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Mar 23, 2019
The thrilling potential for off-grid solar energy
Posted by Alexandros El in categories: solar power, sustainability
There’s an energy revolution happening in villages and towns across Africa — off-grid solar energy is becoming a viable alternative to traditional electricity systems. In a bold talk about a true leapfrog moment, Amar Inamdar introduces us to proud owners of off-grid solar kits — and explains how this technology has the opportunity to meet two extraordinary goals: energy access for all and a low-carbon future. “Every household a proud producer as well as consumer of energy,” Inamdar says. “That’s the democracy of energy.” (Followed by a brief Q&A with TED Curator Chris Anderson)
Mar 23, 2019
Scientists rise up against statistical significance
Posted by Derick Lee in category: futurism
We are not calling for a ban on P values. Nor are we saying they cannot be used as a decision criterion in certain specialized applications (such as determining whether a manufacturing process meets some quality-control standard). And we are also not advocating for an anything-goes situation, in which weak evidence suddenly becomes credible. Rather, and in line with many others over the decades, we are calling for a stop to the use of P values in the conventional, dichotomous way — to decide whether a result refutes or supports a scientific hypothesis5.
Valentin Amrhein, Sander Greenland, Blake McShane and more than 800 signatories call for an end to hyped claims and the dismissal of possibly crucial effects.
Mar 23, 2019
Meteor no one saw coming exploded over Earth with force of 10 atomic bombs
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: military
NASA says the blast was the second-largest meteor impact on record.
A meteor weighing about 1,500 tons exploded over the Bering Sea on Dec. 18, 2018. narvikk / Getty Images/iStockphoto.
Mar 22, 2019
How Drones Could Be Able to Plant a Billion Trees Per Year
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: drones
Mar 22, 2019
Drones: the future of ocean conservation
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: drones, robotics/AI
Unmanned systems like drones significantly change the way ocean conservation scientists collect data, monitor species and protect the ocean.
Mar 22, 2019
These drones plant trees
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: business, climatology, drones, engineering, habitats, robotics/AI, sustainability
Climate change is a sprawling, complex problem. But there is an astonishingly simple way to make a difference: plant more trees. Trees scrub pollution from the air, reduce erosion, improve water quality, provide homes for animals and insects, and enhance our lives in countless other ways.
It turns out that ecosystem restoration is also an emerging business opportunity. A new report from the World Resources Institute and the Nature Conservancy says governments around the world have committed to reviving nearly 400 million acres of wilderness — an area larger than South Africa. As countries push to regrow forests, startups are dreaming up new, faster ways to plant trees. For some innovators, like NASA veteran Dr. Lauren Fletcher, that means using drones.
Fletcher said his conversion from stargazer to eco-warrior was driven by his worry about climate change, which has been dramatically worsened by deforestation. To tackle the problem, he created BioCarbon Engineering, which he describes as an ecosystem restoration company. Working with colleagues, he came up with a 30-pound unmanned aerial vehicle nicknamed “Robin.” It can fly over the most rugged landscapes on earth, planting trees in precise locations at the rate of 120 per minute.
Mar 22, 2019
Unmanned Systems Grow in European Agriculture
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: business, drones, food, robotics/AI, sustainability
Unmanned systems’ global inroads are including European agriculture. GNSS for precision guidance of tractors and harvesters is already in place. More recent innovations include fully driverless and smart systems, while drones remain poised to fly.
The experience of one Dutch company is instructive. Precision Makers is an up-and- coming manufacturer of automated farm systems. The company delivers two main products. One, a conversion kit called X-Pert, turns existing mowers and tractors into driverless machines. The other is a fully robotized, unmanned vehicle called Greenbot. Both systems enable automated precision operations, but while one has been successful in terms of sales, the other has not.
Precision Makers Business Development Director, Allard Martinet, told Inside Unmanned Systems, “Sales of our X-Pert conversion system have been very good. We started in 2008, first converting the Toro golf course mower, and then we expanded that into solutions for other vehicles. Today, there are more than 150 X-Pert converted vehicles running.”
Continue reading “Unmanned Systems Grow in European Agriculture” »
Mar 22, 2019
Everything automated – Farming in 5G
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: food, internet, robotics/AI
Agriculture becomes very easy when data controls the machines. 5G makes this possible because everything is connected. Explore your life in 5G! 5glife.tno.nl
Mar 22, 2019
CERN Just Got Closer to Figuring Out Why Antimatter Hasn’t Annihilated Everything
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: cosmology, particle physics
Why do we exist? This is arguably the most profound question there is and one that may seem completely outside the scope of particle physics.
But our new experiment at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider has taken us a step closer to figuring it out.
To understand why, let’s go back in time some 13.8 billion years to the Big Bang. This event produced equal amounts of the matter you are made of and something called antimatter.