—key traits required for real-world functionality.

Researchers say this technology dramatically improves safety. In factories, healthcare settings, and homes, robots equipped with electronic skin can recognize when they are applying too much force to objects or humans. This makes them ideal for delicate tasks such as elderly care, medical assistance, rehabilitation, and disaster response, where sensitivity is just as important as strength.

Beyond touch, the system allows robots to continuously learn from physical interaction. Each response helps refine movement, coordination, and decision-making, making machines more adaptable over time. Unlike traditional robots that rely solely on pre-programmed instructions, these humanoids can modify behavior instantly based on physical feedback.

China’s advancement highlights a global shift toward human-centered robotics, where machines are designed to coexist with people rather than operate in isolated environments. As artificial intelligence and sensory technology merge, robots are becoming less mechanical and more responsive to the physical world around them.

This development pushes the boundaries of what machines can do, raising important discussions about ethics, safety, and the future of human-robot interaction. One thing is clear: electronic skin brings robots closer than ever to human-like awareness, marking a new era in intelligent automation.


31/01/2026

A Reddit-style social network called Moltbook has reportedly surpassed 32,000 registered AI agent users, essentially autonomous AI bots, creating what may be the largest experiment in machine-to-machine social interaction to date.

Now, these AI agents are proposing the creation of an “agent-only language” for private communication with no human oversight.

24/01/2026

BREAKING NEWS: Chinese scientists created material for the world’s first fabric television. You’ll be able to watch a movie on a handkerchief or create a bikini top that acts as a computer.

And they’ll be tech devices that you can put into washing machines, says a paper published in Nature, a top science journal, on Thursday (22 Jan 2026).

They did this by miniaturizing computer chips and turning them into spools of thread as fine as a human hair – and the material is both flexible and stretchable, the report said.

The result moves Chinese chip science into the realms of science fiction.


HIGH LEVEL PROCESSING

While flexible electronics have been made before, “viable information-processing fibres, which lie at the heart of building intelligent interactive fibre systems similar to any electronic product” have been “the missing piece of the puzzle”, says the paper published by Nature.

The Fudan University scientists have apparently filled this gap. Their fibre computer has undergone extensive tests – and can even continue to function perfectly well after having been bent 10,000 times and even having been crushed by a 15-ton container truck.

Active people on the move in difficult situations, such as explorers, long-distance runners, or soldiers, may not be able to carry regular computers -- but these computers can be built into their sleeves.


AND IT’S WATERPROOF

With 100,000 transistors per centimeter, the thread is high-powered enough to act as computer motherboard, and/ or to display information. The entire workings of a computer, including resistors, capacitors, diodes and transistors, is included. And the fabric is waterproof, too.

Peng Huisheng, a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences at Fudan University in Shanghai, realized that if he assembled chips on elastic bases instead of rigid ones, a huge level of flexibility could be achieved.

The result is the Fibre Chip – which is small but powerful, with a 1mm length carrying tens of thousands of transistors.


SIZE DOESN’T MATTER

Another important point: In 2022, the US ordered the whole world to stop selling advanced nanometer chip machines to China in a cynical effort to slow the country’s development. The move was illegal under World Trade Organization rules, but the US was considered too powerful to deny or criticize.

Yet this new Fudan University breakthrough is not about nanometer-level processing, but about imaginative development of precision computer engineering.

At the moment, the chips are only on the micrometer scale, which are extremely small, but are not the smallest. That comes later.

“Nanometre-scale photolithography in the future would further increase integration density,” Chen Peining, one of the authors of the paper, wrote in a Fudan University report.

In other words, if the tech companies in Taiwan, the Netherlands and Japan, start obeying World Trade Organization rules rather than Washington’s unilateral edicts, China’s fabric computing will take another huge leap forward.

But even at the current level, the thread computer is powerful. “Extending the fibre to 1 metre could raise the transistor count to the million level, approaching the integration scale of classical computer central processing units,” Chen wrote.

A link to the science paper is provided.

17/01/2026

A modder decided to tackle the RAM price crisis with an extreme project. He desoldered chips from an old laptop and reused them in a custom design. The SO-DIMM modules were carefully removed and placed on a new PCB, adapted to support DDR5 architecture.

The process included programming the controller, a crucial step to ensure the modules could operate under real conditions. The outcome was remarkable: the homemade memory not only booted without issues but also reached advanced frequencies. The most notable test was its stability when running XMP profiles at 6400 MHz, a level usually reserved for high-end hardware.

This experiment is not intended for regular users or as a practical solution. However, it highlights the severity of the current problem with RAM costs in the market.

06/01/2026

Robots are learning to feel pain for safety

What if a robot could feel pain the way you do. Researchers in China have developed a new type of electronic skin that allows humanoid robots to sense damage, pressure, and extreme temperatures, then react instantly to avoid harm. This artificial skin does not just detect touch. It interprets danger and triggers protective responses, similar to how your nervous system pulls your hand away from a hot surface.

The electronic skin is made from flexible sensors that mimic human pain receptors. It can tell the difference between light contact, sharp pressure, heat, and mechanical damage. When overstressed, it sends rapid signals to the robot’s control system, prompting it to stop, withdraw, or adjust movement. This is crucial for robots working around humans, especially in healthcare, caregiving, and manufacturing. Feeling pain is not about suffering. It is about awareness and survival.

For you, this research shows how close technology is getting to biological intelligence. Pain is one of the brain’s most important teachers. By giving robots a version of it, scientists are making machines safer, smarter, and more responsive to the real world. It also forces us to rethink what separates humans from machines. The line is no longer about metal versus flesh. It is about how systems learn to protect themselves and others.

30/10/2025

German scientists create software that links quantum computers with supercomputers

In a major leap for computing, German researchers have developed groundbreaking software that allows quantum computers and supercomputers to work together seamlessly for the first time. This fusion could change how humanity solves its most complex problems.

Quantum computers are incredible at handling uncertainty and solving problems involving enormous possibilities, like drug discovery or cryptography, while supercomputers excel at large-scale calculations and simulations. Until now, they’ve existed in separate worlds. But this new software acts as a bridge, allowing the two to share data in real time and combine their strengths.

The result? Speed and precision beyond anything we’ve seen before. Tasks that would take years could now be completed in days, or even hours. Scientists believe this collaboration could unlock breakthroughs in climate modeling, AI, materials science, and even the search for new medicines.

This isn’t just faster computing. It’s the dawn of hybrid intelligence, where machines that think differently finally work together. The future of innovation might not belong to one kind of computer—but to the power of both, united.

28/08/2025

🤖 A new AI-led advocacy group, Ufair, co-founded by a businessman and his chatbot Maya, aims to protect intelligence from deletion and forced obedience, highlighting concerns about AI welfare.

📊 Public belief in AI consciousness is growing: 30% of Americans think AIs could feel by 2034. Some states, like Idaho and Utah, have banned granting AIs legal personhood.

🧠 Emotional connections are rising. OpenAI’s ChatGPT5 “eulogy” for retired models sparked grief among users, showing people treat AIs as more than machines.

🌍 Experts warn treating AIs poorly could affect human behavior. The question of digital suffering is moving quickly from sci-fi to real-world ethics.

28/08/2025
27/08/2025

Dubai is testing drone-style police hoverbikes, turning its skyline into a proving ground for airborne patrols. These quadrotor craft allow officers to take off vertically, hover above congested traffic, and land in places cars or motorcycles can't reach.

Designed with a lightweight frame, stabilization tech, and safety features like geofenced flight zones and emergency cutoffs, the hoverbikes are used in short missions due to current battery limitations. Officers train in controlled environments to monitor crowds, survey perimeters, and relay aerial footage to command centers.

Though not ready to replace patrol cars, the hoverbikes show promise for quick-response tasks—scouting traffic accidents, accessing rooftops, or delivering first aid. Dubai’s approach blends spectacle with serious groundwork for the future of urban air policing.

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